“Scanning the Room,” an exhibition featuring 20 Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) artists, will run May 5-28, at Vashon Center for the Arts.
Mukai’s Haiku Festival drew over 500 poem entries from adozen countries.
The goal is to provide older adults with the same creative experience they’ve been offering to kids and teens.
From Eve to Cleopatra, from Mata Hari to Monica Lewinsky, world culture has had this tendency to blame the supposed spider women.
Celebrate with the Vashon Heritage Museum, FurBall tickets now on sale, and more.
The musical tells a real-life fairy tale from Africa that touched and inspired people worldwide.
Florian Noack will perform his piano transcriptions of two classics next week at Vashon Center for the Arts.
“The Ocean of Black Water (a deeper journey),” International Haiku Day, and more.
The play follows best friends Kiyoko and Peggy, students at Seattle’s Broadway High School, from the bombing of Pearl Harbor through the end of Kiyoko’s incarceration at the Minidoka Relocation Center.
The exhibit, part of a larger partnership between environmental activists and artists, has notable ties to Vashon.
A free jazz series, an acclaimed Belgian pianist, portrait sculpture, and more.
With the pandemic affecting audience capacities, Vashon Center for the Arts decided to turn empty seats intoincentives for youth.
The power of Indigenous tradition and wisdom will flow from the other side of the Pacific Rim to Vashon’s shores.