In an urban city like Seattle, stillness can be found in unexpected places. The Frye Art Museum, known for its modern and contemporary art collections, reserves its auditorium to provide people with an opportunity to…
Posts tagged as “art”
Seattle is known for a variety of things, including its numerous names – “Emerald City,” “Rain City,” its weather, its coffee, and its IT hubs. But one thing that is often overlooked is the city’s…
2024 Seattle Central Student Invitational, art pop-ups, and more: learn how you, a Central student, can have your art exhibited on our walls
Sophia BruscatoLocated in the atrium, the M. Rosetta Hunter Art Gallery serves as a beacon of expression and engagement for Seattle Central’s community. Funded by the Student National Association (SNA), the gallery provides exposure to high-quality…
On Thursday, March 14, Seattle Central’s art gallery hosted the opening reception for “Pink, Unpacked.” With over 60 pieces by Seattle Print Arts, the show explores personal meanings attached to the color, “Love it or…
In the annals of music history, some voices echo through time, shaping entire genres and movements. Yet, there are also those whose voices, despite their undeniable talent and influence, have been muffled by the forces…
This week, I got to chat and interview Meghan Trainor, who is the curator of the M. Rosetta Hunter art gallery. She grew up in Seattle and is a visual artist who has done artwork…
Lush Computation: bridging the gap between technology and humanity through art, M. Rosetta Hunter Gallery’s Fall show
Sophia BruscatoSeattle Central College’s M. Rosetta Hunter Gallery is set to host an exhibition that transcends the boundaries of art, technology, and humanity. Or, rather, connects them. Titled “Lush Computation” and curated by Meghan Elizabeth Trainor,…
The M. Rosetta Hunter Art Gallery is currently featuring the work of students from the Seattle Central Woodworking program. The show, organized by filmmaker, photographer, and Seattle Central Carpentry student, Shann Thomas (they/them), includes wood creations accompanied by poetry. The exhibit will run until Jan. 26.
Labor Day, 1993. Jonathan Borovsky’s kinetic sculpture, Hammering Man, which resides outside the Seattle Art Museum (SAM), bore a new attachment: a seven hundred-pound, 19-foot circumference ball and chain, constructed of sheet metal and plate steel. Its cuff was lined with rubber, so as not to damage Hammering Man. There, the guerilla art piece stood for two days, a statement against working-class oppression, before it was removed on Sep. 8 by the Seattle Engineering Department. And as the attachment was detached, the legend was born.