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Home Music

Things to Do in Seattle This Week

Story Center by Story Center
May 25, 2026
Reading Time: 12 mins read
0
Things to Do in Seattle This Week

Summer is for concerts on the lawn at Chateau Ste. Michelle.


Jump to Your Genre:

 Food and Drink / Visual Arts / Live Music 
Performance / Film / Special Events / Readings and Lectures / On Sale Now


Seattleites are spoiled for choice when it comes to spending our leisure time. Just take a look at the sheer variety of options: We have an exceptional array of museums, independent bookstores, restaurants, bars (and bar trivia), record stores, nightlife options, local shops, and a rich music landscape.

And the actual landscape? Outdoor recreation opportunities abound, especially if you subscribe to the “no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothing” mindset (if you don’t, are you really from Seattle?). From abundant hikes, swimming holes, state parks, and campgrounds just beyond city limits to a voluminous urban trail system, there’s something for the outdoorsperson of every skill and stoke level. Those with little ones (human or furred) can rejoice at a bevy of great playgrounds, spray parks, and zoos. 

But if you just want a guide already, we’ve got plenty for food, outdoors, shopping, and entertainment. Plus, a shortlist of what to do in Washington this month. Or find below the best things to do in Seattle, updated weekly. 


Food and Drink

Lowlander Brewing OysterFest

may 21, 6pm | The Rooftop at Railspur, $100

The upscale, modern brewery takes a field trip to new Pioneer Square spot the Rooftop at Railspur for the third annual OysterFest. Tickets include oysters, obviously, in addition to wine, chitchat between farmers, and sprawling Puget Sound views. 

Sunset and Night Markets

May 21 and 29, 4–8pm | Kirkland Urban and Old Stove Gardens

Seattle’s summer evenings go on forever, and Seattle Night Markets fills the extra daylight with an abundance of bites. The series kicks off with an Eastside event with live music, food vendors, and artisans. The following week, the foodie haven comes to Ballard’s Old Stove Gardens. 

Pancakes with Penguins

may 23–24, 8:30am | woodland park zoo, $72

Coffee with room for penguins, anyone? The Woodland Park Zoo hosts a unique weekend pancake breakfast beside their energetic penguin habitat. Usually, a zookeeper or mascot makes a visit; pancake-fueled carousel rides and zoo exploration are a given.

Visual Arts

Exquisite Creatures

through august 31, various | Seattle Waterfront Maritime Building, $34

Stand face to face dozens of chameleons, compare wingspans with a Japanese spider crab, and peer at mandala-like compositions of everything from butterflies to birds. Using immaculately preserved specimens, artist Christopher Marley hosts a gallery show just across from the Seattle Ferry Terminal where creepy crawlies turn into works of art. 

Samantha Yun Wall: What We Leave Behind

through october 4, various | seattle art museum, $29.99

Monochromatic paintings by Samantha Yun Wall are both haunting and captivating; their inspiration draws from a Korean folk tale of loss and familial ties, a flower motif weaving together the pieces that speak to stigmatization and taboo. 

Eric-Paul Riege: ojo|-|ólǫ́

through october 25, various | henry, free

Sculpture, textiles, collage, and video from Diné artist Eric-Paul Riege form the Henry’s newest exhibition. Riege critically questions the idea of authenticity and role of institutions—like museums—and celebrates ancestral knowledge with an array of large-scale monochrome pieces. 

Tanned and unfixed photography film is continually sensitive, lending a sense of transformation to Lotus L. Kang’s new installation.

Summer 2026 Exhibitions Reception

June 5, 7:30–9pm | frye art museum, free

Four fresh collections arrive at the free First Hill art museum ahead of summer. It includes a new dance-centric banner on the exterior and flashy light sculptures from Tom Lloyd and ethereal installations from Lotus L. Kang, a seasonal refresh brings new perspectives. The celebration caps with a multidisciplinary performance from Joseph Hernandez.

Live Music

The Paper Kites

may 21, 8pm | the moore, $42.60+

Somewhere between folk, rock, and Americana, The Paper Kites bring emotional tracks to every album. Touring in support of their new release, If You Go There I Hope You Find It, this trip around the circuit brings the same artistry and connective songs.

Chateau Ste. Michelle Summer Concert Series

may 24–september 27, various | chateau ste. michelle, various

Nothing screams summer quite like a lawn concert; add Woodinville-crafted wine and you have the ever-popular Chateau Ste. Michelle summer concert series. A slew of artist come to the lawn this summer, from Boyz II Men to Sarah McLachlan.  

HONK! Fest West brings bands to the streets.

HONK! Fest West

May 29–31, various | Georgetown, Columbia City, and Pratt Park, free

Street music is all the rage at the annual HONK! festival; over a three-day run, dozens of outfits from near and far take over Georgetown, Columbia City, and Pratt Park with concurrent shows.

Performance

The Phantom of the Opera brings intrigue to the stage.

The Phantom of the Opera

through may 24, various | the paramount theatre, $141+

The Phantom must have heard about our underground tours; he visits Seattle in the moving, haunting musical alongside classic songs like “The Music of the Night,” “All I Ask of You,” and title track “The Phantom of the Opera.”

Aviatrix

through june 7, various | seattle public theater, $10–100

Set against the rural backdrop of 1917 Texas, Bessie Coleman wants to fly. With no flight schools admitting women, the Black and Native protagonist must find another way to rise to her wildest dreams.

All Lang

may 29–june 7, various | mccaw hall, $36–248

The Pacific Northwest Ballet caps their regular season with a triple bill of works by celebrated choreographer Jessica Lang. The final piece of the trio comes as a jazzy, joy-filled premiere set largely to the tunes of Tony Bennett—with one Lady Gaga addition. Longtime audience favorites Her Door to the Sky and Ghost Variations round out the show.

FILM

Retro Night: Jurassic Park

may 20 and 27, 7pm | majestic bay theatre, $13.50

Ballard’s adorable Majestic Bay Theatre pairs their iconic marquee and PNW-themed retro decor with Steven Spielberg’s 1993 sci-fi adventure classic Jurassic Park. The nostalgic film screens for two weeks of retro night showings. 

Moomins on the Riviera

May 28, 6:30pm | national nordic museum, $10

Family-friendly movie nights come to Ballard’s National Nordic Museum in time for summer’s late nights. The hand-drawn animated feature inspired by Tove Jansson’s comic strips brings beloved Moomins characters to the big screen. 

Since I Been Down

May 31, 2–4:30pm | Central Library, free

A story told through interviews, masquerade, and dance, the film follows Tacoma-raised Kimonti Carter as he founds a prisoner education program and leads the Washington State’s Black Prisoners’ Caucus. Filmmaker Dr. Gilda Sheppard will participate in a moderated discussion alongside Kimonti Carter and Tonya Wilson, both featured in the film. 

SPECIAL EVENTS

Northwest Folklife Festival

may 22–25, various | seattle center, free

The annual celebration of multigenerational creativity, culture, and tradition of the Pacific Northwest returns to the Seattle Center with craft demos, runway shows, full days of music and dance, and culinary exhibitions. 

Black Graduation

may 30–31, various | wa na wari, free

All things art coalesce at community hub Wa Na Wari for a two-day celebration. Saturday brings a keynote speaker on art collecting and several live music sets; Sunday boasts a full art fair and ticketed film screening.

Brewology

june 6, 7pm | pacific science center, $65

The city’s most science-forward happy hour is back with craft beer, cider, wine, and kombucha tastings. In addition to adults-only access to the cerebral exhibits, expert brewers lend beverage-making know-how and deep dives on the science that keeps things bubbly.

READINGS AND LECTUREs

Beyond Mysticism puts the PNW’s art scene on display.

Beyond Mysticism Public Tour

May 14, 16, and 17, various | seattle art museum, admission

Class is in session among the newest SAM gallery, a gentle trek through the Pacific Northwest art and artists of the 20th century. Guided tours on Thursdays and weekends offer behind-the-scenes trivia and deeper dives into artwork crafted in our backyard.

Ly Xīnzhèn M. Zhǎngsūn Brown

may 21, 6pm | town hall seattle, $0–50

Next up in the University of Washington Office of Public Lectures series, disabled wisdom is presented as a way out, a tool for regulating AI, rebuilding justice systems, and challenging late-stage capitalism. Scholar-activist Ly Xīnzhèn M. Zhǎngsūn Brown, founder of The Autistic People of Color Fund, leads the lecture on crip feminist technoscience’s hope for our collective future.

Queer Book Fair

june 6–7, various | charlie’s queer books, free

Kicking off Pride Month, Fremont’s Charlie’s Queer Books hosts a weekend-long book fair with author signings, flash tattoos, zines, art vendors, and a beer garden hosted by local speakeasy Botanicale.

On sale now

The Play That Goes Wrong

June 11–28, various | bagley wright theater, $45–140

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‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.seattlemet.com ’

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