Jack Straw New Media Gallery
The Northwest’s premier space for immersive installation art combining sound, digital media, and other genres.
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Romson Regarde Bustillo’s layered works and immersive collaborations are tied to his Philippine lineage, South Seattle-PNW upbringing, and research travels. Carving his own path, Bustillo integrates a printmaking foundation with a transdisciplinary practice. He populates spaces with images, sound, and concepts that explore and question how place, context, and various cues modify, enhance, and divert meanings. Bustillo was awarded the Seattle Print Arts Larry Sommers Art Fellowship in 2016. In 2017 he was co-recipient of the Garboil Grant established by the late artist Sue Jobs. An award that considers artists “…engaging audiences outside the aesthetic industrial complex.” He received Arts-Individual Projects Grants from 4Culture in 2018 and 2020 in support of his immersive installations and collaborative interventions. He is the recipient of an Artist Trust Fellowship(2019), the Artist Trust Innovator Award(2020), and a Northwest Film Forum (NWFF)’s Collective Power Fund “New Work/Projects” category(2022). |
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Whitney Lynn is an artist who works with a wide array of forms, including sculpture, performance, video, photography, sound, and public projects. Mining history and visual culture, her work reframes familiar narratives, questioning issues of perception and the mutability of meaning. She has exhibited widely, including at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, and the Corcoran Gallery of Art, and was previously an artist-in-residence at the de Young Museum, The Neon Museum, Las Vegas, and the Internet Archive. Born on a military base in Arizona, Lynn attended the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, received a BFA in Sculpture + Extended Media from Virginia Commonwealth University and MFA in New Genres from the San Francisco Art Institute. She is currently the Chair of Interdisciplinary Visual Art at the University of Washington. |
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Tara Tamaribuchi (b. 1975, California) earned a BA in Journalism from George Washington University, a BFA in Painting from Pacific Northwest College of Art, and an MFA from Lesley Art and Design. Tara joined Soil Artist-Run Gallery in 2023. In the last few years, she has exhibited locally at UW Jacob Lawrence Gallery, Method Gallery, Seattle University Hedreen Gallery, and at Soil, as well as Galpão in São Paulo, Eastover Contemporary Art Center in Lenox, MA, Arts Mid-Hudson in Poughkeepsie, NY, and Mass MOCA in North Adams, MA for her MFA show. Tara curated the web-exhibition Reimagining the Future from the Past for ArtsWA and was juror in 2024 for the Artist Trust Innovator Grant and Seattle Asian American Film Festival. She is a graduate of the Cultural Space Agency Building Art Space Equitably program and is a constituent in this public development authority. Tara leads in the effort to save more than 100 Seattle art studios from redevelopment at the Inscape Arts Building, the former INS immigration and detention center in the Chinatown International District where she has kept a studio for 10 years. |
The Jack Straw Writers Program, Artist Support Program, and New Media Gallery Program offer established and emerging artists in diverse disciplines an opportunity to explore the creative use of sound in a professional atmosphere through residencies in our recording studios and participation in our various presentation programs.
The Jack Straw Writers Program was created in 1997 to introduce local writers to the medium of recorded audio; to develop their presentation skills for both live and recorded readings; to encourage the creation of new literary work; to present the writers and their work in live readings, an anthology, on the web, and on the radio; and to build community among writers.
The Artist Support Program has been assisting artists working creatively with sound since 1994, including writers, choreographers, multidisciplinary artists, theatre sound designers, radio producers, film makers, visual artists, and musicians and composers of all types. Every year, up to eight artists are awarded twenty hours of studio recording and production time with a Jack Straw engineer; an additional twelve artists receive matching awards for studio time.