Tribal rhythms intersect with social justice.
A would-be pickup artist strikes out.
Our critics weigh in with their own bright ideas for the local arts.
Spring ’00 Books Quarterly When a recent book of feminist essays published by local Seal Press featured images of Barbie…
One night during the 1994-95 NBA season, David Shields—who was stalking the Seattle SuperSonics that year disguised alternately as a…
Kurt Andersen lives 48 hours ahead of the rest of us.
How bargain hunting by the city’s greatest arts patrons gave Seattle a masterful collection of 20th century art.
Far from Baghdad, we need a sectarian truce of our own. But are hard-believing Americans really ready for a grand compromise?
Also: New Year’s Eve Tango Ball, Willard White, Surrealist Ball, and Perpetual Motion Roadshow.
Sasha Cagen, Paco Underhill, James Shreeve, and Chalmers Johnson.
A play and its producers ask you to consider acceptance.
House of Dames’ Nikki Appino brings us a story of sex, death, and bees with bouffants.
Intiman’s latest production goes overboard.
Two small publishing houses shed light on an unknown cultural force.
Also: Lin Tianmiao, The Lawless Breed, Buck 65, and Jordan Fisher Smith.
Bestial tales; London’s pop-art czar.
The shards of a shattered nation are collected in Heather Raffo’s messy but moving 9 Parts of Desire.
Life in the shadow of The Bomb.
ACT’s production of Warren Leight’s new play listens close to the music.
Hilary Hahn The Seattle Symphony presented violinist Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg last week, and now here’s the anti-Nadja—poised, polished, Apollonian, and not…
