Filtering by: gallery2020

November Art Walk: Double Sided Leash
Nov
6
to Dec 4

November Art Walk: Double Sided Leash

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November 2020 Virtual Art Walk at Make.Shift gallery:

“Double Sided Leash”

Anna Baldi & Chris Copeland 

This group of works asks whether we can or should make a distinction between nature and culture. To us, the answer is no, but to stop there misses the point entirely. What we call nature directly shapes our cultures and our cultures shape “the nature” around them, for better or worse. Our technological advancements show us parts of the world never before seen. And by these very creations the world is changed. 

 When we do work on our computers, we are participating in nature. Through one way or another, our computers are connected to large data storage buildings in Utah or Belgium, and these buildings interact with their surroundings, through heat, through their volume in space, the humans that work there. 

The ultrasound technician and the nature photographer reveal our bodies and landscapes in ways that our eyes are not capable of. As we witness the mysteries of life being solved around us our world expands and contracts. 

  We are always transforming the landscape around us, it’s just a question of scale. Some technologies collapse distance, allowing us to change far away places. Some create boundaries that isolate individuals, othering members of our same species and erasing our collective experiences. But as a disease spreads around the earth, our imagined boundaries between states, between bodies, have become increasingly uncertain. Distant places are infinitely connected – through air, water, and all the creatures that move between them. Similarly, our bodies are connected even when we don’t seem to touch.

A leash, an umbilical cord, a wire, a railroad, a conveyor belt, a line of ants marching towards a giant food source. These are all cables that connect us, that threaten us, and that tie the forces of nature and culture together.

 
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Anna Baldi Artist Statement:

       I am a painter and sculptor interested in anthropology, animal studies, and gender studies. Through my art practice I attempt to dismantle the supposed divide between nature and culture, and investigate whether the word ‘natural’ still holds any value when our relationship to non-human life has become so obscured by human dominance. By creating a binary between nature and culture we also set up hierarchies. We have categorized, organized, and assigned value to every form of life, including ourselves. Humans are animals, and we are reliant on the earth like every other species.  When we try to separate ourselves, and deny our dependence on nature, we leave no space for wildness, and no space for lives, relationships, and actions that do not fit neatly into either category. 

In my work I blur this boundary, and create situations where symbols of nature and culture collide. These collisions expose our animal reality, and the hypocrisy of our binary systems. Frequently, I use images or physical pieces of animals in my work and place them in what we might consider to be a distinctly human scenario, often this scenario depicts violence or distress. This switch of human and non-human highlights our shared experience as animals while also referencing the many ways humanity has been stripped from those who do not fit within a narrow definition of culture.  

I don’t believe that a person’s mind can be opened or changed through a single interaction. When I think about how my own opinions were formed, it was through many small learning moments over time, or moments that made me pause and realize that there was something I didn’t understand. I would like my work to operate in a similar way. My objects and imagery are intentionally confusing and often disturbing, but the objective is to plant a seed in the viewer’s mind, and to create an image that will be remembered. My work proposes an acceptance of our animal reality, and an end to our futile, and often destructive attempts at control.  

Anna-Baldi.com

Chris Copeland Artist Statement:

I am an artist currently living in Seattle, WA. With kinetic sculpture, living systems, and drawing, my artworks mediate conflicts I observe between organisms and technological progress. Many ecologies, systems, and forms of labor fascinate me, which is why my work might place you in an office, on a bicycle, or on a farm. By connecting these different systems, I show that nothing happens in isolation. I work with many different collaborators to make these artworks possible. These collaborators include bakers, biologists, bacteria, and more. I received my BFA from the Carnegie Mellon School of Art in 2018, and I have been an Artist in Residence at the Coalesce Center for Biological Art.

Chris-Copeland.com

Race to Mars $1800 Economic Ecologies $275 Scenic View $2000 Social Structures $300 Prey $600 If Our Bodies Were States $225 Does a Wildlife Photographer Piss in the Woods? $1800 Usufruct $275 Decoys $250 Production -2.png

Contact: Gallery@makeshiftartspace.org

View Event →
Oct
2
to Oct 30

October Art Walk: We Protest

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Make.shift Gallery Presents“We Protest”

Guest Curated by Carrie Cooper

Make.Shift Gallery has invited artists, protesters and organizers to share their unique perspectives through visual art. The October gallery show called for submissions of protest signs and banners used in recent protests and rallies, as well as original art in any medium inspired by current events. Originally, we had gone to the protests and seen so many creative signs. There were signs that went beyond the usual bold lettered phrase and dove head first into fine art. Our intent for this show was to provide a platform for that content to be seen in a different setting. The show was then opened up to artists across to submit politically based art to provide an array of mediums and perspectives. 

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“Reh-PAH-roh (Reparo)”

 paint and oil pastel on wood (wand not shown).

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“Seeing Red Mike”

Oil pastel on paper

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“Writing Textiles: Unraveling and Democracy”

Ink on Paper

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Artist Statement: Art is cathartic. Getting myself off the bench, participating, discussing, reaching out to friends, educating myself and children, crying, nightmares, and donating to make this rock better.

reh-PAH-roh (Reparo)-In Harry Potter, the mending charm (reparo) fixes broken objects and is said to seamlessly repair most materials. We are the magic that is needed.

Seeing Red Mike-Inspired by the photography by Christian Cody for the GQ article "The Political Education of Killer Mike". (https://www.gq.com/story/killer-mike-the-atlanta-way) I reached out to Christian and received his blessing to remix his iconic photograph. Sgraffito by pen plotter with lines oriented by chance.

Writing Textiles: Unraveling and Democracy-These are generative art pieces rendered with a pen plotter that turns the words "UNRAVELING" and  "DEMOCRACY" into a a boteh (paisley) shape using a single, continuous thread.

Maria Jane Davenport

Maria Jane Davenport

(She/her)

“Banners on Display at Bellingham Public Library”

Secondhand Fabric

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Maria Jane Davenport

(She/her)

“Black Lives Matter Fundraising Sticker”

Digital Illustration 

$7.00 (20 available) Funds go to BLM Global Network or Local BIPOC Community based organization

Maria Jane Davenport

(She/her)

“Black Lives Matter Banner” 

Secondhand tablecloth and fabric

$100.00 Funds go to BLM Global Network or Local BIPOC Community based organization

Artist Statement: I was inspired to sew a few banners for protests and memorials in Bellingham and Seattle in June.  I used my medium and skill of sewing to upcycling a floral table cloth into a banner reading Black Lives Matter.  I also used material to sew more banners including "RIP GEORGE FLOYD" "I CANT BREATHE" and "GIVE A DAMN"   Two banners were hung at the George Floyd Memorial at the Bellingham Library.  Two others are currently hanging in my studio space.  I would love to have them hanging and visual to the public, and ultimately donated to a BLM or BIPOC organization.  
I also created (in Procreate) an illustrated version of my BLM banner and sold stickers with 100% of the proceeds going to BLM.  
I believe in standing with the BIPOC community and continuing the support and funding of the BLM movement. 

Jordan Remington

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Jordan Remington

“Respect For Black Lives”

Digital Art

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Jordan Remington

“Trail for Teargas”

Digital Art

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Bio:

Jordan Remington is a member of the Quileute Nation, a visual artist, and Seattle's premier Native American drag queen, Hailey Tayathy. Through their work, they aim to bring healing to Indigenous communities and to show everyone that Indigiqueers are still here and are stronger and more beautiful than colonized minds can imagine.

Statement for "Respect Black Lives"  

During a protest at Seattle City Hall Mayor Jenny Durkan addressed the crowd starting with a land acknowledgment of Duwamish land and then proceeded to ignore the demands of BIPOC communities. In Coastal Native communities when we acknowledge the land it is not just about recognition. It's a promise to our hosts that we will conduct ourselves in a good way while in their home. If you truly acknowledged the land you'd be putting a stop to the police killing people for simply being Black or Brown. If you truly acknowledged the land you would listen to the community. If you truly acknowledged the land you would not be pepper-spraying and tear-gassing people when they try to make you listen. Until you're ready to conduct yourself in a good way your land acknowledgment is a lie. To this day Durkan has vetoed even small cuts to SPD's budget.

Statement for "Trail of Teargas"

I created this piece to process my own feelings after experiencing the use of weapons by police during protests. As protesters were forcibly moved through the use of chemical weapons, and flashbangs in ways that felt like they were forcibly moving us simply because they could, the connections to forced relocation seem obvious. From forced relocation to reservations to segregation to outlawing of potlatches to redlining to gentrification, controlling the movement of BIPOC individuals and their ability to gather has always been apart of the colonization process.

Jordan Weeks

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Jordan Weeks

“A Nation Divided”

Mixed Media

$600

Artist Statement My artwork takes a critical look at political, social and racial issues that areoccurring currently in our society. Often focussing on uncomfortable or difficult topics, my artwork vividly expresses these issues through use of color and information. In the age of technology, the world is inundated with false or misleading information through thousands of sources at rapid speeds. Mostly from magazines and newspapers, my art is made up of clippings collaged together to provide a heightened awareness to the public. My work encourages debate and conversation about difficult topics that ultimately expose the viewers core morals and values. Expressive brush strokes and radical use of color visually enhances this notion of stepping out of your comfort zone. My artwork raises awareness and promotes conversation about the racial injustices many Americans suffer from while encouraging people to produce productive, collaborative change.

Bio:Residing in Bellingham Washington, Jordan Weeks is a mixed media artist with an interest in painting and paper collage. Exposed to the fine arts at an early age, she found pleasure in the more traditional forms of art such as painting and music. While finishing her Bachelors of Art Studio at Western Washington University, she experimented more with paper collage and found a true passion for it. Weeks has recently created a mixed media series focusing on political, social and racial issues that pertain to our current society. Her art is meant to provide awareness and truth in the age of misinformation, while also testing the boundaries of what people perceive as “right or wrong”. Weeks has been published in an annual magazine produced by the San Juan College Digital Media Art and Design department in 2015. Weeks has also been featured in multiple galleries at Western Washington University from 2016-2019.

Momma Rain

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Momma Rain

(She/her)

“Fear for Our Fathers, Brothers, and Sons”

Acrylic on Canvas

$220

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Momma Rain

(She/her)

“Captain America”

Acrylic on Canvas

$1,250

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Momma Rain

(She/her)

“Say Their Name”

Acrylic on Canvas

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Bio: Maria Buszinski has been creating art under Momma Rain for the past 10 years and following her passion to create. She currently is working primarily with acrylics on canvas but is known to create mixed media, sculpture, found art, and other unique creations that help others see the world as she does.

Maria resides in Maryland about halfway between Baltimore and Washington DC.

Sophia Edgar

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Sophia Edgar

(She/her)

“Defund The Police”

Photoshop

$10 per print (Proceeds donated to BLM Organizations)

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Sophia Edgar

(She/her)

“ACAB”

Photoshop

$10 per print (Proceeds donated to BLM Organizations)

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Sophia Edgar

(She/her)

“PIC”

Photoshop

$10 per print (Proceeds donated to BLM Organizations)

Bio/Statement: My name is Sofia Edgar, my pronouns are she/her, and I am a 19-year-old student from Colorado now living in Bellingham. I have been making art for as long as I can remember. I use art as a vessel for my thoughts and emotions but I also love using it as an outlet to express ideas and messages that inspire other people. In June and July, I recognized the impact in which the BLM movement had (and has) on my generation, and how important it is to change the racial hierarchies that are ingrained in this country. Social media in this time had become (and still is) a source of information for people to learn and acknowledge their own racial biases. I saw that people were using art to spread information and awareness. Through this and attending protests I decided to utilize my photoshop skills to make mini-posters for the movement, and potentially sell a few prints to help raise money. 


View Event →
Sep
4
to Oct 2

September Art Walk: Comfort Rhythm

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September at Make.shift is dedicated to mental healing. We are all experiencing strong trauma from the pandemic and we have all resorted to mechanisms to help us cope. Our two talented September artists invoke the power of rhythm and tactile embraces to guide them through their recovery. 

Seattle based artist, Katie Twiss is presenting a body of work that explores connection and disconnection, particularly within spaces of harm, trauma, and healing. She says “At the center of my art practice is an on-going exploration of connection. I am interested in how we bind ourselves together, how we fall away from one another, and the grey areas that exist between. What makes us continue to extend our hands out towards each other? Under what circumstances do we pull them back? I utilize images of home, landscape, thread, and the figure to examine ideas surrounding connection.” 

Artist Sara Young presents A short film, “Ode to Joy,” a narration of the rolling, uneven rhythm of one of the essential elements of life. She uses musical rhythm to create an “ode” to the great capacity of human joy. She states, “It is an odd thing to be at once rebelling against the social barriers society has created to divide people and create racial strife, while also requiring physical barriers to keep people safe and healthy. This film is a testament to the joy that can be found in this moment in our history.”

Please join us for September's virtual tour on Friday September 4th to heal and grow with us.

Katie Twiss

Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Protective Barriers”

Installation with houseplants, figure, quilt

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“You Are Enough”

Quilt

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Go To Hell”

Quilt

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“No More Brock Turners”

Quilt

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“You Are Good”

Quilt

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“You Are Not Nothing”

Quilt

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“SAFE SAFE SAFE”

Quilt

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“I Believe You”

Quilt

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“SAFE”

Colored pencil, gouache, and graphite

$300

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Different Parts of the Same House”

Ink watercolour, and gouache

$300

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Halved”

intaglio print

$75

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“When is a Home a Home”

Gouache, woodburning, ink on panel

$300

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Left Home”

Gouache, woodburning, ink on panel

$300

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“This Mountain of Grief”

Gouache, ink

$250

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Big Loss”

Gouache, ink

$250

Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“All Tied Up in Knots Over It”

Gouache, woodburning on panel

$125

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Tied To Home”

Gouache, relief print, thread, wood burning on panel

$125

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Stayed Home”

Gouache

$100

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Protection”

Gouache, thread, wood burning on panel

$125

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Between Two Mountains”

Gouache, monoprint, graphite

$250

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Katie Twiss

(She/her)

“Two Versions”

Gouache wood burning on panel

$300

Artist Statement:  At the center of my art practice is an on-going exploration of connection. I am interested in how we bind ourselves together, how we fall away from one another, and the grey areas that exist between. What makes us continue to extend our hands out towards each other? Under what circumstances do we pull them back? I utilize images of home, landscape, thread, and the figure to examine ideas surrounding connection.
My most recent work employs a combination of fiber, drawing, and printmaking to investigate the complexity of connection with regard to comfort and trauma. I use the imagery and medium of the quilt to explore the multiple meanings of comfort. Quilts traditionally carry messages of softness, of the solace of bed, of security. The construction of a quilt reinforces themes of connection—a quilt is literally pieces bound together, uses thread and fiber to create physical connections. I can embrace my friend and say, “it’s okay, you are good”; I can drape a quilt over my friend’s shoulders and, without having to speak out loud, say those same words.
It is important and healing to receive such affirmations in the wake of harm, but what does it mean to need that in the first place? That connection can be as frightening as it is supportive. Connection requires vulnerability, which can either be positively reinforced, or invite further harm. When we step into comfort, we acknowledge an injury has been done—that there is something to heal in the first place. The various text featured in my work echoes the dialectic of the discomfort within comfort - some quilts function as affirmations or vows of support, whereas others feature disquieting and uncomfortable text recognizing harm.

Bio: Katie Twiss is a mixed media artist/maker working and living in Seattle, WA. She holds a B.F.A. in Printmaking and Creative Writing from the Kansas City Art Institute. Through a combination of printmaking, painting, drawing, and fiber work, she explores connection and disconnection, particularly within spaces of harm, trauma, and healing.

Website: www.ktwiss.com

Sara Young

Sara Young

(She/her)

“Ode to Joy”

Short film

NFS

 

Artist Statement:

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Bio:

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View Event →
Aug
7
to Sep 4

August Art Walk: On The Edge of Reality

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August 2020 Virtual Art Walk at Make.Shift gallery: 

“On The Edge of Reality”

Make.shift Gallery is excited to present “On The Edge of Reality.” This is a multi-media group show with an incredibly vibrant lineup of work. This show features four regional artists with a variation of mediums, themes, and styles. 

Natalie Niblack is a multimedia artist based out of Skagit River. She uses this setting to observe the fragility of the landscape. “Her work reflects a pervading sense in accelerated change in our culture- change in the climate, environment, politics, and war. She asks the viewer to recognize the consequences of our relationship with the environment, and the choices we have collectively made that are inevitably, and perhaps irrevocably, altering the world around us.”

Elissa Buchalter is a Denver born, Seattle Painter. Her “paintings explore memory, time, and place through the reconstruction of personal experiences using collage to construct vivid and richly pigmented worlds.” She often floats between the realms of dream, imagination, reality, and memory. “Adventurous, curious and insightful by nature,

Yingri Guan pays attention to global commonalities and differences between every existence.” She is originally from China and studied in Singapore, but has now brought her talents to Seattle and the surrounding region. “By analyzing and interpreting different patterns and forms, she creates physical visualizations through generative design and digital fabrication to promote understanding about deep and hidden connections.”

Natasha Marks is a mixed media artist residing in the Seattle area. In this exhibition she “centers around the exploration of texture and pattern within pop and street culture through the unique combination of mixed media mediums such as: decorative papers, fabric, plastic, glass, acrylic paint, and live plants.”

For more information about the Art Walk or Make.Shift please visit our website at makeshiftproject.com or contact Gallery Director, Gabrielle Olson, at gallery@makeshiftproject.com.

Natalie Niblack

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Natalie Niblack

“History Lesson”

Graphite on Paper

$5,000

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Natalie Niblack

“Riot”

Oil on Wood

$800


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Natalie Niblack

Below the Waves”

Graphite on Paper

$2,000

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Natalie Niblack

“Lynchburg”

Oil on Wood Panel

$1,500

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Natalie Niblack

“Watershed”

Oil on Canvas

$5,000





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Natalie Niblack

“Funnel Cloud”

Graphite on Paper

$3,000



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Natalie Niblack

“City Explosion, Twilight”

Oil on Canvas

$2,300

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Natalie Niblack

“Oil Train Explosion, Night”

Oil On Canvas

NFS

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Natalie Niblack

“Civil Discourse”

Porcelain, wood, silkscreen, glass

$1,500

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Natalie Niblack

“Fire”

Oil on Linen

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Natalie Niblack

“Folly”

Graphite on paper

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Natalie Niblack

“McDonalds”

Oil on Wood Panel

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Natalie Niblack

“Estuary”

Oil on Canvas

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Artist Statement: My current painting, drawing, and graphic work reflect a pervading sense of accelerated change in our culture- change in the climate, environment, politics, and war.  It addresses the experience of living in the Anthropocene, where everything around us is impacted by human activity, and is a product of our collective consent and participation. I am attempting to codify the viewpoint of a world that is based on monetary value and utility, and the inevitability of complicity and participation in it. The convenience and unavoidability of driving, using plastics in almost every product, consuming foods from every ocean and continent, has recreated our landscape into one of mindless consumption and an excess of waste. While driving my diesel car over the tracks of a major railway for oil and coal near my home, I simultaneously know about the fossil fuel industry and it’s attendant callous disregard for the environment, when broken pipelines and devastated watersheds are an acceptable risk, simply collateral damage. It is this disconnect between our collective actions and their consequences that fuels this body of work. It asks viewers to recognize their participation in the climate emergency, and that the choices we have collectively made is inevitably and irrevocably altering the world around us.

Bio: Natalie Niblack is a visual artist working in drawing, oil painting, printmaking andceramics. She lives on the Skagit River on Fir Island, north of Seattle. From this viewpoint, she has been able to observe the pressure of conflicting demands on a fragile landscape since moving to Skagit Valley in 2000. Her work reflects a pervading sense in accelerated change in our culture- change in the climate, environment, politics, and war. She asks the viewer to recognize the consequences of our relationship with the environment, and the choices we have collectively made that are inevitably, and perhaps irrevocably, altering the world around us. Niblack taught visual art at Shoreline Community College from1996 to 2016. She received an MFA from Edinburgh College of Art in Scotland in 1993. She has shown her work in solo and group shows internationally, nationally and regionally.

Website: natalieniblack.com

 

Elissa Buchalter

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Drifting Wood”

Oil on Canvas

$2,500

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Big Wilma Style”

Oil on Canvas

$2,500

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Surya”

Oil on Canvas

$2,500

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“AAMANAARYUM!!!”

Oil on Canvas

$2,500

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Tourist Trapped”

Oil on Canvas

$2,500

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Beary Nice”

Oil on Canvas

$2,500

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Midnight Honey”

Oil on Canvas

$2,500

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Oh, That’s Just Greg.'“

Oil on Canvas

$2,200

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“OtterPOP”

Oil on Canvas

$2,200

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“My Words Just Blown Away”

Oil on Canvas

$2,500

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Ladybug Vortex”

Oil on Canvas

$2,500

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Welcome”

Oil on Canvas

$4,000

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Smelling Snow”

Oil on Canvas

$4,000

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Anam Cara”

Oil on Canvas

$4,000

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Elissa Buchalter

(She/her)

“Accumulate, Purify, Release”

Oil on Canvas

NFS

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Artist Statement: My paintings explore memory, time, and place through the reconstruction of personal experiences using collage to construct vivid and richly pigmented worlds. Bright tones of chroma punctuate muted modulations of subtle pastel hues in vibrating active environments which reference personal specific occurrences and locations. 

Forms layer and combine assembling new patterns that function as composites of tangible and fantasy. Through drawing I have built up a visual vocabulary of specific forms that communicate my inventive recall of deeply personal experiences. I collage these forms and characters in a process that layers and complicates, creating a space that is strangely nameable yet foreign; one that floats between the realms of dream, imagination, reality and memory. 

Memory and emotion are inextricably linked to one another. Emotional states facilitate recall of experiences. My paintings evoke and conjure the reactions and perceptions experienced through the materiality of paint application; Thin washes of color allude to cool and misty fog or thickly caked on pigment reminiscent of sticky mud. Densely packed with explosive colors and patterns the viewer experiences chaos and calm. 

My paintings capture unpredictable and unfamiliar emotions; unexpected moments of opaque shapes suddenly shifting to transparent structures or bizarre combinations of seemingly unappealing yet pleasingly unnameable colors. My paintings focus on moments of wonderful strangeness and overwhelming discomfort. I work with the past in the present to construct a future in a process of remembering, forgetting, and fabricating.

Bio: Born in Denver, Colorado, Elissa Buchalter holds an MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art and a BFA from Maryland Institute College of Art. Awards include a residency at the Burren College of Art in Ireland, a Fulbright Research Grant to India, where Ms. Buchalter studied Buddhist Thangka painting and art as a meditative tool, and the New York Studio Residency Program located in the DUMBO neighborhood of New York City. Group Exhibitions include Cranbrook Art Museum and Mercedes Benz Financial Services World Headquarters.  Her work is published in Juxtapositions Magazine, Open Doors Report on Student Exchange journal, and the Mercedes Benz Experiencing Perspectives Catalog. She has lectured  at the Fulbright South and Central Asia Conference, Poornima University, and Jodhpur Institute of Engineering and Technology. She currently lives and works in Seattle, Washington. 

Website: www.elissabuchalterpaint.com

 

Yingri Guan

Yingri Gaun

(She/her)

“Cava” Series includes 4 individual pieces

Mixed Media

$20,000 for Entire Series

Through combining mathematical formulas, cave mineral structural formation angles, mineral composition data, a series of vector images were generated through computational design. Yingri Guan visualizes cave patterns through generative designs. She transforms these data into three-dimensional installations.

Yingri Guan

(She/her)

“Diatom” Series includes 3 individual pieces

Mixed Media

$24,000 for the entire series

This piece is inspired by the phenomenal contributions diatom algae bring to our world. Diatoms are light-absorbing molecules that convert light energy from the sun to chemical energy through photosynthesis.
In the process, carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere, converted into sugar, and oxygen is released. In addition, diatoms are a major source of food for aquatic life on earth. Therefore, this piece aspires to celebrate diatoms as essentials organisms to our whole ecosystem.

Artist Statement: Adventurous, curious and insightful by nature, Yingri Guan pays attention to global commonalities and differences between every existence. By analyzing and interpreting different patterns and forms, she creates physical visualizations through generative design and digital fabrication to promote understanding about deep and hidden connections. Working at the intersection of art, design, and technology, she seeks to bring truth to the surface.

She has spent the better part of a decade actively designing products that simply delight, programming experimental media and exhibiting art. She has exhibited work in China, US, Italy, and India.

Bio: Made in China, polished in Singapore and currently living in US, Yingri Guan is a multidisciplinary artist and designer based in San Francisco Bay Area. She is currently working as a designer at Tile, Inc. When not designing, she brainstorms and makes art. She is also into traveling, reading, snowboarding and cooking.

Website: https://yingriguan.com/

 

Natasha Marks

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“The Smoke of a Factory in the Distance”

Suede, faux snake skin, outdoor linen, gesso as a hardening medium, acrylic paint

$1,500

Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“The Void”

Decorative paper, watercolor texturizer, gesso, waxed canvas, embroidery string, oil paint, acrylic paint

$1,500

Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“This is a Black Issue”

White denim, gesso as a hardening medium, acrylic paint

$1,200

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“Two Conflicting Thoughts Colliding”

Heavy body acrylic, molding paste, house paint

$1,500

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“What Happens Beneath: The Color Palette”  

Heavy body acrylic, molding paste, gold leaf, sponge

$800

Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“A Southwest Horizon”

Canvas, suede, white denim, gesso used as a hardening medium, acrylic paint

$1,500

Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“What it Looks Like to Rebuild”

Gesso, decorative paper, watercolor texturizer, acrylic paint, gold leaf

$500

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“Almost Touching”

Thick body canvas, soft denim, gesso used as a hardening medium, decorative paper, acrylic paint

$400

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“Final Point of Deterioration”

Gesso, decorative paper, watercolor texturizing medium, oil paint, acrylic paint

$1,200

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“Gemini”

Waxed canvas half circles hand stitched into stretched canvas, acrylic paint

$1,200

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“Repetition of Insanity”

Acrylic paint, Golden medium, texturizer

$400

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“Growth Within Trauma”

Ink on Cardstock

$150

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“Staring Into the Faces of Judgement”

Ink on Cardstock

$150

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Natasha Marks

(She/her)

“The Release of Judgement”

Acrylic paint, spray paint, Golden medium

$500

Artist Statement: My name is Natasha, and I am a Mixed Media artist. I like to work with a mixture of materials usually consisting of heavy body acrylic paint, spray paint, several types of fabric, decorative papers, gesso, texturizing mediums, and cement or molding paste. I am a tactile learner, and when I paint, I get messy. I like to feel the fabrics, dip them in gesso, squeeze them across canvasses, watch as paint and cement create layers and texture. I love to use my hands and often I will paint a primer on a canvas just to create a bottom layer texture that I can later paint over. I find texture and thick layers so sexy. My goal with every piece is to invoke the viewer’s desire to touch. Sometimes I will draw designs in the suede I use or add fur to the top layer of a piece, just to provoke the viewer even more. Pre-COVID when I showed my work, I brought with me a sign that said, “please touch the pieces gently”. Often time artists do not want you to touch their pieces, but I am interested in the way people can experience a piece that they are able to first see and then feel. As art is a representation of a piece of the artist, I am hoping that by being able to touch the art, viewers can more keenly feel the emotions I was working through while creating. I have found as I explore art, that I have an almost stoppable desire to use my full body to create. I have included a few pieces from a previous series of singular line drawings where I was exploring my body dysmorphia and hatred of my body. I struggled to see myself for who I really was, and I made art to represent what it looks like to be clouded by your own judgment. This new collection of abstract works is a representation of what healing looks like for me. Now I use every part of that body I so hated to create the very art I am proud of showing you today.

Instagram: www.instagram.com/jucieejelly







View Event →
Jul
3
to Jul 31

July Art Walk: Shift.Show

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July 2020 Virtual Art Walk at Make.Shift gallery: 

“Shift.Show”

Every month in Make.shift our gallery is filled with eye-catching and controversial work from local, regional and international artists, but what about the artists who work hard to make sure we are functioning at full steam? We are fortunate to have so much talent within Make.shift’s community. July is our month to showcase the visual artists that help to form us as an institution. We asked our staff, interns, board members, jury members, gallery attendants, and kzax DJs to submit work that defined their art. We’d like to show the work that they feel most embodies their themes and style to display the range of creativity within our space. Join us art walk Friday so we can show you what Make.shift is really made of!


Carrie Cooper

Jury Member

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Carrie Cooper

(She/her)

“Isolated Figure 1”

Wood, linen, embroidery floss, and wire

$350

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Carrie Cooper

(She/her)

“Isolated Figure 2”

Wood, linen, embroidery floss, and wire

$400

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Carrie Cooper

(She/her)

“Isolated Figure 3”

Wood, linen, and embroidery floss

$300

Artist Statement and Bio:

I am a mixed-media fiber artist working mainly in embroidery, but often incorporating sculpture, painting, print-making and photography into my pieces. The expressive, textural nature of needlework has a unique, communicative quality that I feel is especially conducive to contemporary artmaking. My aim is to help expand the perception of needlework - once considered a domestic craft - to the realm of contemporary art. Most of my work explores the complexity of identity and the difference between the self we present to the outside world and the one we express behind closed doors. I find inspiration in the absurdity of life. Carrie Cooper resides in Bellingham, Washington and holds a Masters in Teaching Secondary Art from Western Washington University. She has exhibited her work throughout Whatcom and King counties and is currently a juror for Make.Shift Art Space in Bellingham.

 

Spiderleg

Gallery Interviewer

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Spiderleg

(They/them)

“Echochamber”

Acrylic

$375

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Spiderleg

(They/them)

“Wild Wild Country”

Acrylic

$450

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Spiderleg

(They/them)

“Obligatory Self Portrait”

Acrylic

$300

Artist Statement:

I began painting to have a positive outlet during a really dark time of my life. My work is a mixture of moments of chance and cathartic expression. This particular piece, “Obligatory Self Portrait” is a reflection of my addictive behaviors. Once substances, now plants and gardening. I hope to portray an air of playfulness and happiness with this piece because while I have an issue with these behaviors, there are definitely worse ways for them to play out. If I one day do wake up tangled in plants, at least I was trying my best to love things that benefit us all. Also, for better or for worse, this is who I am and I am proud of that. 




Gabrielle Olson

Gallery Director

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Gabrielle Olson

(She/her)

“Squatters Rights”

Oil, acrylic transfer, caulk, and pulp

NFS

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Gabrielle Olson

(She/her)

“Stolen Jungle”

Oil, acrylic transfer, caulk, and pulp

NFS

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Gabrielle Olson

(She/her)

“Wasted Infrastructure”

Oil, acrylic, paper, caulk, and pulp

NFS

Artist Statement:

I’m focused on large scale oil paintings and mixed media collage. The themes addressed in my work usually range from wealth distribution to the displacement felt by people without homes. My work often has washed out color palettes. Vivid rust colors are the extent of brightness. I use caulk to build up layers and texture. I am unseduced by flat surfaces and I like most of my work to resemble dilapidated concrete infrastructure, so the caulk is something that is consistent in my work.

I’m originally from Seattle, the city with the third largest homeless population in the country, outranked only by New York City and Los Angeles. The rate has risen exponentially within the last decade with a 4% increase within the last year. I grew up witnessing the rough and sudden change and have seen many loved ones affected by the ever-rising crisis. I’ve seen loss and displacement and have also noticed that as the homeless population rises the more Seattle attempts to ignore the issue. My goal is to remind the country's middle class and wealthy elite of the devastation they are causing and to comment on problematic anti-homelessness rhetoric. I have relied on the guidance of artists like Anselm Kiefer and Mark Bradford so set my style and dictate my approach. I use Kiefer's concepts of tragic, abandoned spaces to let the emptiness of a once-crowded community speak. I rely on Bradford's use of unusual and anti-elitist materials to emphasize that value is not synonymous with currency.

 

Emily Campbell

Assistant Executive Director

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Emily Campbell

(She/her)

“Eggs”

Mixed Media Drawing

$50 or $120 for all 3

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Emily Campbell

(She/her)

“Toast”

Mixed Media Drawing

$50 or $120 for all 3

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Emily Campbell

(She/her)

“Orange Juice”

Mixed Media Drawing

$50 or $120 for all 3

Artist Statement:

A true escapist at heart. Emily Campbell often pulls real life content into a surrealist environment. In creating new small worlds, the viewer is met with a different take on familiars which in turn asks the question, “What do we know about what we think we know?” Emily hopes this mindset transcends the moment and sparks wonder and curiosity about the world around us.

 

Frank Stepek and Maren Stepek

KZAX DJ

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Franks Stepek

(He/him)

“Black Lives Matter”

Acrylic on Board

NFS

Artist Statement:

 I wanted to paint something to support the BLM movement I feel like we have a long way to go in supporting POC and we need to constantly remind ourselves.

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Frank Stepek

(He/him)

“Zappa in 79’”

Acrylic on Canvas

$300

Artist Statement:

 I love trying to connect art and music and what better way to do this than honor one of my favorite guitarist, sings, song writers, etc. Frank Zappa.  I know his style isn’t for everyone but there was something incredible, (if not magical) happening with him and his band around the circa of ‘79.  If only I was a little bit older I could have appreciated it in person.

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Maren Stepek

“Rainbow Land”

Acrylic on Paper

$5

Artsist Statment:

I love Rainbows and Unicorns

Maren Stepek’s Bio:

I am 8 years old and I go to Parkview Elementary

Frank Stepek’s Bio:

I have been living in Bellingham for five years.  Coming from the east coast and moving further and further northwest, the things in my life that haven't changed are my love for art and music and my connection with great venues like Make.Shift.   Frank Zappa was a true artist and a hero of mine.  1979 was, in my opinion, the height of his career.  Not everybody “gets” Zappa but if you are interested, check out “Baby Snakes” a concert he gave in 1979 where he was absolutely on fire.

 

Hannah Lewis

Volunteer Coordinator and Gallery Intern

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Hannah Lewis

“6x6 Peaches”

Watercolor and paper collage on canvas

$300

Hannah Lewis

“6x6 Pink Squiggles”

Watercolor, oil, acrylic, and paper collage on canvas

$250 each, $450 together

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Hannah Lewis

“6x6 Primary Squiggles”

Watercolor and paper collage on canvas

$300

Instagram @bangs_lewis

 

Karen Hanrahan

Jury Member

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Karen Hanrahan

“And Then There was Rape”

Mixed Media Collage

NFS (Fine Art Prints by Request)

Artist Statement:

This collage was created when I was 56 years old. It was the first collage where my subconscious revealed itself around the topic of rape. I was gang raped at the age of 17. I never told anyone. I see in this piece: shame, youth, a suggestion of force and male anatomy, and a place to hide. Sprocket holes frame a series of rape moments in time.

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Karen Hanrahan

“From Within”

Stitched Paper Collage

$150

Artist Statement:

I feel to be a vibrant effective leader that one carries equal measures of tranquility and fierceness within

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Karen Hanrahan

“Magnolia”

Photography, collage and stitching

$110

Artist Statement:

t took me a year to perfect this quilting technique and apply it to paper. I am thrilled to now add my photography to the mix. These paper quilt squares are tremendous fun to make.

Bio:

Self-taught intuitive artist Karen Hanrahan, uses a digital camera and torn magazine pages to document & narrate the challenges of her life. Her multi-disciplinary work expresses her tenacious spirit by processing personal topics such as rape, loneliness, trauma and poverty. Karen’s work is acknowledged as organic, intimate and visually engaging. Karen was a 2019 Make.Shift juror.

 

Siri Beckman

Gallery Intern

Siri Beckman

(She/they)

“Homemade Journal”

Paper, watercolor, pencil, ink, grapefruit, fig, marker, thread, and glue

NFS

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Siri Beckmen

(She/they)

“Dreaming”

Canvas and acrylic paint

$333

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Siri Beckmen

(She/they)

“Nurture”

Fabric, yarn, and thread

NFS

Artist Statement:

Hey, my name is Siri Beckmen, sometimes referred to as "cereal slick kid." I’m a local Bellingham artist originally from Minneapolis, MN. I jump from medium to medium each season, but painting, playing with fabric, and sketch booking have continued to be my favorites. Each one of my pieces begins differently. A blank piece of paper or canvas holds so much potential and I can become easily overwhelmed by the amount of ideas that could come to life; so what do I do? I start. I turn off my mind and let my authentic self come forward to create. This intuitive creating eases me into the grey of winter. Creating art is a space where I can break the rules, it has given me confident abilities in expressing and reflecting. All the bright colors in these pieces remind me to come up for sips of delicious air when I feel submerged in dark underwater caves of shame, depression, and stress. Creating makes space within my life for non-judgement. It helps me confront uncomfortability and acknowledge my ability to hold so much emotion at one time. I believe the way we perceive experiences in the world around us is really a mirror into our deepest psyche. My art is continuously an easy way for me to watch my experience leave my body and land on the canvas for what it is. 








View Event →
June Art Walk: The Work is Never Done
Jun
5
to Jul 3

June Art Walk: The Work is Never Done

Make.shift presents “The Work is Never Done,” and atemporal multimedia exhibition that guides us through a timeline of experience. In June we proudly feature five different artists using five different mediums, with themes spread throughout centuries of perspectives. All five of our featured artists are women based out of the Pacific Northwest. Some of them deal with contemporary concerns and hardships and some peek into our uncertain future.

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May Art Walk: Kids Art Walk - Beyond My Wildest Dreams
May
1
to May 29

May Art Walk: Kids Art Walk - Beyond My Wildest Dreams

Make.Shift opened an invitation to all artists in our community to create a piece of art inspired by the work of some very talented kids.  The exhibit will display these works by students and local artists side-by-side through the month of May. Every year, Make.Shift Gallery celebrates Kid's Art Walk in May. This year, we've partnered with Cedar Tree and Sammish Woods Montessories and asked 5th to 7th-grade students to create artistic renderings of their most outrageous dreams!

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Apr
3
1:30 AM01:30

MAKE.SHIFT APRIL ART WALK: Playful Creatures

For the month of April Make.Shift invites you to step outside of the gallery and into an environment that welcomes curiosity and play. Spring has sprung and it’s time to invite your inner child to Playful Creatures, a partially interactive exhibit showing a combination of local, regional, and international artists. The exhibit is focussed on spreading a spirit of playfulness and imagination. Our featured artist this month is Sophia Munic, a Tacoma based Sculpture Artist.

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