Oly Arts Fall Winter 2025 Print Edition

Contents

David Mollari Sederberg 45-Year Art Retrospective 
by Alec Clayton – page 4
Nobody does it like David Mollari Sederberg, an artist whose work is simultaneously otherworldly and grounded in reality.  You have certainly seen his otherworldly Glowhenge (2020-2021), nine brilliantly painted monoliths standing upright on the mound by the shore of Capital Lake, each lit with black light at night and each painted by a different artist. During fall Arts Walk this year, Sederberg’s work will be featured in a retrospective exhibition of artworks in various media assembled by the artist: painting, sculpture, lighted installations, and video created from 1981 to the present at the Olympia Ballroom. 

Ballet Northwest’s 55th Season 
by Rachel Benton – page 16
Ballet Northwest boldly enters its 55th Season with highly innovative, inspirational and diverse programming in store. Time flies by quickly, so  mark your calendars now and make a plan to purchase tickets for the following events:  

  • Crescendo: a one-night-only  event October 11, when dancers will share the stage with Masterworks Choral Ensemble and Student Orchestras of Greater Olympia.  
  • The Nutcracker: Olympia’s favorite December tradition that invites the whole family into a land of sweets and all others we create in our imagination.  

As we count down the days to each event, we are excited to give you an inside glimpse into everything that is in store.  

Patton Oswalt Presents Pig and McCabe & Mrs. Miller 
by Adam McKinney – page 12
If you’ve grown up loving movies, and fantasize about having a career around film, you may pursue the coveted paths (director, actor, screenwriter, special effects artist, film critic), but find that the purest expression of this love is the most straightforward one: film programmer at a movie theater. With this job, you are responsible for picking the films that get shown to the public, a natural extension of every cinephile’s instinct to show all their favorite movies to everyone they know.  

It’s a perfect fit, then, to have Patton Oswalt come through Olympia’s Capitol Theater in November, presenting two films that have the Pacific Northwest coursing through their veins: 1971’s McCabe & Mrs. Miller and 2021’s Pig

s’gʷi gʷi ʔ altxʷ The House of Welcome at The Evergreen State College Celebrates 30Year Anniversary – page 8
by Lynette Charters Serembe 

Nestled in the heart of the beautiful and lush grounds of The Evergreen State College is s’gʷi gʷi ʔ altxʷ House of Welcome, also known as the Longhouse, on the Indigenous Arts campus. The gathering place hosts many opportunities for Native artists as well as workshops providing a nurturing common ground to share art, wisdom, cultural practices and experiences which educate and empower the community. The Longhouse helps promote self-determination and cultural resilience, representing, facilitating, and nurturing Pacific Rim Native arts and culture by creating programs through grants that create and host Native arts classes. These programs connect Native artists with students and collaborators. 

The Olympia Armory Creative Campus Looks to Reconnect With Its History As a Community Hub 
by Molly Walsh – page 20
For more than three decades, a wide swath of Olympia residents has expressed interest in the creation of a community art center, with this demand recorded in nine separate City of Olympia planning documents since the late 1980s. And multiple local stakeholders, including the Eastside Neighborhood Association, City of Olympia staff, and State of Washington officials, saw potential for the Armory building as a community creative campus. In 2021, the state gifted the Armory building to the City of Olympia, with the condition that the building be turned into a community art center for at least a ten-year period.  

The building is currently closed to the public until the necessary upgrades are made. Construction is set to begin around October, with an estimated re-opening date in 2027.  

The South Sound Story Guild‘s Monthly Story Swaps and Annual “Tellabration!” Fundraiser  
by Molly Walsh – 14
On the second Wednesday of the month, the South Sound Story Guild gathers at Olympia’s Harbor House, where attendees preserve and celebrate the art of oral storytelling. Whether a funny yarn passed down through the generations, a spooky legend or the tale of a great mythological hero, the South Sound Story Guild holds space for members of the guild and the greater community to be entertained, learn something new, and share their own stories. 

Maggie Lott has been a member of the Story Guild for more than two decades, and many of the oral storytelling traditions that the group started long ago continue into the modern day, including an annual Stories in the Park event that takes place each August. Lott’s interest in oral storytelling began at a young age, when exchanging family stories at her grandmother’s kitchen table.  

Dead Man’s Cell Phone at OLT 
by James O’Barr – 19
Theater, from the beginning, has been a space for confronting death, and life’s existential questions. Shakespeare, in Julius Caesar (currently on the boards at Ashland), has much to say about both: “I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him,” quoth Marc Antony, “The evil that men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their bones.” Fast forward to the current zeitgeist, and the evil that men, mostly men, are doing, from one side of the earth to the other—climate derangement, a new ICE age, nuclear proliferation, war crimes and lawlessness from sea to shining sea—looks very much like it will have enduring if not undying consequences. 

Now comes Olympia Little Theatre’s production of Sarah Ruhl’s quintessentially quirky comedy, Dead Man’s Cell Phone, directed by Kendra Malm and Toni Holm. 


Oly Arts Now Offering Writing Classes! – page 7

Fall/Winter Live Theatre & Dance – 24

Copies of the printed version are available free of charge throughout the area at these locations:

Centralia
The Station Coffee Bar and Bistro
Gracie’s Steampunk Emporium
The Olympic Club

Chehalis
Book and Brush
Good Fork Nutrition Co.
Shakespeare & Company
Shonas food company

Lacey
Fog and Fern Coffee House
Cutters Point Coffee Lacey Blvd.
Cutters Point Coffee Ruddell Rd.
Lacey In Tune

Olympia
Archibald Sisters
Bayview Thriftway
Belleza Ropa
Browsers Books
Captain Little
Childhoods End Gallery

Olympia, continued
Compass Rose
Danger Room Comics
Doubletree Inn
Encore Chocolates
Golden Hour Tea
Govenors Hotel
Lantern Records
Last Word Books
Marriot Towneplace Suites
Meconi’s Subs
Old School Pizzeria
Olympia Food Co-op east and west
Olyphant arts supply 
Ossa Skinworks
Popinjay
Psychic Sister
Rhythms Coffee
Schwartz’s 
The Olympia Center
The Owls Nest Coffee
The Spar
222 Market Place
Wayside Cafe and Deli

Shelton
Marmo Gallery
Uraco Coffee
Zepplin Shipping and Technology Center

Steamboat
Uraco Coffee

Tacoma
Bluebeard Cafe
Compass Rose
Metropolitan Market
Tacoma Glass Gallery
The 15% Board Game Cafe
Valhalla Coffee

Tenino
Centerplace Market
Landmark Tavern
The Sandstone Cafe

Yelm
Shiplap Shop and Coffee House
Yelm Co-Op

 

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