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Klingbiel and Somers
Karl Klingbiel presents seemingly windblown abstract paintings; together with Marti Somers' collaged imagery immersed in encaustic. More...


Bill Braun
What looks like cute little paper cut-out folk collages by Bill Braun are in fact meticulously rendered paintings that creates palpable tension between the physical and the conceptual. More...


James Ensor
James Ensor had two brilliant careers, first as an avant-garde Realist and then as a forerunner of modern Expressionism. More...


Ross Palmer Beecher
Ross Palmer Beecher's cut-and-woven recycled metal quilts are an utterly unique amalgam of folk art, Pop Art and social-political art. More...


“Irish Glass: Tradition in Transition”
The once robust culture and manufacture of glass in Ireland broke down a decade ago. Now slowly recovering, "Irish Glass: Tradition in Transition" traces the early signs of fresh creative vitality. More...


Marc Dombrosky
In a provocatively divided show Marc Dombrosky embroiders discarded handwritten notes; and crafts sculptures that are sly and hilarious. More...


Fred Martin and Friends in the Fifties
In a recent interview with the San Francisco Chronicle’s Kimberly Chun, longtime Bay Area painter Fred Martin described his role as “basically, a builder. A builder of the community of artists.” More...


Modernism in the Northwest
"Modernism in the Pacific Northwest" presents a canon of greatest hits with new accessions bound to become iconic pictures themselves. More...


Michael Cook
"Venetian" references window coverings, not a destination city in Michael Cook's current series of deftly considered paintings. More...


June Wayne
A new survey of June Wayne's varied career focuses on her achievements in lithography, but not to the exclusion of so much more. More...


“Vanishing Points”
Art photography, photo journalism and advocacy blend into a compelling photo show "Vanishing Points" that features work by Sant Khalsa, Stephen K. Lehmer and Douglas McCulloh. More...


Sean Healy
In "Extroverts" Sean Healy stares down contemporary masculinity through such motifs as a cigarette--not as a subject but as a drawing tool. More...


“Deco Japan: 1925-1945” 
Because it was so tainted politically, the exhibition "Deco Japan: Shaping Art and Culture 1925-1945" is only now possible. More...


"Nur: Light"
"Nur," Arabic "light," lends itself to the title of a gathering of Islamic treasures that reflect the mature skills of a major civilization. More...


Sara Rockinger
An installation of translucent, ghostlike figures is not only pleasurable eye candy, but a powerful political statement on the subject of immigration by Colorado artist Sara Rockinger. More...


Douglas Cooper
He may not be a Seattle resident, but Douglas Cooper's conflated portraits of the city are among the best ever. More...


Christina Mackie
Christina Mackie's color investigations are material rather than conceptual, experiential rather than formal. More...


John Singer Sargent
Initially private works, watercolors became an exceedingly vital part of John Singer Sargent's body of work, which the selections here demonstrate. More...


Chris Engman
Intellectual yet hypnotically beautiful, Chris Engman’s images carry photography into worlds that by turns disorient, please and frustrate. More...


Debra Baxter
Enigmatic, ambiguous surrealist-inspired abstract objects by Debra Baxter defy conventional sculptural categories. More...

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