SEATTLE, WA.- Bench Mark, a Partnership for Youth exhibition, is an exploration of architecture through space, function, and purpose. Created during sixteen after-school sessions MarchMay 2018, this collection of works traces the design thinking process students applied while considering Seattles urban environment and humans interaction with it.
Identifying the bench as focal point and unifying element of the urban environment, the ten contributing artists reveal their understanding of the many ways people use benches to interact with their surroundings. Benches offer spaces for conversation, rest, and reflection. The exhibition chronicles an experiential investigation into placemaking and how benches become the site of some of lifes most mundane as well as precious moments.
Bench Mark is co-curated by Lynn Chou, Manager of Youth and School Programs, and Negarra A. Kudumu, Manager of Public Programs, featuring the work of Abdisemed Ali, Gebre Engeda, Eva Gugsa, Tegarius Kea, John Le, Kiet Nguyen, Ngoc Nguyen, Tam Nguyen, Nurham Nuru, and Nhu-Phuong Tran. Teaching artists Laura Bartunek, John Hallock, and Jim Nicholls provided instruction in design, architecture, and 3-D modeling.
This youth program is organized by the
Frye Art Museum with support from the Associated Recreation Councils RecTech program at Yesler Community Center, Multimedia Resource and Training Institute, the Seattle Youth Violence Prevention Initiative, Therapeutic Health Services, Olson Kundig, and the Architecture Department at the University of Washington. Generous funding is provided by US Bank, Seattle Office of Arts & Culture, Windermere Capitol Hill, and Frye Art Museum members. In-kind support is provided by Gauge Design Group.