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The Fisher Ensemble

Garrett Fisher’s operas—for lack of a better term—are often mythic explorations of individuals in conflict with larger forces (previous subjects include Galileo and Sir Thomas More). But conflict is his theme, not his method; his music coexists with other arts in a harmonious balance that must be something like what Wagner was groping for when he came up with his theories of the “total art work.” Psyche, premiering this weekend, is the latest in Fisher’s series of meditative, ritualistic theater pieces, which involve dance (choreographed by his sister Christy Fisher), masks and other elaborate costuming (here large-scale puppets by Tori Ellison), and even sculpture, if you include the visual impact of Dean Moore’s lavish array of gongs and other metal percussion. Harmonium, viola, taiko drums, and six-string bass add their colors to Fisher’s intimate “orchestra.” Good Shepherd Center, 4649 Sunnyside Ave. N., 679-5914, www.fisherensemble.org. $12–$15. 8 p.m. Fri., May 16-Sat., May 17. GAVIN BORCHERT

$12-$15. Fri., May 16, 8:00pmSat., May 17, 8:00pm

Mark Morris Dance Group

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Paramount Theatre Daily from Fri., May 16 until Sun., May 18, 8:00pm

Last week, a group of scholars spent an enjoyable evening picking apart the different elements of Mark Morris’ L’Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato—the original poems by John Milton and the score that George Frederic Handel set to them; the evocative illustrations by William Blake and their analogue to the choreography; and the place that the work holds in Morris’ development. All fascinating topics, but in the end, all of them less satisfying than the dance itself. Using some of the simplest movements, Morris has his cast run and skip, slide, and sway through an ideal world. As critic and SW alum Roger Downey pointed out, Mark Morris uses steps that everyone in the audience would know, to create the sublime. Paramount Theatre, 911 Pine St., 467-5510, www.theparamount.com. $35–$75. 8 p.m. (Also: 8 p.m. Sat., May 17; 2 p.m. Sun., May 18.) SANDRA KURTZ

Psyche

Garrett Fisher’s operas—for lack of a better term—are often mythic explorations of individuals in conflict with larger forces (previous subjects include Galileo and Sir Thomas More). But conflict is his theme, not his method; his music coexists with other arts in a harmonious balance that must be something like what Wagner was groping for when he came up with his theories of the “total art work.” Psyche, premiering this weekend, is the latest in Fisher’s series of meditative, ritualistic theater pieces, which involve dance (choreographed by his sister Christy Fisher), masks and other elaborate costuming (here large-scale puppets by Tori Ellison), and even sculpture, if you include the visual impact of Dean Moore’s lavish array of gongs and other metal percussion. Harmonium, viola, taiko drums, and six-string bass add their colors to Fisher’s intimate “orchestra.” Good Shepherd Center, 4649 Sunnyside Ave. N., 679-5914, www.fisherensemble.org. $12–$15. 8 p.m. (Also: 8 p.m. Sat., May 17.) GAVIN BORCHERT

Daily from Fri., May 16 until Sat., May 17, 8:00pm

Dead Meadow, SubArachnoid Space, Whalebones, Patrol

Man, the stoners haven't had a pairing this perfect since Comets on Fire played the same night as Hempfest in '06. Whalebones, as we know, is our local hero of rootsy stoner rock. Listening to them is like sifting through some cool old dude's records at a flea market: heavy on the Crazy Horse, Band, Stones, '70s riff rock, etc. In a live setting, they fuckin' bring it, jamming on chords as if they're riding a bucking horse. Dead Meadow, from D.C., is all about oozy electric riffs, mixing the narcotic swell of Spiritualized, the blooze-choogle of Blue Cheer, and the spacier nod-off moments of the Verve's Storm in Heaven. Tonight, the two are joined by SubArachnoid Space, a Portland band specializing in heavy space-prog instrumentals that fans of Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Explosions in the Sky, Floyd, Earth, and the like would do well to check out. See what I mean? Total stoners' paradise. With Patrol. El Corazon, 109 Eastlake Ave. E., 381-3094. 7 p.m. $10 adv./$12. BRIAN J. BARR

$10 adv./$12. Sat., May 17, 7:00pm

Peter Bagge

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Fantagraphics Bookstore & Gallery Sat., May 17, 6:00pm-9:00pm

Artist Peter Bagge will show off a form of panels from Hate, his pioneering local grunge-era comic book series. Now, with kids born in that beflanneled, befuddled, pre-hiptard era entering their teen years, it’s appropriate that local shop Manik Skateboards should put graphic history beneath their Vans—is that what the kids are wearing today?—on the decks of a new line of boards. Oh, the indignity ’90s slacker hero Buddy Bradley would feel! He’d protest! He’d get angry at the desecration of his own cherished Jet City youth and memories! Then he’d probably collect beer money from all the underage skate punks and drink it with them on the curb outside 7-Eleven. He’d tell them what it was like to hear the Melvins, Mother Love Bone, and Mudhoney for the first time. (Sigh.) This event launches the new Bagge design line, and should provide an opportunity for older riders to bitch about how kids today don’t really understand or appreciate what good music is about anymore. Fantagraphics Bookstore & Gallery, 1201 S. Vale St., 658-0110, www.fantagraphics.com. Free. 6–9 p.m. BRIAN MILLER

Thee Emergency (CD release), the Valley, the Hands

With Dita Vox at the helm, Seattle garage-rock band Thee Emergency specializes in metal-punk hybrid songs that simply can't be contained. For the true Thee Emergency experience, you must see the band live, because no album can capture Thee Emergency's boundless energy. To truly benefit from Dita Vox's sultry, raw vocals, to rightfully appreciate Nick Detroit's smooth bass lines and Tom T. Drummer and guitarist Matt "Sonic" Smith's power riffs, you must do so in person—and you'll have several chances in the next few weeks. Plus, Thee Emergency's upcoming King Cobra show will celebrate the official release of Sonic, the band's first full-length record to date. And even if your home stereo only manages to capture a quarter of Thee Emergency's righteousness, tracks like "Heartbreaker" and "It's All in the Reflexes" pack a punch nonetheless. With the Valley and the Hands. King Cobra, 916 E. Pike St., 8 p.m. SARA BRICKNER

Sat., May 17, 8:00pm

Black and Tan

If you’ve been walking past ACT Theatre recently, your ears may have picked up the sound of a jazz quartet, raising the question: What’s a jazz club doing in a theater? That question stems from another one that a lot of theaters are asking right now: How do you turn your venue into a destination and your show into an event? ACT is trying all sorts of stuff, and some of the most interesting projects come from the Central Heating Lab, which has started featuring special events themed to their mainstage productions. To tie in with their production of Fathers and Sons, Michael Bradford’s smart drama about three generations of an African-American family, they’re presenting Black and Tan, a “juke joint” curated by Laura Kelley-Jahn and featuring a jazz quartet backing up local poet luminaries like Tina LaPadula, Matt Gano, and Angela Dy. Bradford’s play has some harsh twists and turns, and an evening epilogue with jazz and cocktails sounds like a great way to unwind afterwards. ACT Theatre (Bullitt Cabaret), 700 Union St., 292-7676, www.acttheatre.org. $10. 10 p.m. Sat., May 17 & 24. JOHN LONGENBAUGH

$10. Sat., May 17, 10:00pmSat., May 24, 10:00pm

Circus Contraption's The Show to End All Shows

I have to admit, those white-faced circus freaks were always a little scary. Word among the carnies was that the troupe at Circus Contraption was particularly macabre. But the 14-performer, self-producing traveling circus is lightening up in their latest all-new jaw-dropper under the big, uh, warehouse roof. The SHOW to End All SHOWS (through June 22) will feature the standard fare of the one-ring circus—aerialists, acrobalancers, jugglers, and other oddities abound. Yet the performance will follow a loose, overarching plot (something about the end of the world), proving these clowns can be more theatrical than the spraying-water-from-plastic-flowers sort. Indeed, they’re so multitalented many of them take turns playing in the Circus Contraption band, accompanying the weirdness with all-original music. In its 10th year, CC will also feature yet another first in this show (drumroll, spotlight please): They’ve brought in a professional scenic designer (Jennifer Zeyl) and costume designer (Christine Tschirgi). Now that whiteface should really creep you out. That is, until you’re doubled over laughing. Theo Chocolates, 3400 Phinney Ave. N, 442-2004, www.circuscontraption.com. $20–$25. Opens tonight. 8 p.m. Thurs.-Sat., 7 p.m. Sun. JOSHUA LYNCH

$20-$25. Every week Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., May 16 until Sun., June 22, 8:00pmEvery week Sunday from Sun., May 18 until Sun., June 22, 7:00pm

I Am My Own Wife

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ArtsWest $10-$29 Every week Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Wed., May 14 until Sun., June 1, 7:30pmEvery week Sunday from Sun., May 25 until Sun., June 1, 3:00pm

The Pulitzer- and Tony-winning I Am My Own Wife had a long and complicated road to Seattle. Originally scheduled for a slot at the Empty Space, playwright Doug Wright’s critically acclaimed work was left in limbo by the Space’s closure back in 2006. Then after a brief tussle over rights between the Seattle Rep and Arts West, the smaller company won; hence the belated Seattle premiere on Wednesday (it continues through June 1). So is the script worth all of the tussle? It depends on how compelling you find the true story it’s based on, that of a German homosexual who murdered his father during World War II, renamed himself “Charlotte,” and lived under both the Nazis and the Communists wearing women’s clothing and collecting antique furniture. (OK, aren’t you the least bit compelled?) The one-man show stars local actor Nick DeSantis in the large, but no doubt stylish, shoes of Charlotte. Arts West, 4711 California Ave. S.W., 938-0339, www.artswest.org. $10–$29. Opens May 14. 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., also 3 p.m. Sun., May 25 & June 1. Ends June 1. JOHN LONGENBAUGH

Fuco Uedo and Esao Andrews

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Roq La Rue Daily from Sat., May 17 until Sat., June 7, 1:00pm-6:00pm

Depicting strange sexual acts and fetishes, Japanese shunga art was popular during the 16th and 17th centuries. You can see traces of it today in modern anime and here in the paintings of Fuco Uedo and Esao Andrews (through June 7). Japanese artist Uedo’s acrylic-based pieces feature women exposing subtle bits of skin—an elbow here, an ankle there—as they wander through perilous landscapes. The New York–based Andrews uses oil on wood panels to create figures like one woman standing doe-eyed in murky swamp water, entangled in tentacles belonging to unidentifiable creatures. The results are dreamy yet disconcerting, mysterious and vaguely arousing. Roq La Rue Gallery, 2312 Second Ave., 374-8977, www.roqlarue.com. Free. 1–6 p.m. ERIKA HOBART

Seattle Opera

The opera world’s current big buzz is over tenor Juan Diego Florez’ performance in the Met’s production of Donizetti’s The Daughter of the Regiment; his aria "Ah, mes amis," which he encored on opening night in a "historic" moment ("historic" meaning that no one had sung an encore at the Met since aaaaall the way back in 1994); and the nine high Cs that earned him that honor. (Actually, what the aria calls for is a pair of adjacent Cs—same note, different syllable—in a phrase repeated four times, with a bonus C at the end.)

Well, on Saturday, the opening night of Seattle Opera’s production of Bellini’s I puritani, tenor Lawrence Brownlee managed a rather nice high F, a full fourth higher. A fourth is the interval between the first two notes of, for example, Wagner’s Wedding March. To get an idea of Brownlee’s feat as compared to Florez’, sing "Here" on a note at the top of your range. OK, now sing "comes the bride."

The audience jumped. Even more exciting and unexpected, though, was Seattle Opera’s ability to make something absorbing—an actual story—out of this rather thin and convention-bound opera (something the Met couldn’t manage with its Puritani, despite the presence of glamour-diva Anna Netrebko, in its movie simulcast last season). The setting is the English Civil War, the conflict is between Stuarts and Cromwellians-—not that it matters. Change a few proper names and the girl-loses-boy-goes-nuts plot wouldn’t make an atom less sense among any other pair of feuding factions—-Montagues and Capulets, Hutus and Tutsis, Microsoft and Yahoo employees.

When Brownlee’s character, Arturo, is obliged—-on his wedding day-—to run off and save the incognito Queen Henrietta, his abandoned fiancee Elvira snaps. The high-wire act of her two mad scenes—-three for those sopranos, like SO’s Norah Amsellem, who don’t seem to be fully healed when reunited with Arturo in act 3—-is the main justification for reviving the work, and Amsellem more than made it all worth the effort. She floats some very pretty high notes and also sounds secure singing them full out, though her singing does have some clarity issues, with occasional smearing and scooping in her legato phrases and fioritura. Despite that, she acts the holy hell out of the part-—she really does seem to be on some other mental plane, or planet, than the rest of the characters, in an edge-dancing, risk-taking performance of 200% commitment.

Brownlee’s singing is damn near impeccable, full of both heart and precision. His ability to make his singing seem utterly effortless—-his notes sound like they’re simply loosed rather than delivered—-is something I’ve heard only one other SO singer manage at that level, and that’s Jane Eaglen. As Riccardo, the quasi-villain who’s the other point of the triangle, Mariusz Kwiecien only has one major solo turn, so he made the most of it, with artistry and breath control up to the challenge of the composer’s endlessly unfurling melodies—-just when you think he’s bringing a phrase to a cadence, Bellini finds some clever way to extend it. The fourth principal, John Relyea, brought a bass of great splendor and warmth to the role of Elvira’s uncle.

Peter J. Hall’s full-on storybook costumes were handsome, as was Robert A. Dahlstrom’s scaffoldy unit set, though the incongruity of these two elements remained distracting throughout. Actually, the set’s unabashed utilitarianism made a pretty good metaphor for the plot-—a rack on which to hang all those fancy-dress genre pieces, the love duets and military marches, which make bel canto opera so dramatically ludicrous and so fun nevertheless. GAVIN BORCHERT

7:30 p.m. Wed. & Sat., plus Fri., May 16; 2 p.m. Sun. Ends May 17.

$25-$162. Every week Sunday from Sun., May 4 until Sat., May 17, 2:00pmFri., May 16, 7:30pmEvery week Wednesday, Saturday from Sat., May 3 until Sat., May 17, 7:30pm

Dorothy Rissman

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Fetherston Gallery Daily from Mon., April 21 until Sat., May 24, 11:00am

Much to the chagrin of her Wallingford neighbors, Dorothy Rissman began dumpster diving at Dick’s. Her frequent visits resulting in servers announcing over loud speaker, “The trash lady is here again!” Unfazed by the mockery, she foraged for weeks until she accumulated enough Dick’s Deluxe burger wrappers to sew a jacket. The garment now on display, Hair Shirt, stitches together her conflicting identity as meat consumer and environmentalist. And she’s not alone—how many of us claim we wanna save the world and actually do our part? (BTW, what’s the carbon footprint of your $200 Patagonia sweater made from old six-pack rings?) Her show “Confluence: Man and Nature” (through May 24) reflects on our consumer appetites and careless consumption habits. Rissman recycles waste to deliver a an eco-political message, and perhaps, manufacture her own atonement. Fetherston Gallery, 818 E. Pike St., 322-9440. www.fetherstongallery.com. Free. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. ERIKA HOBART

Combine: A group show of Cut Paper, Collage, and Assemblage

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BLVD Gallery Every week Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., May 9 until Sat., June 7

When he first began tagging in the ’70s, Ghost (aka Cousin Frank) would leave his girlfriend asleep in bed, take an hour-long bus ride to the subway station, and hide until the coast was clear. More than once it crossed his mind that it wasn’t necessarily normal behavior. In an interview with Underdog Studios, he recalls, “I’m asking myself, ‘What the fuck are you doing? People are going to the prom, living their lives and shit… you’re sitting in the fucking weeds, waiting to write on a train.’” Ghost emerged as an important early player in New York’s graffiti art movement, later making him public enemy number one for mayor Rudy Giuliani’s “quality of life” campaign. This exhibition of his new work (through May 4) reflects the same hurried graphic improvisation that was required of Ghost decades ago: deformed letters, spontaneous bursts of color, and underground comics references containing sly social satire. Bulging eyes and bold signatures distinguish most of his pieces; they smugly defy the scorn and censure he has constantly faced outside the gallery. BLVD Gallery, 2316 Second Ave., 448-8767, www.blvdart.com. Free. 1 -6 p.m. ERIKA HOBART

Busytown

What year is it is in Busytown? Its population of cats, dogs, lions, bears, and worms dress like peasants and live in Victorian houses, but also fly around in airplanes and perform X-rays on each other. This world premiere (don’t mock the term, Longenbaugh!) radiates with simple, silly joy while bringing to life the impossible physics and interspecies harmony of Richard Scarry’s world. The breezy, confident cast dances and sings their way through a catchy mishmash of Tin Pan Alley and doo-wop numbers (by Michael Koerner, with lyrics by NPR regular Kevin Kling, who also wrote the script), and mug it up with inspired bits of physical comedy. Highlights of the latter include a squad of pig firefighters demonstrating, in rapid-fire succession, a half-dozen terrible ways to carry a ladder. The pace never lags, though there could probably be a bit more audience participation, especially given an audience that keeps up a continuous low murmur of commentary anyway. The perfect age to see this show probably ranges from 3 1/2 to 6, but older siblings are also likely to have a good time, even if they won’t admit it. Scandalized by perceived "babyishness," my own 8-year-old roommate had to be dragged to this show ("I’m not going to clap," she warned), but was observed laughing, smiling, and exhibiting other clinical signs of pleasure. Apparently even prolonged exposure to Zac Efron doesn’t make you immune to the guileless, low-key charms of Busytown. DAVID STOESZ Mostly 7 p.m. Fri., 2 & 5:30 p.m. Sat.-Sun., but double-check the Web site for the exact schedule. Ends June 15.

$17-$33. Every week Friday from Fri., April 25 until Sun., June 15, 7:00pmEvery week Saturday, Sunday from Sat., April 26 until Sun., June 15, 2:00pmEvery week Saturday, Sunday from Sat., April 26 until Sun., June 15, 5:30pm

Cirque du Soleil

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Marymoor Park $55-$210 Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday from Thu., April 24 until Sun., June 1, 8:00pmEvery week Friday, Saturday from Fri., April 25 until Sun., June 1, 4:00pmEvery week Friday, Saturday from Fri., April 25 until Sun., June 1, 8:00pmEvery week Sunday from Sun., April 27 until Sun., June 1, 1:00pmEvery week Sunday from Sun., April 27 until Sun., June 1, 5:00pm

Montreal-based Cirque du Soleil is bringing another big-top-on-LSD production to the Eastside (through May 25), this time telling the story of a clown in some kind of ethereal limbo watching his own theatrical funeral procession in Corteo. (Is a dead clown more or less terrifying for coulrophobiacs?) His buddies and ex-lovers pay their respects in acts both poignant and comedic acts—including a duo of “little people” who perform ballet on a vertical bar set on a pivoting platform’ a man with unnervingly good balance who climbs ladders that lean on nothing but air; and a clowness floating on six enormous helium balloons. As usual, Cirque du Soleil is the master of amassing acrobats who are really, really, ridiculously good at really, really ridiculously peculiar talents, such as whistling, teeterboarding, and rolling around in metal rings like revolving Vitruvian Men. It’s an incredible showcase of human discipline (and provocatively ornate costumes). I have never left a performance without feeling sensory overload. Marymoor Park, 6046 W. Lake Sammamish Parkway N.E., Redmond, 800-678-5440, www.cirquedusoleil.com. $55-$210. Opens April 24. 8 p.m. Tues.-Thurs, 4 & 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat., 1 & 5 p.m. Sun. Must end June 1. SARA NIEGOWSKI

Fathers and Sons

Unlike some of Michael Bradford’s contemporaries, whose attempts to address a variety of social issues leave the audience overwhelmed, Bradford’s Fathers and Sons is a tribute, albeit a depressing one, to the power of the theater. Though it’s billed as an exploration of what it means to be a man, the play also tackles love in a romantic but complex way and war in a straightforward yet gut-wrenching way. After Marcus Goodwater (Reginald Andre Jackson) inadvertently loses his son at the park, his wife Yvette (Tracey A. Leigh) rages off to her mother’s, insisting that Marcus kill everyone he sees until he finds her baby. His formerly non-communicative, drug-addicted father, Leon (William Hall Jr.), chooses this moment to fly in and reconcile their relationship, but he’s haunted in turn by the ghost of his own father, Bernard (Wilbur Penn). Leon is sure of his mistakes but unsure how to fix them, and Bernard seems sure he hasn’t made mistakes, though no one else would agree. While time shifts between the present, where Marcus deals with his father and searches for his son, and the past, where we see the budding romance of Marcus and Yvette, Fathers and Sons maintains nonstop, fluid motion. BRENT ARONOWITZ Mostly 8 p.m. Fri., 2 & 8 p.m. Sat., 2 & 7:30 p.m. Sun., 7:30 p.m. Tues.-Thurs.; double-check Web site for exact schedule. Ends May 25.

$10-$55. Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday from Tue., April 29 until Sun., May 25, 7:30pmEvery week Friday from Fri., April 25 until Sun., May 25, 8:00pmEvery week Saturday from Sat., April 26 until Sun., May 25, 8:00pmEvery week Sunday from Sun., April 27 until Sun., May 25, 7:30pm

Living Dead in Denmark

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Theater Off Jackson Daily from Thu., May 15 until Sat., May 17, 8:00pm

Some people know wine and cheese. I know zombie movies. And now—zombie theater. Qui Nguyen’s Living Dead in Denmark (through Sat., May 17) features local sketch-comedy troupe the Pork Filled Players in a post-apocalyptic, zombie-filled future. (Zombies and the future, they go together.) The Danes here attempt to fend off human extinction by enlisting their own zombie army: Shakespeare and his fiercest female creations, which of course include the totally bad-ass zombified Lady Macbeth. A battle ensues between well-read and well-fed zombies to determine who will rule Denmark. Let’s hope it’ll be made into a movie. Theatre Off Jackson, 409 Seventh Ave. S., 340-1049, www.theatreoffjackson.org. $13–$15. 8 p.m. ERIKA HOBART

Medea Knows Best

Major props to Nebunele (“little crazies”) Theatre for their major prop: a giant TV screen, complete with volume control, through which characters hopped to enter the play’s Pleasantville-esque reinterpretation of ancient Corinth. Jason (Laurence Hughes) and Medea (Heather Persinger), sans Golden Fleece, vault into Corinth and are greeted by three sinister, singing Stepford Wives, who cheerfully assure us they “don’t have sex, just babies.” Jason inevitably falls to the charms of a lullaby moon (Davie-Blue) and the sturdy cross-stitches of “Corinth, Inc.” begin to fray. Local co-playwrights Alissa Mortenson (also one of the wives) and Claytie Mason tune Euripides’ tenuous sympathy for the hell-hath-no-fury stereotype of a woman scorned at a higher pitch by shredding the myth of a quiet town and a happy marriage one ’50s cover song at a time. JENNA NAND 8 p.m. Thurs.-Sun. Ends May 25.

$10-$15. Every week Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Thu., May 8 until Sun., May 25, 8:00pm

The History of Fashion in Flight

“If the airline industry had a baby book, 1930 would surely be an important page,” the Museum of Flight tells us. It’s because that year, Boeing Air Transport hired eight young nurses to fly as cabin attendants—and the rest is his (and her-)story. Today the museum unveils their extensive flight attendant uniform collection (who knew it had one?!) for this temporary exhibit that’s going to thrill fashion and costume buffs, or anyone with a fancy for mid-century kitsch. From the jaunty pillbox hats and sleek boots of the ‘50s and ‘60s to the onslaught of taupe and sensible loafers later on, it’s incredible to think of how women, and their roles in the workforce, evolved along with the fashions. In “The History of Fashion in Flight”, a dozen complete uniforms are showcased, representing several airlines and dating from the ‘30s to the ‘90s. Prepare for “ooh”’s, “aah”’s, and maybe even some groans from those who know that sometimes it’s “vintage” for a reason. Museum of Flight, 9404 E. Marginal Way, 764-5720. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Daily. Through June 2. RACHEL SHIMP

Daily from Sat., February 9 until Mon., June 2

Ron van der Ende: Motor Memory

Dutch artist Ron van der Ende, who was born in Delft (home of the famous blue porcelain dishware), here makes his U.S. debut. “Motor Memory” renders manufactured machines as oversized, hand-wrought bas-relief figures. Those on display include a Boeing 727, the S.S. Roosevelt (the schooner used for Robert Peary’s historic but ill-fated North Pole expedition), and two Citröen DS automobiles (those beautifully streamlined and iconic French sedans with their adjustable hydraulic suspension). The title of this show (through June 10) refers both to the motor-powered objects being modeled and van der Ende’s time-intensive manual recreations of same. His fragile reproductions of vintage vehicles are made of balsa and scrap wood. Yet in a gallery, free from rust, they may outlive their inspirations. OkOk Gallery, 5107 Ballard Ave. N.W., 789-6242, www.okokgallery.com. Free. 6-10 p.m. ADRIANA GRANT

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Sat., May 10 until Tue., June 10

Quickies, Volume 9

The latest in Live Girls!’ raucous theater series dishes up six short new plays by up-and-coming women writers. Bounding gleefully from ethereal suburban creepiness to sweet and goofy love, from unsettling memories to hilarious parody, these riveting and imaginative tales pack a full-course meal into a flavor-packed sampler of strong contemporary work. An expecting couple settles into the perfect neighborhood, only to discover the terrible dark price they must pay the local Elder God in Lisa Romero’s Yog Sothoth. In Your Roaring Blood, Catherine Trieschmann tells a tender story of a precocious backwoods girl, shipped off to an arranged marriage, who teases a boy at the train station with kisses and her sweet tales. Two sisters share a brief moment from their busy schedules, but a half-revealed memory spins their comfortable lives into breathless uncertainty, in Allison Moore’s A Little Test. Finally, Kristina Sutherland’s Hardy Boys “solve” the “mystery” of a stolen Egyptian statue, escaping danger with wits, dumb luck and their fat friend. Host Shermona Mitchell reanimates the stage between each piece with quizzes, contests, and the “alternate talents” of the cast and crew. NEIL CORCORAN 8 p.m. Fri., 4 & 8 p.m. Sat. (Industry night, pay-what-you-can, is Mon., May 19.) Ends May 24.

$5-$15. Mon., May 19, 8:00pmEvery week Friday from Fri., May 2 until Sat., May 24, 8:00pmEvery week Saturday from Sat., May 3 until Sat., May 24, 4:00pmEvery week Saturday from Sat., May 3 until Sat., May 24, 8:00pm

S2

In Edward Mast’s futuristic play, the future looks much like the present, except that people wear funny clothes and talk like robots. The political turmoil of S2 is not so much a vision of what’s to come, but rather an amalgam of events that have already happened. Although Mast seems to be frustrated with the modern capitalistic military-industrial complex of an unnamed world superpower, the setting—a developing country under attack after its refusal to continue sugar production—brings to mind most clearly the United Fruit Company and the Banana Massacre of 1928. As any cynic or conspiracy theorist will tell you, civil liberties will soon be out the window entirely, quite possibly leading to the apocalypse. And the situation for homosexuals, or sodomites as the robot-people call them, is just as dismal as ever. One of those sodomites is Slate, a 14-year-old prostitute whose lover is murdered at the hands of the money-driven global hegemony. Slate vows revenge, but he’s interrupted when a power-and-sex-crazed female representative of said country tortures him, thus turning him straight. The play might tragically end there, but he soon has sex with a woman, remembers he’s gay, and manages to continue on his mission. BRENT ARONOWITZ 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat. Ends June 7.

$5-$12. Every week Friday, Saturday from Fri., May 9 until Sat., June 7, 8:00pm

Seattle International Children’s Festival

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: The Seattle International Children’s Festival (through Sat., May 17) isn’t just for kids. In fact, if your child is whining about seeing cool music acts (including Reem Kalimi and women drummers from Guinea), stick Raffi on the CD player and hire a babysitter. If they complain about being deprived of their video games and TV for the day, stick Hannah Montana into the DVD and let their brains rot while you go check out Puppentheater Halle’s delicate retelling of the Grimm tale King Thrushbeard, using unique puppets crafted out of mud and sticks; or the whirlwind antics of Circa, who promise “46 circus acts in 45 minutes.” And only if they’re very, very good should you consider taking them to see Italy’s Teatro di Piazza o d’Occasione’s Dream Carpet, a storytelling experience that marries the form of a Japanese garden with interactive technology that creates images and sounds, first from a dancer, then from members of the audience. Why wasn’t the world this cool when I was a kid? See www.seattleinternational.org for full schedule and details. Seattle Center, 325-6500. $9.50–$45 (four-show pass). 10 a.m. JOHN LONGENBAUGH

Daily from Thu., May 15 until Sat., May 17, 10:00am

United Artists Retrospective

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SIFF Cinema Daily from Wed., April 30 until Wed., May 21, 7:30pm

Through May 21, repertory series honors the studio founded in 1919 by icons of the silent movie era (Chaplin and Pickford among them). This week's titles include The Night of the Hunter (Wed.), a Billy Wilder double-feature of Some Like It Hot and The Apartment (Sun.), and Scorsese's love letter to The Band, The Last Waltz (Tues.). See SIFF Web site for full schedule and details. (NR) SIFF Cinema, 321 Mercer St. (McCaw Hall), 448-2186, www.siff.net. $85-$100 (series), $5-$10 (individual). BRIAN MILLER

6th Day Dance

Their show "Burden" explores issues of life and death.

$12-$15. Sat., May 17, 3:00pmSat., May 17, 8:00pm

Cappella Romana

Choral music from Cyprus, reflecting both Greek and Latin influences.

$15-$30. Sat., May 17, 8:00pm

Inside the Music

This innovative piano recital series, combining visual art and music, closes its season with music from Spain played by Geisa Dutra.

$9-$15. Sat., May 17, 6:00pm

Ten Grands

Grand pianos, that is, playing solos and ensemble pieces in a rainbow of styles.

$36-$120. Sat., May 17, 8:00pm

UW Ethnomusicology Concert

Always the most eclectic lineup of the year, this concert includes xylophone music from North Ghana, Mongolian horse-head fiddle music, the UW Steelband, and more.

$5. Sat., May 17, 7:30pm

Cory Doctorow

The police state clamps down on youth in his young adult novel Little Brother. (Also: Ravenna Third Place, 7 p.m. Tues. May 20.).

Sat., May 17, 7:30pm

Jay Inslee

The congressman fights global warming with Apollo’s Fire: Igniting America's Clean-Energy Economy.

Sat., May 17, 6:30pm

Book -It

A Jon Scieszka double-feature: The True Story of the Three Little Pigs and The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales.

Free. Sat., May 17, 2:00pm

Open Box

A monthly open-mike session for playwrights.

$3. Sat., May 17, 4:30pm

Brett Dennen, Mason Jennings, Missy Higgins

all ages

$25. Sat., May 17, 7:00pm

Das Llamas, Denelian, Reverse Dotty and the Candy Cane Shivs, Le Concorde

$6. Sat., May 17, 8:30pm

Fat Dog Heavy, Salmon Skin, Max Gross Weight

Sat., May 17, 9:00pm

Girl4Girl Uniform Night with DJ Shortee

$12. Sat., May 17, 9:00pm

Girlyman

$15. Sat., May 17, 7:00pm

Graffiti Rock with the Physics, Party Time, Phil in the Blank

$5. Sat., May 17, 10:00pm

Greta Matassa Quartet

$15. Sat., May 17, 8:30pm

Harbor Rats, Sugarcane Mutiny (CD release), Ordinary State

Sat., May 17, 9:00pm

Island-Style Cooking with an Italian Flavor

A cooking class focused on the Italian isle of Sardinia. The menu for this morning class features such Mediterranean favorites as seafood, pecorino cheese, and aromatic saffron. Call ahead for specific menu details.

$50. Sat., May 17, 9:00am-10:30am

Miguel Migs with Petalpusher, guests

$15 adv. Sat., May 17, 9:00pm

Opus 7

This choir welcomes spring with music by Britten, Gershwin, and the winners of their annual Student Choral Composition Awards.

Sat., May 17, 8:00pm

Rose City Kings, Kolvane

$12. Sat., May 17

Saturday Family World Music Party

Sat., May 17, 2:30pm

School of Rock play Pink Floyd’s “The Wall”

$5. Sat., May 17, 1:00pm

Skinlab, Subjekt2change, Funeral Age, Die by Day, Gift of Prophecy

all ages

$15 adv. Sat., May 17, 6:30pm

Slim Pickins,Los Flacos

Sat., May 17

Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin, Port O'Brien

all ages

$10. Sat., May 17, 7:30pm

Stanton Moore Trio featuring Wil Blades & Wil Bernard

$15 adv./$17. Sat., May 17, 9:30pm

Steel Tigers of Death (CD release), the Coloffs, Flux Capacitors

$5. Sat., May 17, 9:30pm

Sunday Night Blackout, Razrez, Skelator, the Valkyries

Sat., May 17, 9:00pm

Ten Grands

Sat., May 17, 7:00pm

The Posies 20 Year Anniversary/CD release with Preston School of Industry, Dear John Letters and guests

$12. Sat., May 17, 8:00pm

Trolls Cottage, Jerry Joseph Band

$10. Sat., May 17, 9:00pm

Ubik, guests

$5. Sat., May 17, 9:00pm

Wright/Grasso Quartet (CD release) (7 p.m., $7); Paul Harding and the JuJu Detective Agency (9 p.m. $10), Special O.P.S. (11 p.m., $6)

International Ballet Theatre

Giselle, starring Natalia Toriashvilli and Yuri Andreev from the St. Petersburg State Academic Theatre of Ballet.

$20-$45. Thu., May 15, 7:30pmFri., May 16, 7:30pmSat., May 17, 2:00pmSat., May 17, 7:30pmSun., May 18, 2:00pm

Seattle Pro Musica

He's known to the mainstream for his barnstorming piano music, but choral singers revere Rachmaninoff for his gorgeous and moving Vespers. Karen P. Thomas conducts.

$22-$32. Fri., May 16, 8:15pmSat., May 17, 8:00pm

Aedonis

Music by gay composers from this men's vocal ensemble. At Trinity Lutheran Church, 6215 196th St. S.W., Lynnwood, 3 p.m. Sun., May 11; Holy Rosary Catholic Church, 4139 42nd Ave. S.W., 8 p.m. Sat., May 17; and Queen Anne Christian Church, 1316 Third Ave. W., 3 p.m. Sun., May 18.

$10-$20. Sat., May 10, 7:00pmSat., May 17, 8:00pmSun., May 18, 3:00pm

Cascadian Chorale

Music of several centuries. At St. Margaret's Episcopal Church, 4228 Factoria Blvd. S.E., Bellevue, 7:30 p.m. Sat., May 17, and at Plymouth Congregational Church, 1217 Sixth St., 2:30 p.m. Sun., May 18.

$12-$17. Sat., May 17, 7:30pmSun., May 18, 2:30pm

Jesse Brown: The Village Green

A show of drawings and paintings by this artist/designer and the Creative Director at Artworks. A last hurrah before he moves to Chicago. Free. Mon.-Sun. Ends June 12.

Daily from Sat., May 10 until Thu., June 12

Seattle Occultural Music Festival

Two weekends of "esoteric, mystical, and psychoacoustic musics" open with a performance by Robin Holcomb, Phillip Arnautoff, and Michal Szostalo at Gallery 1412, 1412 18th Ave. E. Saturday's show, May 17, is at Dearborn on Woodland, 4131 Woodland Park Ave. N.; the Fri., May 23 show is at the Underground Event Center, 2407 First Ave., and Sat., May 24 is at the Jewelbox Theater at the Rendezvous, 2232 Second Ave. See Web site for complete schedule.

$5-$15. Fri., May 16, 8:00pmSat., May 17, 8:00pmFri., May 23, 8:00pmSat., May 24, 10:30pm

OBViouS: Object Based Video Sculpture

A five-artist show of sculptural work informed by video, curated by Steven Vroom. With work by Tina Aufiero, Casey Cahoy, Joseph Gray, Caroline Knapp, and Tony Weathers. Opens Thurs., May 15 6–9 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Free. Ends June 30.

Every week Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., May 15 until Mon., June 30

Aida

Scooping the Seattle Opera's August production with the Elton John/Tim Rice version. Opens May 14. 8 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 2 p.m. Sun., also some Sat. matinees and Tues. & Sun. evenings; see Web site for complete schedule. Ends July 6.

$20-$55. Every week Sunday from Sun., May 18 until Sun., July 6, 2:00pmEvery week Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Wed., May 14 until Sun., July 6, 8:00pm

The CREATION Project Showcase

The Central District Forum presents two nights of new spoken-word, theater, and dance works.

$10-$15. Fri., May 16, 8:00pmSat., May 17, 8:00pm

Defending the Caveman

Ben Tedder brings the longest-runing solo show in Broadway history back to Kirkland. [Read Longenbaugh's take on the show here.].

$34-$36. Wed., May 14, 8:00pmThu., May 15, 8:00pmFri., May 16, 8:00pmSat., May 17, 5:00pmSat., May 17, 8:00pm

The Gold Show

An "intimate, interactive" cabaret "with an erotic theme." (Meet by 9 p.m. at the office at 406 Dexter Ave. N. and you will be escorted to the performance space.).

$30. Sat., May 17, 9:00pmFri., June 13, 9:00pmSat., July 19, 9:00pmFri., August 8, 9:00pm

A Little Night Music

The BCC drama department presents Sondheim's operetta about mismatched, but eventually enlightened, lovers. 8 p.m. Fri., May 16-Sat., May 17 and Wed., May 21-Sat., May 24; also 2 p.m. Sat., May 24.

$10-$12. Fri., May 16, 8:00pmSat., May 17, 8:00pmWed., May 21, 8:00pmThu., May 22, 8:00pmFri., May 23, 8:00pmSat., May 24, 2:00pmSat., May 24, 8:00pm

Naked Ladies

Annex Theatre premieres a screwball-flavored play by the comedy duo of Paul Gude and Ben Laurance. Opens May 16. 11 p.m. Fri.-Sat. Ends May 31.

$5-$9. Every week Friday, Saturday from Fri., May 16 until Sat., May 31, 11:00pm

Over the River and Through the Woods

Nick gets a great job offer in Seattle, but his family wants him to stay in Joisey, in Joe DiPietro’s comedy. Previews May 14-15, opens May 16. 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Thurs., 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat., 2 p.m. Sat. Ends June 14.

$10-$33. Every week Wednesday, Thursday from Wed., May 14 until Sat., June 14, 7:30pmEvery week Friday from Fri., May 16 until Sat., June 14, 8:00pmEvery week Saturday from Sat., May 17 until Sat., June 14, 2:00pmEvery week Saturday from Sat., May 17 until Sat., June 14, 8:00pm

Akeelah and the Bee

Eleven-year-old Akeelah (Keke Palmer) talks all “ain’t” and “giiiiiiiiiirl, please” on the scrappy streets of south L.A., but she progresses up the Scripps National Spelling Bee with mixed feelings. Her deceased father inspired her fascination with words, but her eternally hardworking mother (Angela Bassett) doesn’t see any use in the competition. The plot of this Starbucks-endorsed 2006 movie is as recycled as the cardboard cup holding my grande non-fat chai latte. Yet I found myself waiting impatiently for the seasoned Laurence Fishburne, playing her tutor, to run through his maudlin lines so Palmer could get back to doing her sassy, sweet spelling thing. (Note: Saturday show at 4 p.m.) (PG) SARA NIEGOWSKI.

$5. Daily from Thu., May 15 until Sun., May 18, 7:00pm

Aladdin

Sprouts Children’s Theatre presents Stan Gill and Cathy Domeck's original musical. 7 p.m. Fri., 1 & 3 p.m. Sat.-Sun. Ends May 17.

$8.75. Every week Friday from Fri., May 2 until Sat., May 17, 7:00pmEvery week Saturday, Sunday from Sat., May 3 until Sat., May 17, 1:00pmEvery week Saturday, Sunday from Sat., May 3 until Sat., May 17, 3:00pm

The American Pilot

In David Greig's play, the title character parachutes into, and causes conflict in, a village in an unnamed country. [See review here.] 8 p.m. Thurs.-Sat. Ends May 24.

Pay-what-you-can Thurs., $15-$18 Fri.-Sat. Every week Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., April 24 until Sat., May 24, 8:00pm

Annie Get Your Gun

Seattle Musical Theatre presents Irving Berlin's musical. 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat., 2 p.m. Sun.; also 7:30 p.m. Thurs., May 23. (No show May 24.) Ends May 25.

$25-$35. Thu., May 22, 7:30pmEvery week Friday, Saturday from Fri., May 9 until Sun., May 25, 8:00pmEvery week Sunday from Sun., May 11 until Sun., May 25, 2:00pm

Dorothy Rissman & Tim Forcade

Objects on view include Rissman’s hair shirt made from Dick’s burger wrappers and Forcade’s photograph of a mysterious burning object, set on a lovely grassy field. Free. Tues.-Sat. Ends May 24.

Fri., April 18, 5:00pm-7:00pmEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., April 18 until Sat., May 24

Barton Fink

Meh. The Coen brothers' 1991 hotel of Hollywood horrors has always left us cold. All clogged drain pipes and claustrophobia, the film stars John Turturro as an eggheaded playwright (similar to Clifford Odets), who's not too proud to decline a lucrative screenwriting job. John Goodman is the mysterious, cheerful stranger who befriends him. There's a lot of venom directed toward Tinsel Town (where the Coens have generally disdained to work), made bearable by occasional moments of slapstick. (R). BRIAN MILLER.

Daily from Wed., May 14 until Sun., May 18, 9:45pm

Anna Skibska: Follow the Line, the Path to Form

Ribbons of glass filament constructed into a site-specific installation piece. $7. Tues.-Sun. Ends September 21.

Fri., May 2, 6:30pm-7:30pmEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Tue., April 8 until Sun., September 21

Mandy Greer: Dare alla Luce

The artist who awed Bumbershoot-goers with a unicorn bleeding crocheted red entrails makes an "earthly and celestial paradise" at the museum, for her largest installation to date. $7. Tues.-Sun. Ends Aug. 4. RACHEL SHIMP.

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday from Tue., May 6 until Mon., August 4

Stephen Rosen John Chervinsky: Spatial Relations

Photographs of buildings, and a visual plan for a time machine. Wed.-Sat. Free. Ends May 24.

Every week Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Wed., April 16 until Sat., May 24

Big Love

Charles Mee's "explosive" updating of Aeschylus. [See review here.] 8 p.m. Thurs.-Sat., 2 p.m. Sun. Ends May 17.

$12-$20. Every week Sunday from Sun., April 27 until Sat., May 17, 2:00pmEvery week Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., April 24 until Sat., May 17, 8:00pm

Black Panthers Film Series

Films document the Black Panther movement, connected to the current exhibit of photographs by Stephen Shames. (NR) Odegaard Library, Room 220. Free. Mon.-Sun. Ends May 19.

Daily from Mon., April 7 until Mon., May 19, 12:00pm-1:00pm

Blood Squad Lives

Improvised horror movies from this gore-loving trio. 10:30 p.m. Sat. Open run.

$10. Every week Saturday, 10:30pm

Bobby Hutcherson Quartet with Nicholas Payton

$27.50. Daily from Thu., May 15 until Sun., May 18

The Boys Do The Girls

A cabaret featuring the music of Judy, Ella, and Barbra (if you have to ask about last names, maybe this show's not for you). Dinner 6:30 p.m., show 8 p.m. each Sat. Ends May 17.

$50 w/dinner, $20 show only. Every week Saturday from Sat., April 26 until Sat., May 17, 8:00pm

Brian Nova Quartet with special guests

free. Every week Friday, Saturday

Buckaroo Blues

$5. Daily from Fri., May 16 until Sat., May 17, 9:00pm

Burlesque Behind the Pink Door

A weekly naughty cabaret.

$12. Every week Saturday, 11:00pm

Gregory Glynn: Higher Ground

A solo exhibit by Northwest sculptor Gregory Glynn, who crafts sculptural work from salvaged trees. Opens Thurs., May 15, 6-8 p.m. Free. Tues.-Sat. Ends June 28.

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., May 15 until Sat., June 28

Chase, Julie Cascioppo

free. Every week Saturday, 7:00pm

Club V '80s Party

$6. Every week Saturday

Comedy Underground

Beginning May 16, the long-running humor hangout is closed for remodeling UFN.

$6-$15. Daily

Cornish College of the Arts Art & Design BFA Exhibitions

Two concurrent exhibitions showing work by graduating art and design students. Art Department Exhibition: Terry Avenue Studios at 2000 Terry Ave. Design Department Exhibition, Cornish Main Campus Center, Floor 1, 1000 Lenora St. Free. Tues.-Sat. Ends May 20.

Thu., May 8, 5:00pm-9:00pmEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., May 9 until Tue., May 20

Eroyn Franklin and Jenene Nagy: Landmark

Director of Portland’s Tilt Gallery, Jenene Nagy shows colorful, abstract map sculptures. Eroyn Franklin’s maps are notable for what they leave out: a map of New Orleans shows “only those streets remaining that touch Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi River.” Opens Sat., May 17, 6-9 p.m. Free. Sat. & Sun. Ends June 8.

Sat., May 17, 6:00pm-9:00pmEvery week Saturday, Sunday from Sat., May 17 until Sun., June 8

Group Exhibit

Pyrographs by Etsuko Ichikawa, iron sculpture by Kathleen Rabel, and gorgeous images of bike works, in ink on Mylar by Katina Huston. Free. Tues.-Sat. Ends May 31.

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., May 1 until Sat., May 31

The Diary of Anne Frank

A stage adaptation of the well-known Holocaust memoir. [See review here.] Generally 7:30 p.m. Tues.-Thurs., 8 p.m. Fri., 2 & 8 p.m. Sat., 2 & 7:30 p.m. Sun.; check Website for exact schedule. Ends May 17.

$10-$50. Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Fri., March 21 until Sat., May 17

DJ Eddie (techno, house)

Third Saturday of every month

DJ Kemal

$5/$10 Pioneer Square joint cover. Every week Saturday, 9:30pm

DJ Niros with rotating guests

Every week Friday, Saturday

Alison Keough: In-Cite

A trio of media, with works in clay, graphite, and newsprint. Delicate, patterned works. Free. Tues.-Sat. Ends May 24.

Fri., April 11, 6:00pm-9:00pmEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., April 11 until Sat., May 24

Dune

Starring Yakima boy Kyle MacLachlan in an adaptation of local novelist Frank Herbert's sci-fi classic, David Lynch's 1984 movie isn't a complete mess, but it's close. The first novel in a long series of of spin-offs, Dune would seem today ideally suited for episodic TV on the Sci-Fi Channel, like Battlestar Galactica. They could even bring back MacLachlan for a recurring role. Though I doubt Sting would interrupt his yoga for a cameo. (PG-13) BRIAN MILLER.

$6.75-$9.25. Fri., May 16, 11:59pmSat., May 17, 11:59pm

"Message to Love"

The first phase of a tribute to Jimi Hendrix, “Love” features two of the legend’s guitars, including his Woodstock Fender Strat. The gallery walls are a blank slate for visitors to write comments and reflections. Jan. 26-April 6. Also: Rik Allen's clever glass and metalworks of spaceships and rockets come from a mind fascinated with science-fiction and the future. Through April 25. Also: “American Sabor: Latinos in U.S. Popular Music,” a bilingual, interpretive, interactive exhibition following the impact of Latinos in American pop music. Through Sept. 7 2008. “Sound and Vision: Artists Tell their Stories,” features more than 100 excerpts from the extensive oral history archives of Experience Music Project and the Science Fiction Museum.

Jordan Crane

Limited edition prints and original artworks from this L.A. cartoonist. Free. Mon.-Sun. Ends May 21.

Daily from Sat., May 10 until Wed., May 21

Peter Bagge: Manik Skateboard Launch Party

New skateboard decks from Seattle-based Manik Skateboard, decorated with imagery from Bagge’s comic, Hate. Opens Sat., May 17, 6-9 p.m. Free. Mon.-Sun.

Vashon Saturday Farmers Market

If you need an excuse for a short ferry ride across Puget Sound, consider the a trip the Vashon Saturday Market, the first market to open this season. This is the first year this market will operate year-round, keeping company with markets in the U District, West Seattle, and Ballard. On the tables at Vashon, expect to find dinosaur kale, Jerusalem artichokes, and braising greens, as well as red radishes and sweet rhubarb.

Every week Saturday, 10:00am-2:00pm

Merrilee Moore and James Waterman

Work by glass artist Merrilee Moore and painter James Waterman. Free. Tues.-Sat. Ends May 24.

Thu., May 1, 6:00pm-8:00pmEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., May 1 until Sat., May 24

Clicks and Cuts: Sound Retooled

Audio and sculptural artworks made by teens during a workshop taught by Susan Robb last fall. Sound art experiments using circuit bending, tape loops, field recording, and more. Tues.-Sun.

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Sat., March 1 until Sun., June 1

Dario Robleto: Heaven is Being a Memory to Others

An installation created from the artist’s 2007 residency at the museum, with research into, and sculptural interpretations of the little-known life of Emma Lamp Frye, wife of Charles Frye. A site-specific work, including 20 paintings from the gallery’s collection. Free. Tues.-Sun. Ends August 10.

Sat., April 26, 2:00pmEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Sat., April 26 until Sun., August 10

Dario Robleto: Alloy of Love

A 1997-2007 survey of the conceptual artist's work, which has included clothing made from melted Billie Holiday LPs, a smashed cassette tape made with bone dust, and other powerfully music-inspired art. Opens May 17. Curator lecture with Elizabeth Dunbar, Arthouse at the Jones Center, Sat., May 17, 2 p.m. Gallery talk with artist Dario Robleto, Sun., May 18, 1 p.m. Film screening of After Life, Hirokazu Koreeda’s 1998 film about memory, with a talk by Robert Horton. Sun., May 18, 2 p.m. Tues.-Sun. All events are free. Ends September 1. RACHEL SHIMP.

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Sat., May 17 until Mon., September 1

Michael Brophy: Here-There

Paintings, some of which look like photographs, including landscapes at night. Opens Thurs., May 15, 5-7 p.m. Free. Tues.-Sat. Ends June 28.

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., May 15 until Sat., June 28

Members 2: Returning Gallery Artists

A group show by gallery members, including work by Liz Tran and Tomoko Yoshitake, among many others. Free. Wed.-Sat. Ends May 31.

Every week Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., May 1 until Sat., May 31

Giggles Comedy Club

Stand-up comedians and other entertainers Friday and Saturday and open mike Thursday and Sunday. On May 16-17, Robert Kelley and Lukas Seeley; May 24-25, Round 1 of Giggles' Laff-Off. See Web site for program details.

Every week ThursdayEvery week Friday, SaturdayEvery week Sunday

Sherry Markovitz: The True Story

Explorations into memory, through intricately beaded work (often stuffed animals and masks), as well as new paintings on silk. Opens Thurs., May 15, 6-8 p.m. Tues.-Sat. Ends June 28.

Fri., April 4, 12:00pmEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., May 15 until Sat., June 28

Amy Ellen Flatchestedmama Trefsger: Urban Beach Scenes

Photographs documenting the artist, in retro swim gear, ready for a dip in the unlikeliest of (urban) places. Tues.-Sun. Free. Ends June 7.

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Thu., April 10 until Sat., June 7

Shawn Patrick Landis: Suspension of Belief

A household after a flood, crafted from objects suspended in inflated clear vinyl, some of which hang in mid-air. You’ll remember his work from a recent show at Gallery4Culture. Tues.-Sun. Ends July 5.

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Thu., May 8 until Sat., July 5

Grow More in a Small Space

A two-day workshop for those who want to learn how to get the most out of their city garden plots. Tilth promises to demonstrate techniques that will double or triple your harvest. Topics include proper garden planning and vertical gardening, incorporating several kinds of trellises. At the Seattle Tilth demonstration garden in Mount Baker.

$85. Thu., May 15, 6:30pm-9:00pmSat., May 17, 10:00am-2:30pm

The Hairy Baby

The premiere of Ki Gottberg’s fantastical fable. 7:30 p.m. Thurs.-Fri., 2:30 & 7:30 p.m. Sat., 7:30 p.m. Sun., May 11, 2:30 p.m. Sun., May 18. Ends May 18.

$6-$10. Sun., May 11, 7:30pmEvery week Thursday, Friday from Thu., May 8 until Sun., May 18, 7:30pmEvery week Saturday from Sat., May 10 until Sun., May 18, 2:30pmEvery week Saturday from Sat., May 10 until Sun., May 18, 7:30pmSun., May 18, 2:30pm

Kader Attia

Installations and new video works by the French-Algerian artist, and his first large-scale, solo exhibition in the U.S. $15. Tues.-Sat. Ends May 25.

$6-$10. Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., February 29 until Sun., May 25

Josiah McElheny: the last scattering surface

MacArthur fellow McElheny creates installation work in glass, rigging, and electric lighting. $15. Tues.-Sun. Ends August 17.

Every week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., April 4 until Sun., August 17

Oscar Tuazon & Eli Hansen:This World's Just Not Real To Me

This two-man (two-brother) exhibit explores temporary shelters, found objects, and utopian architecture. Object-oriented work and site-specific installation pieces are on view, including a structure constructed from six-sided blown glass bottles inspired by Alfred Heineken. The beer company owner came up with a brilliant (and thwarted) solution to third world housing and recycling problems: beer bottles as building blocks. The blown glass bottles on view in the galley are a nod to that unrealized project. More installation work on view at SAM, in a parallel exhibit. Free. Tues.-Sat. Ends May 31.