If you’ve seen any recent indie films set in Seattle, you’ve likely watched them through Ben Kasulke’s eyes. The cinematographer … More
Category: Seattle Magazine
Dan Webb’s Chiseled Features
An imposing figure stands at the back of Dan Webb’s Georgetown studio: a rectangular column of fir, 3 feet across and … More
Pinterist: Head Over Heels for Harold Pinter
Don’t go to a Harold Pinter play hoping for a happy ending. The British playwright, who produced work throughout the second … More
Three Summer Reading Musts, All Set in the Northwest
The Pacific Northwest is often misunderstoodby outsiders—written off as a rainy hinterland populated by fleece-flaunting Earth Firsters, or parodied as … More
Collectors Joe and Jill McKinstry Fill their Home with Local Art
“The problem is, we don’t have enough walls.” It sounds ironic, coming from Joe McKinstry, owner of prominent Seattle homebuilding and … More
M.I.A Gallery Gives a Voice to International Artists
Before opening contemporary art space M.I.A Gallery in Seattle last January, Mariane Lenhardt was working with a much older group of … More
How Seattle Became the Epicenter of Glass Art
The first thing most seattleites think about upon hearing the phrase “glass art” is Dale Chihuly. And with good reason; the … More
Inside Chihuly’s New House of Glass
In 1961, while studying interior design at the University of Washington, an arty kid from Tacoma experimented with melting and … More
King Tut Returns to Seattle as Egypt Elects a President
The press preview for the new King Tut exhibit at the Pacific Science Center began with the customary parade of … More
Quinton Morris Takes on Carnegie Hall
Just as this issue hits the stands, a young concert violinist who went to high school in Renton and now … More