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Artists Selected for King County Metro South Annex Base Projects

90% rendering of the new South Annex Base. Courtesy of King County Metro and Jacobs

4Culture is excited to announce the selection of four artists who will elevate themes of connectivity, empowerment, sustainability, and biophilia at King County Metro’s forthcoming South Annex Base (SAB) in Tukwila.

Mobility is a human right and Metro is committed to getting people where they need to go—safely, equitably, and sustainably. As part of its transition to a 100% zero-emissions fleet powered by renewable energy, Metro is working with Jacobs to expand capacity at its South Campus and house approximately 250 new battery electric buses. When complete, SAB will function as a stand-alone bus base with maintenance and operations to support its fleet.

Haddad|Drugan (Laura Haddad and Tom Drugan) joined the SAB design team in 2023. In addition to creating their signature artwork and influencing the overall look and feel of the facilities, they helped conceive of three opportunities for other artists to lend creative thinking to the project: a collection of community tables to inspire gathering and connection, a low-relief artwork to activate the lobby’s feature wall, and two graphic surface treatments to add color and interest to the dispatch hallway and break room. 4Culture would like to thank Haddad|Drugan as well as the other selection panelists—artists and arts professionals from across the county, Tukwila community representatives, and members of the Metro and Jacobs staff—who reviewed hundreds of applications and identified commission recipients whose distinct practices complement one another and the goals of the SAB public art program.

Dan Webb. Right Here, 2023. Madrone, glass, and steel. Seattle Convention Center | Summit, WA. Photo: joefreemanjunior.com. Courtesy of the Collection of the Seattle Convention Center | Summit

Dan Webb will design and build ten functional and conceptually linked tables for interior and exterior SAB locations. Currently represented by Greg Kucera Gallery, Webb has over two decades of exhibition experience in galleries and museums and has contributed significantly to the field of public art. His work is held in the collections of the Museum of Glass, Tacoma; New Museum, New York; Portland Art Museum; Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C.; Seattle Art Museum; and Tacoma Art Museum. Webb was a finalist for the Neddy Award and received the Betty Bowen Award, Pollock Krasner Foundation Award, Stranger Genius Award, and Washington State Artist Fellowship.

Dan Webb. Photo: Kristin Tollefson. Courtesy of the artist

“There are two things that draw me to the community tables opportunity,” Webb says. “The first is the focus on sustainability and environmental stewardship. My work and designs will be deeply impacted by starting with this approach. The second thing is to make tables that will occupy lots of different contexts, from the meeting rooms to the shop and the places in between. I look forward to making things that fit logically into many different spaces and provide a throughline to connect them all. Working in collaboration with Metro, the architects, and Haddad|Drugan, the goal is to make tables that will be useful, memorable, and long-lasting.”

Andrea Wilbur-Sigo. Creator, 2023. Old growth red cedar and acrylic paint. Seattle Convention Center | Summit, WA. Photo: joefreemanjunior.com. Courtesy of the Collection of the Seattle Convention Center | Summit

Andrea Wilbur-Sigo will create artwork for the entry wall in the administrative building’s lobby. A member of the Squaxin Island Tribe and the SteChess family, Wilbur-Sigo is the first documented Indigenous female carver in a multigenerational artistic lineage. Her practice encompasses different art forms of Coast Salish culture, including beadwork, welcome figures, house posts, and baskets, among others. In addition to showing her work in numerous venues, Wilbur-Sigo facilitates workshops and community outreach programs to empower individuals to connect with their heritage through art.

Andrew Wilbur-Sigo. Courtesy of the artist

“Together with Metro, I am eager to create an artwork that not only beautifies the lobby but also instills a sense of pride and responsibility in those who engage with it,” Wilbur-Sigo states. “My goal is to ensure that every person who enters the building feels uplifted and inspired, leaving them with a renewed appreciation for the environment around us. In this way, the lobby feature wall will become more than just a backdrop; it will be a testament to our shared values and a reminder of our commitment to preserving the natural world for future generations.”

Romson Bustillo. Photo: Kori Suzuki. Courtesy of the artist

Romson Bustillo and Lara Kaminoff will develop distinct but complementary site-specific surface treatment designs for walls in the base’s dispatch hallway and break room.

Bustillo integrates an interdisciplinary practice with a mixed media printmaking foundation. He has earned the Artist Trust Fellowship, Artist Trust Artist Innovator Award, Conductive Garboil Grant, Northwest Film Forum Collective Power Fund Award, and Seattle Print Arts Larry Sommers Art Fellowship, and completed residencies at AADK Spain; Bali Purnati Center for the Arts, Indonesia; Jack Straw Cultural Center, Seattle; and Museum of Glass, Tacoma.

Romson Bustillo. Amigo ako nimo, 2022. Mixed media installation. Meta, Bellevue, WA. Meta Open Arts. Photo: Romson Bustillo. Courtesy of the artist

“My work examines how context and visual cues shape, enhance, or divert meanings, with the goal of engaging viewers as active participants in reconsidering references based on inherited knowledge, lived experiences, and ideas of privilege,” Bustillo says. “This collaboration with Metro is very much in line with my belief that public art contributes to our understanding of place and community.”

Kaminoff is a freelance illustrator, educator, and cartoonist. Her graphic novel How to Pick a Fight (Nobrow Press, 2021) demonstrates her passion for visual storytelling through children’s books and public art. Kaminoff believes that creating and witnessing art can inspire people to imagine bigger, kinder stories for themselves.

Lara Kaminoff. Courtesy of the artist

Kaminoff adds, “It’s rare to see such positive and impactful climate action being taken and unbelievably exciting to be a part of it, especially alongside Haddad|Drugan and the stellar team at 4Culture. Also, as a non-driver, I’m so grateful to Metro and its dedicated operators for getting me where I need to go every day; I’m looking forward to working for them for a change!”

Lara Kaminoff. Environmental Stewardship (Chapter Header), 2023. Gouache on paper. Watershed Community Development. Courtesy of the artist