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Seattle Weekender: Bike to work, Seattle's circus children and banned ballets
Crosscut's guide to a culturally enriching weekend in the city. Or at least some fun.
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ALL MEMBERS »Crosscut's guide to a culturally enriching weekend in the city. Or at least some fun.
READ MORE | 6 COMMENTSVillage Theatre's production of 'The Producers' is spot-on, thanks to fabulous actors and Mel Brooks' unflinching genius.
READ MORE | COMMENT NOWCaffeinated News & Gossip featuring: More bad news for the tunnel; Democratic campaign expenditures; city hall departures; Jay Inslee at NARAL luncheon; and more.
READ MORE | 73 COMMENTSAcoustic sculptor and contemporary composer Trimpin's new work on memory and bearing witness, "The Gurs Zyklus," defies all categorization.
READ MORE | 2 COMMENTSDutch dance company Introdans makes a gorgeous debut at UW's Meany Hall. If only they'd gone with more choreographed works.
READ MORE | COMMENT NOWCrosscut's guide to a culturally enriching weekend in the city. Or at least some fun.
READ MORE | 1 COMMENTSSeattle has developed a report out of lengthy discussions about providing work spaces for artists. But a lot is left to the artists themselves.
READ MORE | 1 COMMENTSSeattle Opera's simulcast of 'Madama Butterfly' in HD at Key Arena is a study in contrasts. Albeit a rather successful one.
READ MORE | 2 COMMENTSFrank Ferrante's one-man-show, 'An Evening with Groucho,' is far more than a tribute to the famous brother.
READ MORE | 1 COMMENTSThe Pitmen Painters, ACT Theatre's latest play about a group of British miners turned famed artists, raises questions about art, culture, and class.
READ MORE | COMMENT NOWIn the face of screen fatigue, a new generation of Vancouver creative types are converting to face-to-face meetings.
READ MORE | 1 COMMENTSFor Fifth Avenue Theatre's Damn Yankees, it's the acting and the musical numbers that carry a rather hum-drum story.
READ MORE | COMMENT NOWThe American Gauguin is on display through the weekend at a downtown Seattle gallery space. His chosen medium? Black velvet.
READ MORE | 2 COMMENTSFor 40 years, McCafferty has executed SAM's installations, becoming a recognized master of the subtle art of designing exhibits.
READ MORE | 2 COMMENTSWhile preparing for the Richard Hugo Literary Series, a local author faced the biggest barrier to success and enjoyment: fear of failure.
READ MORE | 2 COMMENTSThe latest from news outlets and blogs around the Northwest and beyond, chosen by Crosscut editors.
A lot of the exhibits resemble earlier displays in Tacoma, where work by the glass-master can be seen for free. The Chihuly showroom opened Sunday at Seattle Center.
What really conveys approval is the sitting ovation. May it come back.
A new study finds a fascinating correlation between weight control and culturally enriching but sedentary activities.
The News Tribune reports, "The University of Washington Tacoma now has an original Picasso drawing hanging in its library, courtesy of Tacoma peace activist The Rev. Bill 'Bix' Bichsel." (A Jesuit priest, no less.)
The key loss is the connection between a live audience and the singers. Clap in the movie theatre and no one hears you on stage.
He does marvelous, if infrequent work in Seattle. His new post is in Western Australia.
Peter Plagens, the Journal's gallery critic, enthuses over the Portland art scene's venturesomeness, "residual roughness and collective spirit," and "plethora of 'alternative spaces,' such as a decommissioned crab boat and renovated neighborhood storefront. But he diagnoses "a schizophrenia" in artists who try to both play and scorn "the art game as it's contested in New York and Miami."
In the process, it may signal the end of contemporary art.