MLK Celebration 2026
Schedule of Events
This FREE celebration fills the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art with amazing activities all day:
12PM – 5PM – Community Art Project
Come boldly harvest your hopes and add them to our community art project.
12:30-2:15PM – Social Justice Social
Come join friends and advocates carrying on the legacy of Dr. King. Learn about the work being done and join community conversation.
12:45-2:15PM – “Villaging Our Voices” Healing Circle
In this time of uncertainty come together to cultivate and harvest hope.
2:30-5:00PM – Community Celebration Program (registration required)
Performances of music, dance, art and poetry that honor the legacy of Dr. King. Admission to the auditorium is limited
1:30-4:00PM – Social Justice thru Art Workshop — Harvesting Hope for a ‘Dream Deferred’ (registration required)
Come join Kitsap Black Student Union and explore various modes of social justice expression thru various art modes including group dance. Dress comfortably, wear socks. Materials and snacks provided. To register for this workshop, text 360-990-3372.
Thank you to our event partners
The Living Legacy of James W. Washington, Jr.
Guest Speakers
Esther Ervin is a contemporary visual artist and jewelry maker. She has a BS in Biology from the University of California, with credits from the American University of Beirut in Lebanon. She completed her MFA thesis in medical Illustration at California State University, Long Beach. After a brief career adventure in the insurance and securities industry, Esther was awarded a residency and the Gregory M. Robinson scholarship at Pratt Fine Arts Center in Seattle, Washington, where she studied jewelry-metalsmithing and welding. Later, she had a residency at the James and Janie Washington Foundation in Seattle, where she incorporated materials found there into new work. Her wearable art has been exhibited in Washington, Oregon; Beijing, China; Vilnius and Palanga, Lithuania; and in Legnica and Gdansk, Poland. Esther consistently generates and exhibits art and jewelry. She has 18 concrete, glass, and bronze pieces installed at the Liberty Bank Building on 24th Ave. and Union St., Seattle, WA, and was the coordinator for the art plan, which included seven other artists. Esther continues exploring new techniques and works in various mediums, sometimes focusing on environmental or political subjects. She is a member of the Seattle Metals Guild and shows work at Onyx Gallery and her home studio.
June Sekiguchi was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas, and received a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Studio Art from the University of California at Santa Barbara. She works primarily with scroll-cut wood in her studio practice making sculptures and site-specific installations. Her current work is in the public art realm. Sekiguchi is an arts activist and advocate, co-founding and participating in several non-profit and artist-run spaces in the Seattle area. Sekiguchi’s interests involve social justice issues, cultural exchange, mental health, and elder communities. She is currently an independent art curator for Era Living and curates for the gallery at Asia Pacific Cultural Center in Tacoma, WA, where she serves on the board. Sekiguchi is a recipient of a GAP grant and Fellowship from Artist Trust and five 4Culture grants. She has participated in residencies in the Pacific Northwest, including Willapa Bay AiR, Vashon Artist Residency, and the James and Janie Washington residency, as well as abroad in Cambodia and Laos. She has exhibited extensively in the Salish Sea area, including the San Juan Islands Museum of Art, the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art, the Vashon Center for the Arts, the Wing Luke Asian Museum, and Bellevue Arts Museum. She lives in Tacoma and is represented by ArtX Contemporary in Seattle.
Stewart Wong is a mixed-media artist whose work spans fiber arts, sculpture, and public installations. Drawing inspiration from both natural and built environments, he blends craft and technology to explore structure, identity, and cultural memory. A descendant of Native Hawaiian and Chinese immigrants, his heritage informs much of his work, which often highlights underrepresented AAPI and BIPOC histories. Wong’s public artworks include installations at the Wing Luke Museum, Sammamish Park & Ride, and Bernalillo County Courthouse. He earned a BFA in Design from Cornish College and has served as a mentor to youth through programs like Wing Luke’s YouthCAN and Mercer Island schools. His art reflects his understanding of displacement, labor, and equity—shaped by personal family history and broader systemic challenges. A member of Northwest Designer Craftartists and the Chinese American Citizens Alliance, Wong continues to create pieces that offer social insight and encourage cultural reflection through layered, material-rich forms.
Artist Talk and Panel Discussion | The Living Legacy of James W. Washington, Jr.
Thanks to our 2025 Exhibition Sponsors
Three Voices, Three Visions: On The Life and Legacy of James W. Washington Jr.
Guest Speakers
Anna Bálint is a London-born, Seattle-based poet, writer, editor, and cultural activist of East European descent. Her many years of editorial work for Raven Chronicles Press include the Take a Stand, Art Against Hate Anthology, which won the 2021 Washington State Book Award for poetry, and Words From the Café, an anthology of writing by people in recovery. Her short fiction collection, Horse Thief (Curbstone Press, 2004), spans cultures and continents and was a finalist for the Pacific Northwest Book Award. A longtime teacher of creative writing, Anna currently teaches adults in recovery from trauma, addiction, mental illness, and homelessness at Seattle’s Recovery Café, where she founded Safe Place Writing Circle.
Susan Noyes Platt, PhD, is a freelance art historian and art critic based in Seattle. Her most recent book is Around the World in 25 Years: Provocative Art from Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and the Americas: Collected Writings (Ingram 2025). After many years as a tenured professor of art history, Susan Noyes Platt is an independent art historian and freelance art critic and curator, based in Seattle, Washington. Her books include Modernism in the 1920s (UMI Research Press, 1985), Art and Politics in the 1930s, Modernism, Marxism, Americanism (Midmarch Arts Press, 1999), and Art and Politics Now, Cultural Activism in a Time of Crisis (Midmarch Arts Press, 2011), Setting Our Hearts on Fire, Collected Writings Volume 2: Essays on Artists from 1982 to the Present (2022).
Through poetry, artist books, installations, and mixed-media works, Carletta Carrington Wilson discovers answers to questions she did not know to ask. This artist finds each artistic endeavor to be an act of excavation and a revelation. Her work, described as “decorative with a message,” has been exhibited in museums, galleries, and libraries in the Seattle area and beyond. Her poems continue to appear in local and national publications. Carletta Carrington Wilson created Poem of Stone & Bone, a work of memory, on the property of James W. Washington Jr. in 2011. Four installations revived key aspects of the sculptor’s artistic lineage, melding geography, spirituality, nature, and intellect. The culminating event led visitors on a journey across the Washington landscape and into his studio after the artist’s month-long residency. Raven Chronicles Press published, in 2023, Poem of Stone & Bone: The Iconography of James. W. Washington Jr. in Fourteen Stanzas and Thirty-One Days. The book documents Wilson’s series of site-specific installations created on the property of the noted sculptor. Journal entries chart her journey and visceral responses to objects found on the grounds, in the house, and studio of the artist. The artist engaged with objects, land, and literature to create a nuanced perspective on the life and work of James W. Washington Jr.
Book Sale & Signing: Poem of Stone & Bone
Poem of Stone & Bone: The Iconography of James W. Washington Jr. in Fourteen Stanzas and Thirty-One Days by Carletta Carrington Wilson (Author), with an introduction by Anna Bálint and a foreword by Susan Noyes Platt, documents Wilson’s 2011 series of four site-specific installations at the Seattle home of renowned African American sculptor James W. Washington Jr.
This richly illustrated volume features 59 full-color images and essays by Wilson, Bálint, Platt, and Dr. Angela Gilliam. The book offers readers an intimate experience of Washington’s world—his garden, studio, and unfinished sculptures—while reflecting on the spiritual and historical resonances present in his home. Wilson’s installations incorporated stones, bones, photographs, and symbolic objects to evoke the artist’s legacy as a sculptor, activist, and leading member of the Northwest School.
Three Voices, Three Visions: On The Life and Legacy of James W. Washington Jr.
Thanks to our 2025 Exhibition Sponsors