From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The "Art Ladder": the main staircase of the 1991
Robert
Venturi-designed wing of SAM.
Artist and musician Whiting Tennis (left) performs with his band at
an opening at the
Henry Art Gallery.
Being so much younger than the cities of Europe and the Eastern United States, Seattle, Washington has a lower profile in
terms of art museums than it does in the performing arts. It is
nonetheless home to five major art museums and galleries: Consolidated
Works, the Frye Art Museum, the Henry Art
Gallery, the Seattle Art Museum, and the Seattle Asian Art Museum.
Several Seattle museums and cultural institutions that are not
specifically art museums also have excellent art collections, most
notably the Burke Museum of
Natural History and Culture, which has an excellent collection
of Native American
artwork.
Seattle is also home to well over 100 commercial art galleries,
at least a dozen non-profit art galleries, and perhaps a
hundred artists' studios that
are open to the public at least once a month. About half of these
galleries and studios are concentrated in one neighborhood, Pioneer Square.
Outside of the realm of art, Seattle has several other notable
museums and similar
institutions:
- The Burke Museum of
Natural History and Culture, on the campus of the University of Washington, has
a large collection of botanical, zoological, and geologic specimens in addition to an anthropology
collection notable for its coverage of Native
Americans of the Pacific Northwest.
- Regional history and industry figure prominently at the Museum of History and
Industry (scheduled to move downtown from its current building
in a public park in the Montlake neighborhood); the Center for Wooden Boats, a
maritime heritage museum on Lake Union; the Museum of Flight, which incorporates
Boeing's original
manufacturing plant; the Museum of Communications; and
the Museum Without Walls, devoted to the University District.
- Key ethnic aspects of Seattle's cultural mix
are represented by the Daybreak Star Cultural
Center in Discovery Park, operated by United Indians of All
Tribes; the Nordic Heritage Museum in Ballard, which honors Seattle's Scandinavian immigrants; and the Wing
Luke Asian Museum in the International District which focuses on the
culture, art, and history of Asian Pacific Americans.
- The Seattle Aquarium is located on piers
on the Elliott Bay
waterfront; the Woodland Park Zoo on Phinney Ridge in north Seattle is one of
the country's leading zoos, notable especially for its innovations
in open and naturalistic zoo exhibits.
- The campus of Seattle Center includes the Pacific Science Center and Paul Allen's Experience Music Project and Science Fiction Museum and Hall of
Fame
- The Seattle Metropolitan Police Museum in Pioneer Square honors the city's police
force.
Writing in November 2007, Jen Graves of Seattle alternative weekly The Stranger considers
the Lawrimore Project (founded 2005) "the closest thing
contemporary art in Seattle has to a center". Four of the five
visual artists who had by that time won the Stranger's
annual "Genius Awards" had come to be represented by Lawrimore,
although only one was at the time it received the award.[1]
See also
Notes