Skip to content

A Rare Citywide Exhibition Celebrates Michael Spafford

The polarizing painter's work is on display all around Seattle through May 26

By Gavin Borchert April 24, 2018

1-mike-spafford

This article originally appeared in the May 2018 issue of Seattle magazine.

This article appears in print in the May 2018 issue. Click here to subscribe.

Even more interesting—and more fun—than the substantial list of awards on painter Michael Spafford’s résumé (from a Rome Prize to a Seattle Mayor’s Arts Award) are the controversies in his bio.

A professor at the University of Washington School of Art (from 1963 to 1994, now professor emeritus), he was tapped to paint murals in the House chambers of the Capitol building in Olympia. Installed in July 1981, the murals were instantly polarizing. Eventually, they were draped, removed, stored and reinstalled at Centralia College.

It’s hard to see what the problem was with the strongly abstracted images (OK, maybe there was a hint of a crotch), and harder to see why Spafford was given the commission in the first place, since the murals were well in line with his widely known provocative style—what Bruce Guenther describes in his forthcoming book, Michael C. Spafford: Epic Works (University of Washington Press, $35, June), as “bold, often brutal universal themes.”

This gray eminence—of which the Seattle Post-Intelligencer’s former longtime art critic Regina Hackett once said “is after the pause before slaughter, the moment of cataclysmic fusion, the reverberation after”—is now being honored with a rare triple joint exhibit at Greg KuceraWoodside/Braseth and Davidson galleries.

Follow Us

Holiday Hunt in Pioneer Square

Holiday Hunt in Pioneer Square

A daily ornament drop turns December into a neighborhood-wide scavenger hunt.

The holidays tend to bring out the kid in all of us. And if opening presents and eating too many treats weren’t enough, there’s also a scavenger hunt in Seattle’s oldest neighborhood. Pioneer Square’s Holiday Ornament Scavenger Hunt has returned for its third year. Twenty-five handblown glass ornaments—all made at Glasshouse Studio—are hidden across 25…

Chit-Chat Kids

Chit-Chat Kids

Phone a friend.

Twenty years ago, before everyone walked around with a device in their pocket, kids used to call each other on a landline—often tethered to the kitchen in their home. It was a simpler time, when parents didn’t have to worry (nearly as much) about a potential predator contacting their child. Nowadays, things are different, which…

A Plate for Pickleball

A Plate for Pickleball

The design celebrates the state’s official sport. Additional plates are on the way.

Washington served up a new license plate last week, honoring the state sport of pickleball. In the works for three years, it’s the second of seven specialty plates to hit the market since getting approved by lawmakers earlier this year. “We’re thrilled to see our efforts become reality,” says Kate Van Gent, vice president of…

Seattle-Based Agency Brings Real Voices to NBC’s New Campaign

Seattle-Based Agency Brings Real Voices to NBC’s New Campaign

DNA&STONE built the project around candid conversations to understand what audiences want from reporting.

“I turned off news altogether. I want to be able to form my own opinions. Just tell the truth.” These lines open NBC News’ new national campaign, a 60-second ad that drifts over forests, farms, neighborhoods, and cityscapes while Americans talk about how worn out they feel by the news. The landscape carries the conversation…