Posts Tagged ‘columbarium’

Your Endowment Care Dollars At Work

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Beginning August 9th, Evergreen Washelli will undergo the removal and improvement of the roof of Washelli Columbarium. The process will take from one to three weeks. The columbarium is located on the east side of Aurora Avenue. Built in 1920, it was owned by the American Necropolis Corporation and known as the Washelli Columbarium.

Evergreen Cemetery and Washelli Cemetery merged in 1928, and in a series of mergers, the Washelli Columbarium became part of Evergreen-Washelli. From the beginning, this building was to be a monument to beauty, elegance, and according to the first written Washelli Columbarium brochure, had an environment that “provides seclusion for peaceful recollection.” The exterior was a beautiful cream white terra cotta and the building had two magnificent columns in front. The entrance walkway was beautifully maintained, and the building was surrounded by well kept up lawns, flowers, and shrubbery.

When the original building was constructed, Aurora Avenue was called the North Trunk Highway, and the mailing address was Rural Route 13. The North Trunk Highway was made of red brick. The original building had a beautiful reception room for people entering the building. The reception room had extremely high ceilings that were hand painted with beautiful pastoral etchings. Today, that reception room is still functional and has been updated with the addition of a domed skylight.

Washelli Crematory has been doing cremations since the early 1920s and the Indoor Columbarium was the largest in all of the Pacific Northwest. Washelli Columbarium is one of the oldest on the West Coast, second only to the one in San Francisco.

In the 1920s, cremation was the choice of many Seattle families. Families would sometimes have the cremated remains placed in a grave; however, more often than not they would take them home since there was nowhere else to put them. It became evident to cemeterians of that time that what people wanted was an indoor facility to inurn their loved ones. As our first brochure said, “heretofore this had not been possible in Seattle, there being no permanent building erected for this purpose.”

Within the walls of the Bronze Room are inurned family members of many of the founding families of Seattle, such as the Denny Party, one of the best known restaurant owners of Seattle, Ben Paris, and baseball announcer legend Leo “The Voice” Lassen. The Fey family was a wealthy family from Renton, who owned numerous theaters in the Renton area. They purchased a niche in Palm Cove with future heritage in mind. Ben Fey, the father, was placed in the niche first. Over the years, six other urns have been placed in the niche, the latest one being in 1982.

Indoor columbaria are a beautiful and convenient option for memorialization. The setting in a columbarium is serene, prestigious, and comfortable, a nice reprieve from the elements. This ensures a reflective and peaceful visiting environment. Many people prefer indoor inurnment in a columbarium as opposed to outdoor inurnment based on their personal preferences. Contributing factors to this include weather, privacy, heritage, and comfort.

The weather is a major determination on the quality of your visit to memorialize a loved one. Therefore, the location of the resting-place becomes a consideration, especially in a city like Seattle. Indoor inurnment allows for the privacy of paying your respects in a columbarium cove, as opposed to outdoors, among a number of other markers in close proximity. Many families will choose a cluster of niches in a columbarium to maintain the final resting place of their relatives in one location. Indoor columbarium visits are preferable to many of our visitors, as walking on hilly or wet terrain is often tedious and difficult.

We have always encouraged people to use urns that are personal, unique, and respectful of the purpose that they are intended to fulfill. Feature niches allow for a family to customize a niche by placing personal items, larger decorative urns, or multiple family members in the same spot. The first Feature Niche was used by Harold Raver in 1980, and besides having his cremated remains, a magnificent porcelain eagle was placed in with him by his family.

A columbarium allows for many options to memorialize even if the remains are elsewhere. If a family wishes to commemorate a loved one, but has also chosen to scatter the remains, or if the remains are unavailable for an inurnment, a cenotaph is a perfect way to select a location where the person is honored, perhaps with an epitaph, statue, personal item, or plaque.

Art in the Columbarium : Winston Rockwell

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Winston Rockwell

Winston Rockwell

Winston “Rocky” Rockwell has been involved in photography since the early 1980s, when he purchased his first “serious” camera: a Pentax ME Super 35mm SLR. His images have appeared in newspapers and magazines, a calendar published by a local botanical garden, on postcards and motivational posters, as well as gallery exhibits in the Seattle area and in other cities nationwide. In 2006, he was honored to have one of his photos printed in National Geographic Magazine.

Rockwell is a lifelong resident of the Pacific Northwest, and currently lives in the heart of the Puget Sound region of western Washington. He writes, “This area is rich with opportunities (in spite of the gloomy, rainy weather), and offers an outdoor photographer a wide variety of environments. Within three or four hours’ drive from my home, I can be at the seashore, surrounded by sagebrush or rolling farmlands, in a rainforest, or high in the mountains. I find the beauty and variety of nature far more appealing than man-made subjects, and love to spend my free time capturing that beauty in my images.”

Winston “Rocky” Rockwell will be showing his work in a solo show at the Art in the Columbarium Gallery, from June 1st to July 12th. The Columbarium is located on the east side of 11111 Aurora Avenue North, and is open to the public Monday to Sunday from 9am to 5pm. Click here to read the Artist’s Statement and Biography

Art in the Columbarium: Jaimie Terada

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Jaimie Terada

Jaimie Terada, our featured artist for April-May

Jaimie Terada is a local artist who recently received her Master’s Degree in Teaching in Visual Art. She has taught mosaic, ceramic, sculpture, drawing, and painting to students, grades K–12. Jaimie has had several solo art shows recently in Seattle and Olympia.

Jaimie has had her artwork displayed at Art Studio116 and Cafe De’arte in Seattle. Previously, she displayed her work at Evergreen State College in an art show called “The Painted Word,” and also at the art gallery for the “Synergy” conference for sustainability. Jaimie has a public art installation at Golden Gardens, a Seattle city park, consisting of a giant wall mosaic on the pedestrian tunnel entrance and original painting of the entire inside walls.

Jaimie Terada has done art since she was very young. Her work has always been about her visions and dreams about the invisible world. Her visions often change as her perspective and state of mind changes. In high school, she won first prize in the annual citywide Naramore Art competition. She also donated many of her pieces to school auctions to raise money for the school. She received the top scholarship for one of the premiere Fine Art Institutions in the country, The San Francisco Art Institute.

In 2006, she had an internship teaching art in a Seattle school where she helped facilitate a student art installation in Ballard, in May of 2006. Jaimie spent one year in Americorps, tutoring underprivileged children. She also mentored at risk middle school youth and volunteered to teach an art class in a nursing home.

Jaimie Terada will be showing her work in a solo show at the Art in the Columbarium Gallery, from April 10th to May 23rd. The Columbarium is located on the east side of 11220 Aurora Avenue North, and is open to the public Monday to Sunday from 9am to 5pm.

Art in the Columbarium

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

CallCALL FOR ENTRIES

Call for Art Submissions
Deadline: April 21st, 2010

Evergreen Washelli is accepting submissions for the 2010 Art in the Columbarium exhibition. We will be hosting up to six solo shows for local, emerging, new artists. Each solo show will run from four to six weeks. We are seeking a portfolio of original artwork that illustrates continuity and is appropriate for a columbarium setting.

Eligibility: All 2- and 3-dimensional media are acceptable – painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, mixed media, and installation.

How to Enter: Submit 12 high resolution digital images of your work, image list (detailing media and artwork sizes), resume/cv and artist’s statement to: hmitchell@washelli.com. An artist statement/bio and price list will be displayed accompanying the exhibit.

Preferred image size: 900 pixels on longest side of image, 72 dpi. Only submit work that is available for exhibition – please do not submit sold or unavailable works. The application deadline is April 21st, 2010.

Acceptance: Artists will be notified of acceptance by May 3rd, 2010. The number of artists and amount of work accepted into the exhibition will depend on media, size, and number of entries.

Commission: The artist will receive 100% on any sales of artworks sold through the gallery. Evergreen Washelli does not take any commission from artwork sales.

Artwork Delivery: Artists are responsible for packing/delivery/shipping and retrieval of works from the Gallery. Delivered works MUST be framed, ready to hang and/or exhibition ready. Artwork must arrive at the gallery no later than five days before the scheduled opening of the show.

Deadline For Submissions is April 21st.

Deadline For Submissions is April 21st.


Contact: Heather Mitchell, Gallery Coordinator, hmitchell@washelli.com