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Posts Tagged ‘fireside chat’

Fireside Chat with Hanson Hosein

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Aug. 17, 6 p.m., Fireside Room

Reserve free tickets through fireside@hotelsorrento.com

Topic: The rapidly changing environment for business and media because of changes brought on by digital media. Will Twitter abide? What’s the future of social networking? What’s the future of news?

 Coming in September: Denis Hayes, of the Bullitt Foundation

In addition to the Fireside Chats, the Sorrento is thrilled to offer a packed calendar of events that includes the following. For more info, visit www.hotelsorrento.com/dining.

SORRENTO HOTEL WELCOMES KUOW’S ROSS REYNOLDS

Monday, August 10th, 2009

SEATTLE – Aug. 7, 2009 – In its heyday, the Fireside Room at the Sorrento Hotel served as a civic hub, where thought leaders convened to exchange ideas about the arts, culture and politics, and the community gathered for music performances and poetry readings. As part of ongoing programming to celebrate its centennial, the Sorrento, Seattle’s oldest boutique hotel, is collaborating with Ross Reynolds, host of KUOW’s “The Conversation,” to hold a series of monthly Fireside Chats.

The public is welcome to attend the free chats, which will be taped and then excerpted for broadcast on KUOW the next day. The first Fireside welcomes Hanson Hosein, Director of the Master of Communication in Digital Media at the University of Washington in Seattle, independent filmmaker, a former NBC News war correspondent and investigative producer, and Emmy Award winner.

DEBUT OF PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW AT SORRENTO HOTEL

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Glenn Rudolph
May 1, 2009 – September 21, 2009

SEATTLE, May 2009 – Striking black and white photographs by Glenn Rudolph that explore the vanishing Milwaukee Railroad Line near Snoqualmie Pass are on view at the Sorrento Hotel through September 21, 2009.  The debut of this show marks the start of biannual art installations at the iconic hotel.

This exhibition includes 14 works from Rudolph’s personal collection, made from 1983 – 1991. “I once thought that railroads were forever. Watching a transcontinental line evaporate was a strange experience.  A part of our infrastructure being sold for scrap is an interesting historical footnote.” Rudolph recently stated about the work. The Milwaukee Railroad Line opened a Northwest extension in 1909, the year the Sorrento Hotel was completed. The line was closed in the late 1970’s and was acquired by the state of Washington. It is currently used as a recreational trail.

Artist to discuss his work with Roy McMakin on  June 8
For 30 years Seattle-based photographer Glenn Rudolph has documented the Pacific Northwest and its changing landscapes, its communities and its people.  The photographs are being shown in the Fireside Room and Hunt Club Bar and Restaurant. The artist will discuss his work on June 8th as part of the Fireside Chat series with show curator, artist Roy McMakin.  

Marisa C. Sánchez, Assistant Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Seattle Art Museum, stated: “Glenn has a deep and intimate relationship to the landscape of the Northwest. In 1958, as a young teenager, his family moved to Mercer Island from Los Angeles. His history in this place not only informs his practice, but lends his work a sensitivity gained only over time and through personal, experience. Since 1986, he has photographed the abandoned and repurposed Milwaukee railway lines that were once a sign of progress and now reveal a much more somber history. What intrigues me about this body of work is Glenn’s repeated engagement with this subject matter over thirty years time, making evident his enduring romance with these landscapes that are memorialized in his absorbing views of them.“

“The Sorrento Hotel is a part of the fabric of this city. The origin of Glenn Rudolph’s photographs was the early years of the hotel, a time of growth and excitement in Seattle. In those days guests were invited to gather around the fireplace – it was a real hotel home.” stated the Sorrento’s Barbara Malone. “We want to continue that tradition. By hosting regular installations and events we will be a destination for conversations on art, music and culture.”
 
About Glenn Rudolph (American, born 1946)
A graduate of the University of Washington’s School of Art, Rudolph has exhibited his work in the United States and Canada and in Northwest exhibitions since the late 1970’s including the Seattle, Bellevue, Portland and Tacoma Art Museums.

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