Culture Things to do in Seattle: Feb. 1-8 Soft sculptures at MoM, jazzy paintings in Pioneer Square and ghosts en pointe at Pacific Northwest Ballet. by Margo Vansynghel & Brangien Davis & Gavin Borchert / February 1, 2023
Culture Indigenous-led art collective yəhaw̓ buys land in Rainier Beach The group envisions the 1.5-acre green space as a powerful way for Indigenous people to reconnect with community, art and nature in Seattle. by Margo Vansynghel / January 30, 2023
Culture Seattle’s new convention center features $7.75M in local art One of the largest and most expensive projects in the city’s history brings Northwest Indigenous works to the fore. by Margo Vansynghel / January 25, 2023
Culture Things to do in Seattle: Jan. 25-31 Up-and-coming Seattle bands, Temptations: the musical and the PNW's first-ever disability-focused comedy festival. by Margo Vansynghel & Gavin Borchert & Brangien Davis & Misha Berson / January 25, 2023
Culture Seattle artist Barry Johnson takes a good look at himself The Black Lives Matter muralist debuts his first solo show of large-scale self-portraits at Winston Wächter. by Margo Vansynghel / January 19, 2023
Culture Things to do in Seattle: Jan. 18-25 Abstract art at NAAM, local psych-rock at Neumos and Roombas roaming Method Gallery. by Margo Vansynghel & Brangien Davis & Gavin Borchert / January 18, 2023
Culture Things to do in Seattle: Jan. 11-17 Heart-throbbing cabaret in Pike Place Market, a mysterious hole in Pioneer Square and more arts events. by Margo Vansynghel & Brangien Davis / January 11, 2023
Culture A Seattle photographer’s firsthand account of the Jan. 6 chaos Nate Gowdy discusses the Capitol attack and his new photo book ‘Insurrection.’ by Margo Vansynghel / January 6, 2023
Culture Can Seattle’s mayor win his tough-on-graffiti game of tag? Harrell’s new plan continues the debate over whether graffiti is artistic expression worthy of acceptance or vandalism requiring prosecution. by Margo Vansynghel / January 4, 2023
Environment Skip the woodchipper: Salvaged city trees are the new lumber From Seattle to Baltimore, cities are recycling felled urban trees into furniture, construction projects and guitars. by Alex Brown Stateline / December 20, 2022