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In the mid-1980s, Foster/White was one of five galleries which started the Pioneer Square Exhibition Magazine, a monthly magazine to publicise their shows. [6] In 1990 the gallery was among the founding members of the Seattle Art Dealers Association, [7] which in 2005 took over publication of the magazine, renaming it the SADA Exhibition Guide. [6]
Scene In Seattle Fine Art Tours Private and Public fine art tours of Seattle's contemporary galleries. S3A: Seattle's Urban Art Association Founded in 2007, s3a is a group of artists and galleries committed to raising awareness of the alternative art scene in Seattle and the Northwest by chronicling and promoting events, artists and venues.
Howard House was a contemporary art gallery located in the historic Pioneer Square District in Downtown Seattle. From its inception in 1997 to its closing on June 12, 2010, the gallery fostered the careers of several local, national and international artists. Billy Howard, the gallery's owner, cited slow business as the basis for the decision.
Irreplaceable art works by Picasso, Rembrandt, Goya and M.C. Escher are among those feared lost after a fire swept through a Seattle art gallery on Friday, the gallery’s manager told CNN.
Henry Art Gallery: University District: Art: The art museum of the University of Washington, includes rotating exhibitions of contemporary art History House of Greater Seattle: Fremont: History - Local: History and heritage of Seattle and its neighborhoods Jack Straw New Media Gallery: University District: Art
CoCA originally existed without a permanent gallery space, [2] [3] and the organization has since inhabited numerous locations in Seattle. Its most recent location, as of September 2016, is the Tashiro Kaplan Building in historic Pioneer Square. Today, CoCA serves the community through exhibitions, artist residencies, publications, and discussions.
Northwest Woodworkers Gallery (formerly Northwest Gallery of Fine Woodworking) [1] in downtown Seattle, is the oldest and largest woodworking cooperative in the United States. Started in 1980 in the Pioneer Square neighborhood by a small group of studio furniture craftsmen, the gallery has grown and fostered the resurgence of the Northwest ...
In art critic Regina Hackett's 2005 Seattle Post-Intelligencer article on Pioneer Square, she credits the gallery with contributing to the neighborhood's "core of cultural tolerance and open-minded experiment". [1] The gallery attracted attention for exhibitions of works on paper [2] as well as contemporary photography and sculpture.