Schack Art Center Opens Its Biggest Art Week of the Spring on May 28 — Contemporary Northwest Artists Exhibition and Summer Auction Drop the Same Day

May 28 is the day Schack Art Center stops being a casual drop-in and becomes the best weeknight art plan in Snohomish County. Two of the biggest things the gallery does all year — the Contemporary Northwest Artists Exhibition and the Summer Auction — open on the exact same Thursday. One runs through August 22. The other runs for eleven days. If you’ve been meaning to spend more time inside 2921 Hoyt Avenue, this is the week it earns your calendar.

Here’s what’s going on, why it matters, and why downtown Everett’s best free art experience just got a lot more interesting.

Quick answer: Schack Art Center’s Contemporary Northwest Artists Exhibition opens Thursday, May 28, 2026, and runs through August 22. The Summer Auction — a benefit supporting Schack’s free exhibitions and arts education programs — also opens May 28 and runs through June 7. Both are at Schack Art Center, 2921 Hoyt Avenue in downtown Everett. Gallery hours are Tuesday–Saturday 10 AM–5 PM and Sunday 12 PM–5 PM, and admission to the gallery is always free.

Contemporary Northwest Artists: A Regional Snapshot That Actually Feels Current

Schack is calling the headline show Contemporary Northwest Artists, and the framing is direct. In the gallery’s own words, the exhibition “showcases contemporary work by Northwest artists across all mediums” and “brings together artists working today to offer a wide-ranging view of current creative practices in the region, highlighting the voices, ideas, and approaches shaping the Northwest art scene now.”

Translate that out of gallery speak: this isn’t a retrospective. It isn’t an invitational of the same five names you already know. It’s a living, present-tense look at what people in the Pacific Northwest are actually making right now — painting, sculpture, glass, fiber, ceramics, mixed media, the whole range of mediums Schack normally cycles through.

That matters for two reasons.

First, the Northwest has a genuinely distinct art identity, and the case can be made that Everett sits closer to the center of it than most people assume. The Schack building has quietly grown into, in its own words, “the premier visual arts destination between Seattle and Vancouver, B.C.” When a venue at that level programs a broad Northwest-artists show, it becomes a reference point for what the region thinks of itself this year.

Second, this show sets the tone for the whole summer at Schack. It opens May 28 and doesn’t close until August 22. That’s almost three months of anchor programming, which means every Art Walk, every weekend drop-in, every out-of-town guest you drag to Hoyt Avenue between Memorial Day and the start of school lands inside the same curated experience.

If you can only make one trip to Schack this summer, make the trip after the show is fully installed — usually a week or two after opening — and plan to spend at least 45 minutes. This kind of multi-medium group show rewards slow viewing.

The Summer Auction: 11 Days, Real Art, and Why the Benefit Side Actually Matters

While the Contemporary Northwest Artists Exhibition is the long-running headline, the Summer Auction is the action. It runs Thursday, May 28 through Sunday, June 7 — so call it one long opening weekend, plus another weekend, plus the weekdays in between.

Schack’s own description of the Summer Auction: guests are invited to “browse and bid on original artwork, unique experiences, and curated packages while supporting Schack’s free exhibitions and arts education programs.”

A few things are worth pulling out of that sentence.

“Original artwork” is doing heavy lifting. Schack sits inside a North American Reciprocal Museum network and has steadily built a reputation for actual working artists donating actual working pieces — not poster prints, not reproductions. If you’ve ever wanted to buy a piece of Northwest art from the kind of artist who normally only shows in gallery settings, auction week is the window where the price point drops into range for regular Everett households.

“Unique experiences and curated packages” is the part that usually sneaks up on first-time bidders. Studio visits, classes at Schack, dinner packages with local partners, behind-the-scenes gallery experiences — the non-artwork lots tend to draw competitive bidding specifically because they can’t be bought anywhere else the rest of the year.

“Supporting Schack’s free exhibitions and arts education programs” is the part that should make you care even if you’re not bidding. Schack runs a heavy education program — classes for kids, teens, and adults, plus partnerships with Everett schools — and the reason its gallery is free every day of the week is because events like the Summer Auction close the funding gap. Bidding isn’t just shopping; it’s the mechanism that keeps Everett’s biggest gallery an open-door space.

Why This Week Is a Bigger Deal Than It Sounds

A lot of towns the size of Everett don’t have a gallery like Schack. A lot of galleries Schack’s size don’t run free public exhibitions seven days a week. A lot of free galleries don’t simultaneously run a regional headline show and a funding-critical auction on the exact same opening week.

The stacked calendar is the story. One building, two major events, both starting May 28, both running inside a walkable downtown district that is slowly but clearly becoming one of the best evening art experiences in Snohomish County.

If you’ve been following the slow cultural momentum downtown — Artists’ Garage Sale waitlists hitting capacity earlier each year, APEX Everett filling Kings Hall on weekends, the Historic Everett Theatre booking touring acts, Tony V’s Garage drawing legitimate regional touring bands — this Schack week fits the same pattern. Everett’s cultural weight is moving from “cute for a small city” into “actual regional destination,” and May 28 is one of the weeks that makes the case.

How to Plan Your Visit

Address: Schack Art Center, 2921 Hoyt Avenue, Everett, WA 98201

Gallery hours (free admission): Tuesday–Saturday 10 AM–5 PM, Sunday 12 PM–5 PM (closed Mondays)

Phone: (425) 309-7723

Contact: artsinfo@schack.org

Parking: Everpark Garage a block away (hourly), plus street parking on Hoyt and Wetmore

Best day to go: A Thursday or Friday evening when downtown Everett is already awake — you can pair the visit with dinner on Hewitt Avenue or a show at the Historic Everett Theatre

Best way to approach the Summer Auction: Start at the gallery in person to see pieces in context before bidding — the lighting and scale on a wall tell you more about a piece than any catalog image

Frequently Asked Questions

When does the Contemporary Northwest Artists Exhibition open at Schack Art Center? Thursday, May 28, 2026. It runs through August 22, 2026 at Schack Art Center, 2921 Hoyt Avenue in downtown Everett.

When is Schack Art Center’s 2026 Summer Auction? The Summer Auction runs from Thursday, May 28, 2026 through Sunday, June 7, 2026. Bidding supports Schack’s free exhibitions and arts education programs.

How much does it cost to visit Schack Art Center? Gallery admission is free. The Summer Auction is an event you can browse without bidding; costs only apply if you place winning bids.

What are Schack Art Center’s hours? Tuesday through Saturday from 10 AM to 5 PM, and Sunday from 12 PM to 5 PM. Schack is closed on Mondays.

Where is Schack Art Center? 2921 Hoyt Avenue, Everett, WA 98201, in downtown Everett between Pacific Avenue and Hewitt Avenue.

Can I buy original artwork at Schack’s Summer Auction if I’m not an art collector? Yes. The Summer Auction is designed for a broad community of bidders, not just established collectors. Lots include original artwork as well as unique experiences and curated packages at a range of price points.

What’s coming up after the Contemporary Northwest Artists show? Schack’s instructor exhibition, Years in the Making, opens June 18, 2026 and also runs through August 22. It features work by the artists who teach at Schack Art Center.

Is Schack Art Center good for families? Yes. Schack is a family-friendly gallery and runs extensive arts education programming including classes for kids and teens. The Summer Auction itself is not specifically a family event, but visiting the gallery during auction week is a normal daytime drop-in.

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