From a new home at the center of Seattle, the Museum of History & Industry bridges past and present. There’s…
Ramayana, An Epic Hero’s Tale, Unfurls at ACT
Boy meets girl, boy marries girl, boy loses girl after evil shape-shifter assumes form of golden deer to distract girl, leading…
Greg Lundgren’s Death Wish
Imagine you are dead. If you’re the type who thinks ahead, you’ve probably already told someone whether you’d rather be cremated…
Cuong Vu: Horn of Plenty
When Cuong Vu plays trumpet, it can sound like he’s underwater, or facing gale force winds or maybe contacting us from…
Stacey Rozich’s Animal Instinct
At the Capitol Hill Block Party in July, musicians on the main stage had special accompaniment: a tiger, a dragon and…
Ben Kasulke: Lens Crafter
If you’ve seen any recent indie films set in Seattle, you’ve likely watched them through Ben Kasulke’s eyes. The cinematographer…
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…
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…
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…
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…