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Urban Grit Meets Wild Beauty: Inside Seattle Art Museum’s Beyond Mysticism

By Seattle Art Museum March 5, 2026

A person with long brown hair closely observes a framed painting on display in an art gallery with purple walls.
Photo by Natali Wiseman / SAM

Seattle’s history is rooted in its fascinating juxtaposition of industry and nature, inspired by the region’s dramatic landscapes and rapidly changing cityscape. Seattle Art Museum’s current exhibition, Beyond Mysticism: The Modern Northwest, invites you to meet the artists who captured that tension and transformed it into a bold new vision of Modernism.

Modernism, Made in the Northwest

Seattle’s growth in the 20th century coincided with the rise of American Modernism, a broad art movement known for its experimentation, subjectivity, and breaks from tradition. Beyond Mysticism showcases artists who told the raw story of the Pacific Northwest during this period. 

By sharing the Puget Sound perspective through trending art styles—including Social Realism, Surrealism, and Abstract Expressionism—these artists challenged the long-standing “mystic” label often attached to Northwest art, revealing work that was socially engaged, environmentally conscious, and deeply rooted in lived experience.

Spearheading the movement were local icons Mark Tobey, Kenneth Callahan, Guy Anderson, and Morris Graves—often referred to the “Big Four” of the Northwest School—but the range and breadth of Pacific Northwest art go beyond these celebrated artists.

A person with long hair views a framed painting of an industrial landscape displayed on a gallery wall.

Four people view large framed paintings on the walls of an art gallery with wooden floors and neutral-colored walls.

Featuring more than 150 pieces, this exhibition showcases works that investigate the complexities of daily life in the region. Visitors will see paintings, drawings, and sculptures from Northwest favorites like Malcolm Roberts and Kenjiro Nomura alongside national and international figures such as Georgia O’Keeffe and Salvador Dalí—placing the region’s artists in dialogue with broader movements that shaped Modern art. Whether applying an ecocritical lens or producing dreamy and uncanny visuals, these artists expressed the duality of the natural world and city life to warn of the environmental and social impacts of industrialization. 

Discover how Northwest artists redefined modernism on their own terms—blending nature, industry, and social change into a distinctly regional voice—in Beyond Mysticism, on view through Aug 2.

A Must-See Experience in Downtown Seattle

The Seattle Art Museum, one of SAM’s three distinct sites, is located steps from Pike Place Market. It’s easily walkable, transit-accessible, and surrounded by some of the city’s most iconic landmarks, making Beyond Mysticism the perfect stop on a day out exploring one of Seattle’s first neighborhoods.

A person sits on a green sofa reading a book in a retro-style living room with patterned wallpaper, wooden furniture, and framed pictures on the walls.

Learn more and plan a visit at visitsam.org/mysticism

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