Hedreen Gallery

Located in the Lee Center for the Arts, dedicated to the vibrancy of Seattle's artistic community.

Photo of people at exhibition reception

Our mission is to support the work of emerging artists and exhibit new work by established artists: local, national, international. We strive to catalyze artistic process and dialogue; to connect artists, audiences, and resources; and to engage the community in the arts. Always free and open to the public.

Located in the Lee Center for the Arts at Seattle University, just north of the corner of 12th Avenue and E Marion St.

Hours: 1-6 pm, Wednesday – Saturday

Current Exhibitions

a woman resting in the hand of someone else

Taking Care: Embrace with Tenderness

Curated by Arielle Simmons

April 10 - June 14

Artists Kamari Bright, Le’Ecia Farmer, and Annie Marie Musselman demonstrate a nurturing care for others and our one precious world in the works of this group exhibition, Taking Care: Embrace with Tenderness. Bright viscerally reminds us of the deeply human need for another’s touch with video poem, Close Spaces. Farmer explores ancestral technologies to create sustainable materials, which naturally echo our own organic forms. Musselman documents relationships between humans and animals that foster mutual healing and existence, rather than a fight for scarce resources. These loving gestures are pathways to connection, offering abundance, perhaps even hope.

Free and open to the public

hair strands on a blue background

Under the Same Moon

Under the Same Moon

May 3 - June 14, 2025

Adair Freeman Rutledge

In becoming a mother, photographer Adair Freeman Rutledge was fascinated by the repetitive, almost Sisyphean tasks of care - the trimming of fingernails, the snipping of curls, the expressing of breast milk - that are often invisible. While in the postpartum period with her own children, Rutledge collected the byproducts of her days that would otherwise be discarded; using these artifacts to make cyanotypes, Prussian blue contact prints and one of the oldest photographic processes, she reimagines them as beautiful.

A community art-making event will take place in two parts: the first on May 3, 2025, to print the cyanotype fabric squares; the second on May 21, to gather around the quilt and sew its binding. Caregivers of all types are invited to participate and are called to bring the evidence of their care with particular curiosity for the items that are byproducts of loving work.

 

Cyanotype Art Action and Artist Talk

Saturday, May 3, 10am - 1pm

 

Collective Quilt Binding 

Wednesday, May 21 4:30 -6:30 pm

Free and open to the public

Our Recent Exhibitions

January 15 - March 29, 2025

a person standing in front of the us capitol with a bare back

Molly Jae Vaughan fights for herself and her trans community to be seen as wholly human through art. Transition as Performance, Life as Resistance reflects Vaughan’s multi-disciplinary approach, with mediums including painting, performance, photography, textile, and screen printing. Each body of work thoughtfully, exquisitely crafted and yet secondary to the ultimate goal of communication. The uniting, principal question: what does it mean to be trans in America at this moment?