Do Ho Suh
Do Ho Suh re-creates his New York City apartment in a museum, but using transparent polyester fabric, wire rods and frottage. You move from room to room while seeing the entire place all at once. More...
Bay Area Boom or Bust
Not long ago the Bay Area's economic demographics plunged much of the local art world into near despair. Suddenly with the re-opening of SFMOMA, the recent opening of a new gallery complex and more perhaps the pending dystopia is not yet upon us. More...
Christine Tarkowski
In Christine Tarkowski's series of sculptures titled “Chthonic Void,” material is content and the making process is paramount. More...
Meow Wolf
About 135 creatives, together they are Meow Wolf, have filled a cavernous permanent space with a two-story Victorian house that opens to a series of fantastical environments: "The House of Eternal Return." We build our own narratives. More...
Ed Moses
"Ed Moses @90" pays tribute to this artist's insatiable search for the process of creation, "not to be in control, but to be in tune." More...
Robb Report Art
What constitutes artistic credibility? There is a breed of aesthetic entrepreneur who chases fame and fortune through means unbeholden to traditional pedigrees, but rather to tactics and standards borrowed from the business world. More...
Julia Brown
Researching documents of the 1960s civil rights movement lead Julia Brown to visually record and respond to the creation of man-made as well as natural boundaries. "Skin Trade" pushes the theme into provocative subject matter involving animals, smuggling and more. More...
Tamas Dezso
Hungarian photographer Tamas Dezso documents the changing social and physical landscape of post–Soviet era Hungary and Romania, particularly life at the edges of society. More...
“H2O”
The three artists comprising "H20" may be timely, but all steer clear of the obvious polemics in their smart, lovely work. More...
Rachel Hellmann
Rachel Hellmann assembles paintings into compelling sculptural objects whose abstract forms wrestle their way into the gallery space. More...
Marilyn Minter
If Marilyn Minter's work seems to connote photorealism, her innovative and charismatic body of work is far too visceral and political to be ghettoized into that or any convenient genre. More...
“By Hand”
The six artists in "By Hand", reference the figure as produced through the artists' gestural subjectivity. More...
Daniel Joseph Martinez
David's "The Death of Marat" is the direct inspiration for Daniel Joseph Martinez' installation, the central tableau featuring life-size figures of the artist--as the dying Marat, assassin Charlotte Corday and of himself. More...
Juan Jose Barboza-Gubo & Andrew Mroczek
The photographic collaboration between Juan Jose Barboza-Gubo and Andrew Mroczek promotes awareness of violence against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities in Peru. More...
David Michael Lee
Over his 15-year career David Michael Lee has used painting's formal building blocks to construct multiple series. The visual energy released by gathering these together proves expansive and energizing. More...
Interview: Kimerly Rorschach
Seattle Art Museum Director Kimerly Rorschach explains her strategy for attuning the program to the region's racial and ethnic diversity. More...
Liam Everet
The act of painting is central to Liam Everett's abstract images. Evidence of application and tools are everywhere. More...
Scott Greene
Scott Greene depicts waste that is not quite biodegradable and processes that are vast and irreversible. He drops a postmodern take on history into Thomas Cole's darkly romantic, epic template. More...
“A Visual Artifact”
A well curated selection of representational art debuts as a gallery manifesto that contributes immediately to the expanding Seattle scene. More...
Eric Hesse and Tim Vermeulen
Encaustics by Eric Hesse aptly depict the variously filtered light of urban Los Angeles. In "Alphabet" Tim Vermeulen's precise paintings look to the letters found in an 18th-century primer for inspiration and perspective. More...