Having departed from Bainbridge Island a half hour earlier, the M/V Tacoma, a 460 foot ferry capable of carrying over 200 cars and 2000 passengers, is about to arrive in Seattle. I’m watching from the sidewalk next to the Four Seasons Hotel downtown, a few blocks from Pike Place Market.
It’s spitting rain out there. The sky is changeable today, morphing through rain and sun-break, and back to rain again. I don’t mind – it’s a nice departure from the blank, featureless grays that typify northwest winters. I’ve just been to the Seattle Art Museum and I’m headed to Pike Place for coffee at Le Panier, with a stop along the way to take in the view.
Looking at art can have the effect of making the most mundane objects around you look new. Museum and gallery walls expand to encompass the street, and everyday objects take on the guise of “art.” Recognizing patterns, color and form in new ways, you interact differently with the world. Neurologists might say this phenomenon is an opening up of neural pathways that, once activated, start to repeat themselves in grooved loops of pleasure. OK, that’s fuzzy science, but whatever the explanation, spending time with painting and sculpture can energize the way you look at the world.
No doubt many people would recognize the sculptural quality of this construction site near the waterfront, but after studying a beautiful steel and glass Christopher Wilmarth piece at the museum, I find the industrial duct work alive with formal possibilities.
Wilmarth, a minimalist sculptor who died in 1987, bent heavy sheets of roughly finished steel and thick slabs of plate glass like you might fold a piece of cardboard, juxtaposing their contrasting properties with apparent ease. His work caught my eye at a 1970 Whitney Museum sculpture exhibit – I still have the catalog. I’d forgotten about him, so it was exciting to see his sculpture commanding the floor in a museum show about Light and Space.
Another work that stayed with me the rest of the day was a large white painting by an artist I wasn’t familiar with, Mary Corse. Her minimalist work, especially the all white painting series, doesn’t reproduce well, but it’s very intriguing to be around. Corse uses the tiny glass beads that make road signs reflective to lend a changeable quality to the light that hits and emanates from her paintings. As I walked around her paintings the surface shifted, a pleasant, meditative experience.
One painting brought to mind a Puget Sound fog, though she would reject that characterization. For her, the paintings don’t reference landscapes or anything else in the outer world. Rather, they’re perceptual tools to make us understand reality in a new way, generating “new meaning, or presence, or state of being.”
On to the market. The press of tourists is intense even in January, so we don’t dally too long. But yes, the espresso and baguette sandwich were great. Sorry you weren’t there!
One way to deal with the crowds is to go down an alley behind the buildings, across from the main market. It’s only slightly quieter, but at least I can admire the bulging brick walls and generous windows at the old buildings’ backs.
On the way home I take the camera out again when rain-slicked skies turn the street lights into compositions of intense, luscious color.

It’s been a departure for me today – no images of leaves or trees, buds or branches. A refreshing change of pace.
I love Puget Sound and the perfectly, perfect air.
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😉 One of the things I noticed early on, coming from New York, was the (relatively) clean air here.
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Yup. It is the perfect atmosphere to nap.
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Refreshing indeed. A very nice change of pace. It keeps us alive.
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Thanks Gunta! And it’s so much easier to do that kind of a day in Seattle than it was in New York.
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Oh yes!!! Though I was still very young and tougher when I did NYC! 😉
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What an amazing sky in your first photo. 🙂
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Well, it’s exaggerated – I saw the possibility and chose a setting on my camera that would magnify the drama in that sky. I don’t like to exaggerate too much but sometimes it makes sense. Thanks!
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I have no problem with that. 🙂
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Loved the post, bluebrightly… both your photos, and your thoughts of the inspiration that is inherent in the appreciation of art.
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I think of you sometimes when I’m writing a post like this. You’re a master at bringing the reader along with a subtle rhythm between images and text.
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A thoroughly enjoyable post. I particularly like the brick wall – patterns, textures, colours, history etc.
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Interesting to hear that – I hesitated to include it because it’s not quite in focus the way I’d like, so I’m glad you liked it. Seattle has lots of little alleys that are fun to check out.
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I really love this post Lynn. You are so generous, taking us along and emparting your thought processes. I admire the way you see the world! 🙂
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Generosity is something you know about – I’ve experienced it! 🙂
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A real contemplative art inspired day out for sure Lynn . loved the variety of shots and your accompanying thoughts .
All those *grooved loops of pleasure from sights and connections right down to that coffee and baguette ! SO satisfying 🙂
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🙂 thanks Poppy!
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Nice jaunt-Got me away. Yes liked your artistic transformation of “normal” things. oved the colored lights very painterly!
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🙂
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Certainly agree re art galleries and so on expanding one’s visual receptiveness – and these blurred street lights are especially good >>> good departure, Lynn! Adrian 🙂
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I liked the way those street lights came out too, so I’m glad you did –
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Love your fuzzy science stuff Lyn and thank you for providing fresh tracks through my neural pathways!
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Anytime Patti!
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