Art After-Hours: Where to Go This First Thursday

Christopher Martin Hoff, 'Totem 2', 2011.
Christopher Martin Hoff
Aug 2–25, Linda Hodges Gallery
Until his passing in March, the young Seattle plein air artist was a fixture on city street corners—stationed with an easel under an umbrella, painting photorealist snapshots of graffitied buildings and Seattle’s skyline against a dense gray blanket of clouds. He died too soon; the gallery mourns the loss with a memorial exhibition of his work (some for sale, some on loan, some unfinished).
Occupy M.I.A.
Aug 2–Sept 1, M.I.A. Gallery
Rising local filmmaker Shaun Scott co-curates a group photo exhibit about Seattle activism, past and present, covering moments of volatility (WTO), the stillness inside a mob (Occupy Seattle), and protests we might have forgotten that shaped our city. Find out more in our Fiendish Conversation with Shaun Scott.
Noah Davis: Savage Wilds
Thru Aug 24, James Harris Gallery
The Record: Contemporary Art and Vinyl
Thru Oct 7, Henry Art Gallery
Though there’s something sad about vinyl-as-artifact, the traveling exhibit (on loan from the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University) celebrates records as both inspiration and medium over a half century of modern art. Nearly 100 works by 41 artists, emerging and established, are on display—from Laurie Anderson’s hybrid violin-record player Viophonograph to Christian Marclay’s Recycled Records series.