The meeting will be at the Shilshole Bay Beach Club.
Click here for driving directions and information on Metro bus service.
The meeting will be at the Shilshole Bay Beach Club.
Click here for driving directions and information on Metro bus service.

RSVP to designsponge@gmail.com.
Connecting women in design
Thursday, February 28, 7-9pm
DWR Seattle Studio
1918 First Avenue
Seattle, WA 98101
Phone: 206.443.9900

a stone adze
shapes a tree
into departure
or return—
on Rapa Nui
warring tribes
felled the forest
and built wooden skids
to transport monuments
through denuded land.
topsoil blew into the sea,
children grew up to preside
over statues
toppled into discord.
rats in the holds of
canoe migrations
became food
for starving generations.
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Notes:
Rapa Nui is the Polynesian name of Easter Island. It was originally covered with a diverse forest including the largest palm trees in the world, but had been completely deforested by the time of its European discovery in 1722. The Polynesian inhabitants of Rapa Nui cut down trees for firewood, to build canoes, and to transport moai, great stone statues that were a form of competition beween the island’s dozen or so clans. Clans had begun to throw down each other’s maoi in the 18th century; none remained erect by 1868.
Rats were introduced to Rapa Nui as stowaways when Polynesians migrated to the island in about 900 AD. They became an increasingly important food source when land birds had become extinct, migratory bird populations were decimated, and no trees remained to build canoes for deep sea fishing.
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Every Friday for 8 weeks I will post a section of a poem-painting cycle called “Migration.” This work is based on my experiences in New Caledonia, where in 2007 I was invited to an artist residency exploring the connections between Melanesian cultures and aboriginal tribes of southern China.
If you enjoy this work, please visit my painting website at www.scottezellgallery.com, and click the links below to see previous postings of “Migration”.
Scott Ezell
Part Seven
Part Eight
Design Build Challenge is an annual design and construction competition open to participants of all disciplines and levels of experience. The DBC '08, taking place March 27-30, focuses on encouraging built responses to community needs in designated cities. Join the competition.
The DBC ’08 focuses on various marginalized communities within Seattle that are currently facing issues of displacement due to rapid urban redevelopment. Participants will be given a contact list of potential clients—organizations with a community design need—with whom teams will collaborate to develop a meaningful and appropriate design response. The DBC aims to emphasize craft, creative reuse, environmental awareness, and innovation in response to the needs of the displaced communities identified in this challenge.
You can learn more about the Design Build Challenge at www.designbuildchallenge.org
Ellen Ziegler at Drop City Gallery
A Chair for a Hungry Ghost
The Hungry Ghost of Asian mythology consumes endlessly, but can never be satisfied. It’s considered an act of compassion to visualize the Hungry Ghost being fed to satisfaction so it will no longer suffer from craving.
This chair invites the Ghost to be seated at your table.
The materials for this chair are recycled in two ways:
1. The sheets and chair are from a second-hand store.
2. I have an ongoing pact with another artist not to buy any new art materials till we use up old ones: all other chair materials are from my studio and were not purchased for this project. In addition, the acetate painting is cannibalized from another exhibit.
Ellen Ziegler is an artist, curator and graphic designer. A member of In Lieu Exhibit Space, she has been published, purchased and exhibited widely. Her work is available at LIMN Gallery in San Francisco and SAM Gallery in Seattle, as well as through In Lieu Exhibit Space.
Ziegler is a recipient of a Rome Fellowship from the Northwest Institute of Architecture and Urban Studies in Italy, is an Artist Trust Fellow and a GAP Grant recipient. Her work is in many public and private collections.

animal meat
contains my mind,
sperm gunk clogs nerves,
commerce barters brain
for breath.
I ate my father’s flesh
to metabolize his songs.
I planted a pine tree
in the place he died,
but no son has yet been born.
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Every Friday for a total of 8 weeks I will post a section of a poem-painting cycle called “Migration.” This work is based on my experiences in New Caledonia, where in 2007 I was invited to an artist residency exploring the connections between Melanesian cultures and aboriginal tribes of southern China. Today’s selection is about contemporary cultural dispersion.
Notes:
1. In some traditional Melanesian cultures, deceased are eaten by their relatives.
2. In New Caledonia, a pine tree is planted where a man dies, a ritual to bring a new son into the world.
Please tune in every Friday to check out this work, and visit my painting website at www.scottezellgallery.com. You can click the links below to see previous postings of “Migration”.
Part Six
Part Eight
This government award is given to manufacturers and designers for forward-looking, professional and excellent design work. The “Focus in Gold” and “Focus in Silver” design awards are highly sought after as guarantees of the highest design quality. With the "Focus” topic changing each year, the competition presents a special challenge for entrants. The competition shows who has the best-designed solutions for current trends and for the topics that are of particular interest for experts and the general public. This renowned competition can look back on a long tradition and enjoys an excellent reputation both in Germany and abroad.
Focus Green – the topic
Today, sustainable development, climate protection and the conservation of our natural resources are being discussed more and more in public debate, and are playing a crucial role in political and economic decisions. In addition, environmentally friendly ways of life are finding more and more advocates, and national and international markets are reacting to meet this demand. Moreover, as raw materials become scarcer and more expensive worldwide, energy and resource-saving measures are pivotal to companies’ economic success. This is why there is a need for design and development that illustrate and implement creative solutions and innovations for more environmentally friendly products.
For more information:
www.design-center.de
Deadline: March, 20, 2008









Ronald Hall: Three Paintings, in cooperation with Pacini-Lubell Gallery of Seattle, focuses on African-American history and current events. Amistad (2006) proposes a plantation takeover in the aftermath of the slave ship mutiny aboard the S. S. Amistad in 1839. Missing (2007) deals with missing African-American children. The Martyr of Death Row (2007) is a memorial tribute to the musician Tupak Shakur.
Learn more about Ronald Hall by visiting his web site
Show runs from Jan. 31 through March. 5, 2008
Artist Reception: February 13th 7 to 9pm
Location: Reception is above the gallery in the Avenue One condos on the corner of First & Clay (Belltown)
Click here to see photos from the reception.
Click here if you want to read Regina Hackett's blog about the exhibition
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Every Friday for a total of 8 weeks I will post a section of a poem cycle called “Migration,” along with a painting of the same name. This week’s poetry selection is a reflection on the greatest migration in human history, the movement of individuals and communities from rural-agrarian to urban-industrial environments.
Please tune in every Friday to check out this work, and visit my painting website at www.scottezellgallery.com.
Scott Ezell
Mend that bleeding heart at the See Sound Lounge with
Event Details:
Tuesday, February 12th at 6:00 PM
See Sound Lounge
Theme: LOVE
Presenters:
Linda Carlin, Senior Design Analyst, Frog Design
David Harrell, Fellow, Royal Institute of Public Health
John Grade, Artist, Seeps of Winter/Suyama Space
Allan Packer, Artist, Davidson Contemporary
Jon Taylor, Architect/Artist, Callison
David Ho, Architect, Gensler
Ryan Matthew Smith, Photographer
Shannon Wells & Jed Dunkerley, SlideLuckPotShow
About Pecha Kucha: www.pecha-kucha.org
Pecha Kucha (the Japanese for the sound of conversation) gathers creative individuals to share their work and ideas in an informal environment. Pecha Kucha Night was conceived in 2003 by
Click here to download the show postcard

The Painting, Sculpture and Public Art Programs of UW School of Art are pleased to present a lecture by Mark Anderson, founder and owner of the renowned Walla Walla Foundry in Eastern Washington. Mark will show slides of his foundry operations and the execution of works for international art stars such as Deborah Butterfield and Jim Dine, among others. This is a world class foundry that has developed numerous innovations in the casting field. You are cordially invited to attend.
For more info contact
John T. Young
Professor
Chair, Sculpture and Public Art Program
jtyoung@u.washington.edu
2010 Annual: Memory Upgrade
December 2, 2010 - January 1, 2011
CoCA Pioneer Square presents Memory Upgrade, a juried exhibition featuring work from 16 emerging as well as established artists in a wide variety of visual media, including 2d, 3d, and video.
A Latin American View -- Curated by Joseph C. Roberts.
Bombs and Spears -- Titillating Distractions During Times of War