Food & Drink

A Beautiful Love Letter to the Alaskan Way Viaduct

With the viaduct's days numbered, local artist Paul Komada creates a multimedia homage.

By D. Scully June 19, 2017

Paul-Komada_Dazzle-Viaduct_NEW-600

This article originally appeared in the June 2017 issue of Seattle magazine.

[addtoany]

Seattle artist Paul Komada’s new multimedia installation, Momument in Memory: Abstract Alaskan Way, encompasses paintings, ambient sound and chroma-key technology (think of the “blue screen” that weather people use). It’s a multimedia love letter to the Alaskan Way Viaduct, a 1950s structure whose days are dwindling as the new tunnel construction nears completion. Komada gained a local following over the past several years with his hand-knit works and projects in a variety of formats. In this installation, his paintings will be hung around the exhibition space forming an enclosure in the middle of the gallery. Audiences will see projected video and hear an ambient audio track of traffic and music along with images of the Viaduct inside the space. “It’s so enormous and imposing—also noisy. Yet people tend to forget it’s there,” says Komada, “so the exhibition is not necessarily a good-bye. Because I think for many people, it’s already gone.”

Times vary. Free. 6/1–6/29. Gallery4Culture, 101 Prefontaine Place S; 206.296.7580; galleries.4culture.org.

 

Follow Us

Seattle Podcast: Spencer Frazer: Second Act Artist Changing the World

Seattle Podcast: Spencer Frazer: Second Act Artist Changing the World

[addtoany]

Dynamic And Engaging: The Call Of Calder

Dynamic And Engaging: The Call Of Calder

As a teenager, former Microsoft executive Jon Shirley fell in love with the works of Alexander Calder. He’s now sharing his passion with the public.

For me, moving around The Eagle, taking it in outside of traditional gallery walls and interacting with it, choosing how I saw the work, was a totally new way to experience art...

The Art in This Leschi Backyard is Literally Immersive

The Art in This Leschi Backyard is Literally Immersive

One local collector’s transformed yard features a new swimming pool with a custom installation

When architect Ian Butcher signed on to design an outdoor space for a local philanthropist and art collector, it turned out to be a double dose of revisiting the past...

Longtime Seattle Artist Mary Ann Peters Opens Show at the Frye 

Longtime Seattle Artist Mary Ann Peters Opens Show at the Frye 

Peters’ first solo museum show is a testament to her decades-long career

After more than 30 years of active involvement in Seattle’s art scene, Mary Ann Peters finally has her first solo museum show...