(ART) The best work of art up in the city right now is Iranian-born Shirin Neshat's 2002 video installation Tooba, at the Seattle Asian Art Museum. Projected on two screens, the narrative, accompanied by a throbbing religious chant, follows a band of men dressed in black who penetrate a desert garden, wordlessly climbing over its walls like a menacing vine, and surrounding a lone tree into which a wrinkled woman has disappeared. Feminism, Islam, international politics, fear, aggression, poetry—what more could you want from contemporary art? (Seattle Asian Art Museum, 1400 E Prospect St, Volunteer Park, 654-3100. 10 am–5 pm, $5.)