Anne Hirondelle
Seriality and deconstruction of curved and circular forms are central to Anne Hirondelle’s ceramic forms and works on paper. More...
David Rudolph
For David Rudolph the process from abstraction to figuration is unforeseen “… without knowing what I was creating ... something would always emerge.” More...
Margaret Lazzari
Margaret Lazzari departs, for the most part, from the figurative work we know her for in favor of more abstract work that expresses fresh joy and abandon. More...
Susan kae Grant
Science and art make happy bedfellows in Susan kae Grant's "Night Journeys," which record the whispers and fuzzy thinking of her recorded dreams. More...
Sam Francis
This in-depth survey of Sam Francis' career encompasses even his early landscapes and runs through his final works. More...
Modernist Siblings
Matthew Kangas profiles the modernist sculptures commissioned over the last 40 years by the Seattle Arts Commission. More...
Alchemy of Ordinary
The range and volume of art in "The Alchemy of the Ordinary" proves an asset in demonstrating the extraordinary elasticity of the collage practice. More...
Lucinda Parker
"All clouds choose the loftiest peak to pile themselves upon" entitles Lucinda Parker's series starring Oregon's iconic Mount Hood. More...
Leon Gaspard
Russian-born Leon Schulman matured as a painter at home, and resettled in Taos on doctor's orders due to wounds sustained in the Great War, as Leon Gaspard, where he remains beloved for his lush, romantic paintings. More...
William Catling
Through his clay figures William Catling ponders on which side of the divide between earth and heaven most people belong. More...
"Tapping the Third Realm"
A multi-generational selection of artists map the "Third Realm" in personal, often idiosyncratic ways that would have been incomprehensible to an earlier age. More...
Daniel Bennett
Young artist Daniel Bennett displays conceptual sophistication and a quality of child-like fascination in his new video work, "Definitions 1." More...
Julianne Swartz
Wires and pipes and sticking your head in a funnel opens up the visual and auditory senses in Julianne Swartz' bracing babel of voices, chimes and chirps. More...
Contemporary Northwest Art
The third biennial "Contemporary Northwest Art Awards" is a jaunty sampling that is the most dynamic in a decade. More...
Abelardo Morrell
Abelardo Morrell uses rooms as cameras, bringing the outside to the interior. Setting up tents to do the same allows him to record this approach anywhere to often spectacular effect. More...
Leo Vroegindeweij
The Latin "Mutatis Mutandis" phrase translates: "only the necessary changes have been made." In assemblage and inkjet prints Leo Vroegindeweij are clever, funny - and, yes, they give a lot from an economy of means. More...
Dannielle Tegeder
A group of large drawings and a hundred small ones accompanied by computed-generated music add up to Dannielle Tegeder's "Library of Abstract Sound." More...
''Surface Truths''
"Surface Truths: Abstract Painting in the Sixties" shows how sincerely the post-Abstract Expressionist artists admired their forebears. More...
“Slow Read”
in "Slow Read" five painters select books to accompany their bodies of work, providing unusually specific conceptual contexts for viewing abstract paintings. More...
Jordi Alcaraz
Jordi Alcaraz works in a minimalist vein--sort of. Unfettered imagination and rich associations derive from deliberately self-imposed limitations. More...