![]() ![]() This kit includes the brushes to help you transform the photos, it does not automatically do this for you. These brush files are for use with Procreate. With easy to use brushes, you can create whimsical looking portraits without any faces! Whether you're looking for a fun project for the family or a unique gift for a friend, these brushes are perfect for creating custom portraits. The second pop-up has been rescheduled from Wednesday, May 26 to Tuesday, May 25.įor more information, check out the flyer above! Continue reading NEWS GLEAMS: Vaccines, South King Co.Transform your family photos into one of a kind illustrations with the Procreate Faceless Portrait creator brushes. at the KC Fire District #20 Administration Office, individuals ages 12 and up can receive doses of the Pfizer vaccine! ![]() Beginning today, Wednesday, May 19, at 9 a.m. King County Fire District #20 Vaccine Pop-Up in Skyway - King County Fire District #20 is hosting weekly walk-up vaccine clinics in Skyway from May 19 to June 23. “And their art, whatever their art is, is an integral part of that, but it’s not the totality of their existence.” Continue reading LANGSTON Builds Funding and Support Program for Seattle Black Artists → Arts and Culture Black Artists Featured Gentrification LANGSTON Pandemic Impacts Seattle Artists Relief Fund Seattle Black Artists Aid Time-EquityĬOVID-19 Vaccination Locations & Access Options “Artists are humans, they’re workers, they have whole lives,” Tim Lennon, the executive director of LANGSTON, said during our video conference interview. But this survey doesn’t narrowly focus on the needs of the artist’s craft - LANGSTON wants to consider the “whole artist.” But first, they have a question: “What is it that Black artists need to thrive and make meaningful impacts on the city and the world?” And they’re asking Black artists in the Seattle metro area to provide the answers in an online survey by May 24, 2021. Seattle Black artists will be funded and supported, and LANGSTON, a nonprofit committed to “cultivating Black brilliance,” is building a framework to do just that. Continue reading PHOTO ESSAY: Central District’s ‘The Liink Project’ Features Local Black Businesses and Artists → #SupportBlackBusiness Black Artists Black Businesses Central District Community Featured In Her Threads Nefertiti Holistic's Photo Essay Ronnie Estoque Seeds & Steeze Stephanie Morales The Liink Project Undefined Clothing Formed by community grassroot efforts, The Liink Project is continuing to accept donations. Stephanie Morales, one of the co-founders of The Liink Project, hopes the space will be a place where local Black businesses can grow and find community in a neighborhood that has rapidly gentrified. The space will continue to be used for markets, gallery shows, and other events at other times. The venue, on Union Street and 20th Avenue, opened this past summer and features retail space Mondays through Thursdays from 12 p.m. The event featured lively music, Black art, and goods for purchase. 18, The Liink Project, a co-op retail space in the Central District, hosted a pop-up market featuring local Black entrepreneurs and artists. Continue reading ‘Packaged Black’ Sparks Conversations of Representation, Black Identity, and Cultural Resistance → Art Arts and Culture Barbara Earl Thomas Black Art Black Artists Black Creation Derrick Adams Featured Henry Art Gallery Nina Dubinsky Packaged Black “One of the things that is so exciting about this project is its origin out of mutual respect and shared conversation between these two artists,” said Henry Art Gallery curator Nina Bozicnik. Though the concept of a shared exhibition between two artists is not new, there is something special about the visual dialogue between these artists. ![]() It is a perfect mesh of works and mediums born from the two artists’ shared dialogue about representation, Black identity, and practices of cultural resistance. ![]() The exhibition brings together the brilliance of Brooklyn-based artist Derrick Adams and Seattle artist Barbara Earl Thomas. Masked visitors were greeted by warm yellow walls featuring sculptural vignettes, precisely cut paper portraits, video installations, and collages at the inauguration of Packaged Black: Derrick Adams and Barbara Earl Thomas at the Henry Art Gallery last weekend. ![]()
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