NORTHWEST BASEBALL

Tacoma, WA

Dad and I take in some art and history in downtown Tacoma. We stop first at the impressive Tacoma Art Museum. After lunch at The Fish Peddler, we celebrate glass-maker Dale Chihuly at the Museum of Glass and the Chihuly Bridge of Glass. We finish our afternoon at the Washington State History Museum.


Tacoma Art Museum

Dad and I began our day at the Tacoma Art Museum, which was founded in 1935 and has been in its current 50,000-square-foot location in downtown Tacoma since 2003. The museum showcases the visual arts of the Pacific Northwest, with nearly 70 percent of its collection focused on the work of Northwest artists.

The first gallery was an exhibit titled “Native Portraiture: Power and Perception,” which featured contemporary indigenous artists who “give voice to Native people and communities to show their resiliency and power over the ways in which they are portrayed and perceived."

“Tee-win-at” (Grand Teton area)

“Wikitata” (Grand Canyon area)

Portrait of a Sioux Scout, Stephen Foster (of Nanaimo, BC), 2013

Plains Warrior with Breastplate, John Nieto, 2018

We moved on to the remainder of the museum’s vibrant collection, full of surprises in style and tone. It included a temporary exhibit showcasing 21 glass artists from the nearby Hilltop Artists youth development program.

Harbinger of Sudden Departures Variation II, Meryl McMaster, 2015

Minidoka No. 5 (442nd), Roger Shimomura, 1979

Le Deuxieme Sexe (1948-1949), Lisa Liedgren, 2002-03

Going Up, Jacob Wilcox (of Tacoma), 2022

House of the Eagles, Tony Sorgenfrei, 2022

Trapped, Trenton Quiocho (of Tacoma), 2021

We finished our browsing with a gallery dedicated to Tacoma native Dale Chihuly, who is known for bringing a sense of large-scale sculpture to the world of blown glass. Chihuly pieces have been displayed in more than 200 museums around the world, from Kew Gardens in London to the Tower of David Museum in Jerusalem, to the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas… even to the Columbia Museum of Art, which Dad and I visited in 2021. But the Tacoma permanent collection is considered to be the premier exhibition of his work.

 

The Fish Peddler

We drove a block or so from the museum to lunch at The Fish Peddler, a friendly spot along the Thea Foss Waterway. My Padres played on a TV in the nearby bar. A tasty house IPA and a plate of fish and chips were on the way. The day was going great.
 

Museum of Glass

After lunch, we walked further along the Thea Foss Waterway, toward a building capped by a 90-foot-tall cone wrapped in steel and jauntily tilted to one side. On this morning full of gloomy clouds, the cone resembled a shiny smokestack on a listing ironclad in a heavy storm. Inside, the building could not be any different.

The Museum of Glass celebrates the work of Dale Chihuly and a host of other artists who use fire to bend matter into forms full of color and creativity. Near its entrance is a massive studio with stadium seating and regular demonstrations of the craft.

Pride from Circus Vase series, Dan Dailey, 2005

Mandara, Lino Tagliapetra, 2005

Red Crater, Stanislav Libenský/Jaroslava Brychtová, 1998-2008

Fruit Cocktail, Megan Stelljes, 2021

Goldenrod and Indigo Persian Set, Dale Chihuly, 2002

 

Chihuly Bridge of Glass

After making important purchases for our respective wives at the Museum of Glass gift shop, Dad and I climbed a set of stairs to the Chihuly Bridge of Glass, which extends over Interstate 705 toward the Washington State History Museum. Above the walkway is a ceiling of glass works by Dale Chihuly, with tubes and seashell shapes twisting and bending in a riot of color. On one side of the bridge is a long display of vases filled with glass flowers stretching tendrils of silica toward the growing sunlight.

The installation, which lights up at night and is accessible to all, was a gift to the city in 2002. Chihuly has called it "the gateway that welcomes people to Tacoma."
 

Washington State History Museum

I love a good history museum -- a place to put my travels in context, to see the people who came here before me, how they lived, what shaped their lives, and the artifacts they left behind.

The Washington State History Museum is a good one. Opened in 1996 next to the historic Union Station, the museum is full of modern exhibits telling the tales of a state with a rich indigenous legacy; of gold rushes and immigration; of dense forests, national parks, rich farmland, and the most destructive volcanic eruption in the history of the United States. It is also home to Washington's largest permanent model train layout (at 1,700 square feet), depicting scenes from Union Station and other regional railroads.