Seattle Art Museum is Open for Business

Seattle Art Museum is Open for Business

Seattle, WA. The Seattle Art Museum (SAM) is now open. There are some limitations in place to keep people safe. Both the Seattle Art Museum and the Seattle Asian Art Museum are open at limited capacity, Fridays through Sundays, 10 am–5 pm. Outdoor spaces at the Olympic Sculpture Park remain open to the public with the PACCAR Pavilion closed for the time being.

Museum administrators say, “We have carefully planned for our reopening in alignment with Governor Inslee’s guidelines for museums outlined in the Healthy Washington—Roadmap to Recovery plan. We ask our visitors to continue to comply with all COVID-19 directives and guidance issued by the Governor and relevant public health authorities to keep our community safe. Keeping SAM open is dependent on the latest guidance for the Puget Sound area and updates will be reflected here as they change.”

Online Timed Tickets Required: To allow for physical distancing, capacity will be limited and ticketing will be timed. Everyone must get tickets online in advance. Tickets will be released on a rolling basis weekly, every Thursday.

Print out your ticket at home or download to a smartphone. With fewer visitors to the museum, you’ll have an intimate art-viewing experience. Get Tickets.

During the pandemic Priya Frank became the Director of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion at SAM.

An installation “Northwest Modernism: Four Japanese Americans,” celebrates four of Seattle’s leading Japanese American artists: Kenjiro Nomura, Kamekichi Tokita, Paul Horiuchi, and George Tsutakawa.

Visitors have shared positive experiences at SAM.

Please visit at another time if you:

  • Are feeling unwell
  • Have been diagnosed with COVID-19 or have any COVID-19 symptoms
  • Live with or care for someone who has been ill
  • Have recently been in contact with someone diagnosed with COVID-19

Please contact [email protected] to exchange your ticket for another day and time if any of the above applies to you.

From Seattle Art Museum:

Masks Required
Staff and visitors over the age of two must wear masks.

Physical Distancing Required
Follow guidelines in public spaces and galleries.

Recognize Risk
SAM has implemented many safety measures and has a state-of-the-art ventilation system, but cannot guarantee zero risk; a risk of exposure to COVID-19 exists in any public setting.

When You Arrive: Seattle Art Museum: Enter at First and Union. The south entrance (the Hammering Man entrance) and the South Hall will be closed.
Seattle Asian Art Museum: Follow marked entrance and exit signs at front doors to maintain one-way visitor traffic and physical distancing.

Expect some areas to be closed
Seattle Art Museum: The Italian Room will not be open to the public when we reopen. The Ann P. Wyckoff Education Resource Center, Bullitt Library, and children play areas will also be closed. TASTE Café will be closed.
Seattle Asian Art Museum: The Education Studio, Community Gallery, Chen Community Meeting Room, and Library will be closed.

Prepare for limited capacity in restrooms
Selected restroom stalls will be closed. Capacity limits will be posted on bathroom doors.

Wash your hands and use hand sanitizers
We have instituted rigorous cleaning procedures using EPA registered disinfectants throughout the museum, with a special focus on high-touch and high-traffic areas and restrooms. We ask that you do your part by washing your hands frequently and using hand sanitizers located throughout the museum.

Expect a contactless experience
Shared materials have been removed from the galleries and interactive touchscreens have been disabled.

Visit SAM Shop!
The Seattle Art Museum Shop and Gallery and the Seattle Asian Art Museum Shop will be open with very limited capacity during museum operating hours to visitors with a ticket. Please visit SAM Shop if you need to purchase water during your visit.

Help Contact Tracing
In alignment with guidance from the Governor’s Office and King County public health officials, SAM is storing ticket buyer information and requesting contact information for all visitors for contact tracing purposes. Learn more

Also please note that if we are unable to reopen or remain open as planned because of changes to public health guidelines, SAM will contact ticket holders via email to present options for moving tickets to a new day and time. 

We have worked hard to make visitors and staff comfortable during their visit and hope to see you soon! 

Located downtown, one block from Pike Place Market, global art collections, temporary installations, and special exhibitions from around the world bridge cultures and centuries.

Seattle Art Museum acknowledges we are on the traditional homelands of the Duwamish, and the customary territories of the Suquamish and Muckleshoot Peoples. As a cultural and educational institution, we honor our ongoing connection to these communities past, present and future. We also acknowledge the many urban Native Peoples from many Nations who call Seattle their home. 

For more info click here: Seattle Art Museum.

 

YouthCare Works Hard to Keep Doors Open Throughout COVID Crisis

YouthCare Works Hard to Keep Doors Open Throughout COVID Crisis

Seattle, WA. Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, YouthCare has continued to work toward its mission to end youth homelessness by providing shelter, safety, and stability to young people. “In times such as these, YouthCare cannot close our doors,” writes YouthCare CEO, Melinda Giovengo, in a news release. YouthCare’s emergency shelter, community living, and independent living programs have remained open throughout the crisis.  To accomplish this, YouthCare temporarily suspended its education, employment, and prevention programs, and instead directed the brunt of its people-power toward keeping essential food, shelter, and housing programs open. “We know that every young person deserves more than just survival. Yet, for now, we must do all that we can to protect young people and the broader community,” says Giovengo. 

Before the COVID-19 outbreak, YouthCare’s Orion Center served over one hundred young people per day.  YouthCare is now serving a fixed number of young people, approximately 200 youth and young adults across their Seattle area shelter and housing programs.  To follow Governor Inslee’s stay-at-home order, these young people are no longer allowed to have visitors, or leave and come back without pre-approval.  To flatten the curve, “YouthCare must navigate the complicated balance of keeping our doors open and shut at the same time,” says Giovengo.   

Gourmondo joined forces with 16 Seattle businesses to provide over 1,000 meals to youth experiencing homelessness

Providing young people with food and safety as they shelter in place has required additional resources.  YouthCare is keeping its facilities staffed 24 hours a day so that clients can shelter in place 24/7. The young people served by YouthCare are also now sharing three communal meals per day, which means increased food costs.  Responding to YouthCare’s increased need for food, many restaurants, businesses, and non-profits have donated food and meals to YouthCare. 

A student working hard at virtual school

In addition to food donations, YouthCare is also now collecting donations to its Back-to-School drive as schools begin to reopen online.  With most schools holding classes exclusively online this Fall, the students served by YouthCare must have access to the supplies they need to stay connected to and engaged with their classes.  To prevent the spread of COVID-19, YouthCare is not currently accepting in-person donations.  Instead, those hoping to donate can do so through YouthCare’s Amazon wishlist, or ship supplies directly to YouthCare’s main office.

From YouthCare:

YouthCare envisions a community where no young person experiences homelessness, all young people have the opportunity to thrive, and the systems that oppress them are dismantled.

 

 

 

Latino Community Fund Creates COVID-19 Resiliency Fund

Latino Community Fund Creates COVID-19 Resiliency Fund

Seattle, WA. In pre-Covid days, the Latino community supported one another by gathering, like the picture above. Since the beginning of the pandemic, the Latino Community Fund (LCF) has been reaching out online, or by using best practices in person, spreading awareness on how to stay safe. The LCF has been keeping updates on its website, spreading the latest news on who individuals can call for assistance and collect resources during this pandemic. Now LCF has created its own COVID-19 Resiliency Fund. This to “provide immediate assistance for supporting families who are experiencing health and economic impacts due to COVID-19,” organizers say. The fund’s main focus is to make sure that resources are being presented to people who are in need of assistance. Administrators say, “As an organization, it is still our priority to advocate and support the Latino Community in Washington State.” LCF’s public health education program includes flyers and handouts.

Latino Community Fund Spreading Awareness for COVID-19.

The Latino Community Fund also has community outreach programs that have “Empowered over 20,000 community leaders to become civically engaged through community dialogues”. The programs they offer that are listed on their website are, Economic Empowerment Initiative, Latinos In Tech and Heathy Latino Family Resource. All of these programs are designed to help the Latino community from the ground up and give knowledge and awareness on many different types of subjects and issues. The next event that will be conducted online via Zoom will be the “Virtual Youth Leadership Summit, presented by the Latino Community Fund and the Alianza Leadership Program”. This event will go over topics such as the “Top issues affecting our Latino communities in Wa State, as well as how to communicate effectively with your policymakers”. All of this to help “unlock their leadership potential and bring change to their communities”. This event will be in August 2020 online via Zoom.

Alianza Youth Leadership Virtual Summit – August 2020.

For more information about volunteering and many other various questions their Seattle Office is located at 68 S. Washington St. Seattle Wa, 98104. Email : [email protected]. Para informacion en Espanol : 206-397-2440

Latino Community Fund of Washington Mission Statement: 

Our vision is a vibrant and civically engaged Latino community in Washington. Latino Community Fund of Washington identifies, shares, and advocates for what is working in the Latino community. Healthy and educated Latino families build vibrant local communities and economies in Washington State.

 

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