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BELLEVUE ART MUSEUM
Stranger Personals
301 Bellevue Square, Bellevue, 425-454-3322.
KURDISTAN: IN THE SHADOW OF HISTORY
Photographer Susan Meiselas has assembled this exhibition, which explores the culture and identity of the beleaguered Kurds, out of photographs, newspaper stories, memoirs, and telegrams. This fragmented narrative -- including the words of freedom fighters, farmers, missionaries, and spies -- echoes the dislocation of this stateless people. Through June 11.
FRYE ART MUSEUM
701 Terry Ave, 622-9250.
THOMAS HART BENTON
Perhaps best known for his dense, saturated murals (the likes of which adorn city halls across the country), Benton also was a great traveler, and recorded what he saw in America's remote regions. His drawings chronicle the country's change from an agricultural nation to an industrialized one. Through June 25.
GRAHAM NICKSON
The British-born Nickson, well-known for his figurative painting, has been painting bathers for the last 20 years. This subject certainly has deep roots in the history of art (Cézanne, Degas), and Nickson makes his mark with vivid, just-this-side-of-natural colors. Preview Thurs May 11, 6 pm. Through July 16.
ROBERT SCHWARTZ
Contemporary allegorical work. Through June 4.
HENRY ART GALLERY
15th Ave NE at NE 41st St, 543-2280.
*TONY OURSLER
Oursler's video works are characteristically creepy. For example, projections of facial features that give a weird, transparent life to inanimate objects. His installation at the Henry is called The Empty Cabinet, but knowing Oursler, "empty" is a relative term. Through July 30.
SHIFTING GROUND: TRANSFORMED VIEWS OF THE AMERICAN LANDSCAPE
It's such a ubiquitous subject, and so often maligned. See Stranger Suggests. Through Aug 20.
*BILL VIOLA
The audio for Anthem, this disturbing, riveting video, is a girl screaming in slow motion. It makes a haunting soundtrack for a montage of images both human and technological, bloody and tender. Viola, along with the likes of Nam June Paik and Gary Hill, brought video art to prominence in the '70s; he is one of the most painterly of these artists, and his work has a potent lyrical charge. Through May 28.
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
100 University St, 654-3100.
SEATTLE COLLECTS LICHTENSTEIN
Seattle's most established art institution gives over space to one of the artists who, along with Warhol, most challenged the idea of originality and what is acceptable as real art. Now he's dead and an icon, and the works shown here are largely drawn from local collections. Through May 14.
SEATTLE ASIAN ART MUSEUM
1400 E Prospect St, Volunteer Park, 654-3100.
THE ART OF PROTEST
Social and political issues addressed through a variety of media, including the photography of Walker Evans and the mordant commentary of Jenny Holzer. Fang Lijun's enormous woodcut, No.19, dominates the exhibition. Through Jan 21, 2001.
PAUL HORIUCHI
One of the Northwest's venerable masters is remembered in an exhibition spanning his work from the 1930s through his death in 1999. Through June 11.
TACOMA ART MUSEUM
12th and Pacific, Tacoma, 253-272-4258.
FAST FORWARD: THE SHAPE OF NORTHWEST DESIGN
It's no longer news: Design is irrevocably part of our visual culture. It doesn't make this show any less interesting, however, since the best design, like the best art, continues to delight and surprise. Participants range from the ubiquitous (Microsoft, Boeing) to Anoek Minneboo, a furniture designer recently named one of I.D. Magazine's hot young designers under 30. Through June 18. See Bio Box.
WING LUKE ASIAN MUSEUM
407 Seventh Ave S, 623-5124.
THROUGH OUR EYES
An extensive exhibition of Asian American photography of the Northwest, from journalism to fine art. It includes the photography of Frank Matsura, who emigrated from Japan at the turn of the century (the last one) and documented the Okanogan frontier, through the contemporary work of Dean Wong and Jessica Kim. Through April 8, 2001.
WRIGHT EXHIBITION SPACE
407 Dexter Ave N, 264-8200.
*THE WRIGHT COLLECTION
Virginia and Bagley Wright have rehung their foundation's exhibit space, devoting one gallery entirely to their great collection of '60s and '70s color field paintings, and introducing a large David Salle oil and the John Baldessari piece Two Onlookers and Tragedy to the mix. Other highlights of their collection include a Robert Longo, Eric Fischl, a huge Warhol Rorschach, and Jules Olitski's Thigh Smoke. Open-ended run.
COOK & WALSH, NHON NGUYEN
Cook and Walsh collaborate in the high tiers of kitsch and functional art; the former works in metal and the latter paints on it, using images as familiar and campy as Cindy Brady, monkey skulls, and wrestlers. Nguyen's paintings of breakdancers are fluid and active, but have a dreamy muted quality that is quite unexpected. Opening reception Fri May 12, 6-10 pm. Roq La Rue, 2224 Second Ave, 374-8977. Through June 3.
CORNISH BFA EXHIBITIONS
Hold on to your hats -- there are three of them. There's always good work at these shows, and they're refreshingly unpretentious, comparatively speaking. The fourth-year fine-art exhibition is at CoCA (65 Cedar St) from May 11-27, with an opening reception Thurs May 11, 7-9 pm. The fifth-year fine-art exhibition is at Cornish Senior Studios (306 Westlake) from May 12-27, with an opening reception Fri May 12, 7-9 pm. The design exhibition is on the Kalakala Ferry (2555 N Northlake Way, on Lake Union) from May 12-28, with an opening exhibition Fri May 12, 6-10 pm.
JULIE ALEXANDER
Works on paper populated with legions of vertical lines drawn in graphite. A line is a simple thing, but Alexander's work hard. Boomtown Cafe, 513 Third Ave, 625-2989. Through May 30.
BASEBALL ART
This small exhibition of Northwest artists includes Thom Ross and Tina Hoggatt, whose work graces the less-than-graceful Safeco Field. Wessel & Lieberman Booksellers, 121 First Ave S, 682-3545. Through May 31.
DEBRA BAXTER
These vivid canvases are heavily worked -- layered in paint, ripped apart, and reconstructed, until abstraction seems a tame description. Ace Studios Gallery, 619 Western Ave, 623-1288. Through May 28.
ROSS PALMER BEECHER, GEORGE CHACONA
In a new series of multi-media entitled Great Film Directors, Beecher honors the film industry's giants. Her assemblages of fabricated metal and old camera parts create elaborate frames for Alfred Hitchcock, Werner Herzog, and Orson Welles -- the directors, in short, who put frames around everyday and not-so-everyday life. Chacona works in cinematic imagery as well, drawing inspiration from the silent era. Bank of America Gallery, 701 Fifth Ave, Third Floor, 585-3200. Through May 26, then continuing through June 15 at Greg Kucera Gallery.
ROSEMARY BELKNAP
Serene still lifes, ordinary objects thoroughly seen. King County Art Gallery, 506 Second Ave, Room 200, 296-7580. Through May 26.
GERTRUDE BLOM
Journalist, photographer, and social activist Blom spent 50 years among the Mayan people of Chiapas, Mexico. Over that period she extensively documented the Lacandon tribe, an indigenous people living in the deep jungle. Blom's photographs are a testament to a world that was vanishing even as she lived in it. Photographic Center Northwest, 900 12th Ave, 720-7222. Through May 31.
JOE BRUBAKER
Solemn, hand-carved wood figures that bring to mind folk-art saints. Grover/Thurston Gallery, 309 Occidental Ave S, 223-0816. Through May 27.
LAURA CASTELLANOS
Castellanos builds her paintings using thin veils of oils, but the effect isn't washed out, rather it's quite vivid and emotional. Lux Coffeebar, 2226 First Ave, 443-0962. Through May 31.
*CHERYL COMSTOCK
The themes are life and death, and the aesthetic is based on so-called women's work. Comstock combines decorative motifs and patterning (associated with such crafts as embroidery and quilting), recognizable iconography such as skeletons, and flora in various stages of bloom and decay. Greg Kucera Gallery, 212 Third Ave S, 624-0770. Through June 15.
DRAWING
There's no one way to look at drawing, as proved by this exhibition, which features work from Pam Keeley, Denita Benyshek, Karen Wesler, and Yvonne Petkus. Shoreline Community College Gallery, Administration Building, 16101 Greenwood Ave N, 546-4101, ext. 4433. Through May 20.
BETSY EBY
Encaustic and mixed-media. Ballard/Fetherston Gallery, 818 E Pike St, 322-9440. Through June 10.
ALEX EMMONS
Fifty small photographs are displayed on lightboxes, giving their dark swimminess an interesting intensity. The figures float around as if released from the rules of gravity. FotoCircle Gallery, 216 Alaskan Way S, 624-2645. Through May 27.
RENA BASS FORMAN
Large-format photographs of sacred places in India. Not a new endeavor, but the images are rather stunning. Winston Wächter Fine Art, 403 Dexter Ave N, 652-5855. Through May 20.
*WENDY HANSON
In Forged Symmetries Hanson exhibits sculpture made out of the unlikeliest of materials: rose petals stitched together and paired with found objects. One, a globe held up by female trophy figures, aptly contrasts strength and fragility, permanence and brevity. An installation at once brave and delicate. Howard House, 2017 Second Ave, 256-6399. Through June 1.
BOOTSY HOLLER
The photographer is only half of the collaboration here; the other half is Angela Seahorse, a model who explores identity through body modification -- tattoos, masks, and finally, cutting off her hair. Brave and revealing gestures, though you wonder how much the camera really shows. Alibi Room, 85 Pike St, 623-3180. Through May 31.
HOT SAUCE
An exhibition by the Chicago curatorial group Law Office. SOIL Artist Cooperative, 12th and Pike, 264-8061. Through May 29.
PAMELA KEELEY, BILL DURGIN
The figure is in the foreground. Keeley apparently can draw with both hands at once, and her pleasingly loose faces and bodies rest on the surface of the work. Durgin's large-format photography shows perfect bodies at close range, and at second look, they're too perfect -- in fact, they're mannequins. Eyre/Moore Gallery, 913 Western Ave, 624-5596. Through June 19.
*SHEILA KLEIN
Textiles seem an unlikely vehicle for pop-culture assemblage, but Klein pulls it off with her wild montages and mixed-media constructions. Her large scale sculpture will be exhibited at Consolidated Works later this month. Esther Claypool Gallery, 617 Western Ave, 264-1586. Through May 27.
JOHN MCQUEEN
McQueen is a basket maker, and he works in traditional basketry materials (willow and waxed string), but this is an appealingly odd exhibition of self-portraits. Each figure is four feet tall and hollow -- a perfect container, in a way, for anything you care to put in it. Elliott Brown Gallery, 619 N 35 St, #101A, 547-9740. Through May 13.
*MIRROR'S EDGE
Get yourself up to Canada to see this touring show -- Vancouver is as close as it's coming to Seattle -- featuring work by international artists rarely shown in the U.S. Vancouver Art Gallery, 750 Hornby St, Vancouver, BC, 604-662-4700. Through Aug 13.
SARAH MORRIS
Meditations on the body, these temporary vessels we haul around. Morris traces her own body onto graph paper and then works the surface with collage and solvent transfers. A delicate treatment of a delicate subject. Oculus Gallery, 216 Alaskan Way S, 784-6532. Through May 27.
*DEBORAH OROPALLO
Everyday objects discover their abstract and decorative qualities through Oropallo's screenprinted canvases, which use multiple images of familiar forms. James Harris Gallery, 309A Third Ave S, 903-6220. Through May 27.
PRINTWORKS 2000
Yet another show with "2000" in the title, but there's good work to be seen here and (not incidentally) it's one of the great benefits of the "one-percent-for-arts" funds. Among the City of Seattle's recent acquisitions are prints by Dirk Park, whose chemically etched work has an eerie and beautiful biological feel, and C. Blake Haygood, whose drypoint prints resemble inventions from the mind of Dr. Seuss, though slightly more sinister. Key Tower Gallery, Fifth and Cherry, Third Floor. Through July 14.
REALIST ART, STEFAN KNORR
Inside the gallery: a rotating exhibit of realist art. Outside, in the window, Knorr's installation The Artists' Breath Is in Their Hands -- rubber gloves blown up by artists. A commentary on all the hot air? Perhaps. SAM Rental Sales Gallery, 1334 First Ave, Suite 140, 654-3240. Through May 20.
LINO TAGLIAPIETRA
These glass forms are lovely -- shapely, organic, and shot through with mysterious color. There's a lot of hack glass out there, but Tagliapietra is a maestro, in the actual and metaphorical sense of the word. William Traver Gallery, 110 Union St, Second Floor, 587-6501. Through July 2.
THE ULTIMATE PRESS
Prints made by the friendly steamroller that could. Daniel Smith Gallery, 4150 First Ave S, 233-9599. Through May 31.
URBEAN LEAGUE ART EXHIBIT
Known for showing a very diverse (both in work and ethnicity) group of artists, this exhibit is in its 23rd year. Washington State Convention and Trade Center, Eighth Ave and Pike St. Through June 28.
*SEAN VALE
Vale has created a sound-and-light environment for his works that tells you a great deal about the act of seeing them. See Stranger Suggests. Pound Gallery, 1216 10th Ave, 323-0557. Through May 28.
VECINOS DE MAYO
It means "neighbors of May," and it's a celebration of Latino culture all month long. The gallery will show the work of five Latino artists: Gerardo Aguayo, Carlos Duran, Che Lopez, Jamie Olaya, and Jose Orantes. Phinney Center Gallery, 6532 Phinney Ave N, 783-2244. Through May 26.
JO ANN VERBURG, MONA KUHN
Landscapes and portraits covered here. Blissed-out, slightly sentimental studies of the Italian countryside from the former; stark, sensual close-ups of figures from the other. G. Gibson Gallery, 122 S Jackson, Suite 200, 587-4033. Through May 20.
*WORKING TITLE
This exhibition explores the labor of art -- what happens between concept and object. The four artists shown here (Thess Fenner, Todd Kephart, Nikki McClure, and Matt Sellars) work in different media, and to different ends, but the process of thought and execution is manifest in their work. Curated by Heather Dwyer, Artist Trust's program director and one of the Seattle art scene's smartest cookies. Kirkland Arts Center, 620 Market St, Kirkland, 425-822-7161. Through June 2.
SARA YEAROUT
Slightly eerie characters are embedded in Yearout's canvases, which are alternatively heavily painted and barely brushed. The unexpected contrast makes these paintings an interesting balancing act. Baas Gallery, 2703 E Madison, 324-4742. Through June 3.
FRANK O. GEHRY
One of the world's biggest architectural guns, brought to you thanks to Seattle Arts & Lectures. Gehry (in case you've been living in a sensory-deprivation tank) is the mind behind the building that houses the Experience Music Project, for which we should thank God, because now Seattle has architecture interesting enough to argue about. Gehry will be at the Seattle Center Opera House on Sat May 15 at 7:30 pm. Tickets are available through Ticketmaster (292-ARTS) or at Seattle Center's box office.
*VISIBLE SOUND REPRODUCTION
This is the second event in this excellent new series at 2AP. There are all the necessary elements for a good old-fashioned happening -- music, artists, a fine sense of play -- but the result hangs in the distance like a question mark. Musicians this round include Lori Goldston (of the Black Cat Orchestra) and two of the Steel Pole Bath Tub clan; the artists, preserving their anonymity, wish only to be known as Lepus Lab and Goatmax1. Second Avenue Pizza, 2015 Second Ave, Fri May 12, 9 pm.
ARTIST TRUST FELLOWSHIPS
It's that time again. This year, fellowships -- which come with a $5,500 award -- are available for artists working in dance, design, theater, and visual arts. The deadline is June 16; visit their website at www.artisttrust.org for application information, or send a SASE to 2000 Fellowship Application, Artist Trust, 1402 Third Ave, Suite 404, Seattle, WA 98101.
ASIAN AMERICAN AND ASIAN VISUAL ART DIRECTORY
RAW Gallery is compiling a directory of Asian and Asian American artists. This directory will go on sale in June, and will be available to arts organizers, artists, and institutions both locally and nationally. There is no fee to participate. E-mail your name, address, telephone number, web information, and medium/profession to: rawgallery@juno.com.
SEATTLE ARTS... ON TV!
Seattle Arts, a new show on TVSea (Seattle's public-access cable channel), is soliciting experimental film, animation, or documentaries about art and arts organizations. This project, initiated by the Seattle Arts Commission, 911 Media Arts Center, and TVSea, is a great opportunity for filmmakers and anyone who thinks the Seattle art scene needs more exposure. For more information, call Amy Painter, the Seattle Arts Commission's public information officer, at 684-7306.










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