
Most arts at the 91̽»¨are having a little midsummer quiet time and regrouping for the fall, but there are still some interesting things to see on campus if you know where to look.
Work by members of the Seattle Print Arts collective will fill the Jacob Lawrence Gallery, exhibits continue at the Henry Art Gallery and Burke Museum, and the Dance Department’s summer Integrated Dance program holds an open community session.
Seattle Print Arts exhibit, Aug. 9-17. An exhibition of work by members of an association of artists, arts professionals and collectors, that was designed, installed and promoted by students of Art 496. In the . Exhibit reception is 4 to 8 p.m. Aug. 10, at the gallery.
Pocket Camera Flower Photography class, Aug. 12. Learn to create strong compositions, separate subjects from distracting backgrounds, control natural light and take charge of your camera’s many features in this class with photographer . 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., at the . Cost is $100 and preregistration is required. Email burked@uw.edu or call 206-543-9681 to register.

Integrated dance open session, 7-9 p.m., Aug. 15. The Dance Program’s Integrated Dance Summer Intensive, where those with and without disabilities work and train together, will hold a free “taster” session open to the community, in Studio 265 of Meany Hall. Participants will work with material from the training class, leading to open improvisation. Read a 2010 about the summer program. Learn more ; contact Jurg Koch, assistant professor of dance, at kochj@uw.edu. No dance experience is necessary.
Lecture by Philip Govedare, 7 p.m., Aug. 16. Govedare, a professor of painting and drawing in the School of Art, will present an overview of “Evolving Interpretations of Wilderness,” a paper he delivered this year to the American Association of Geographers. At the Prographica Gallery, in association with its current , “Commentaries: Artists Respond to the Land,” curated by Govedare with alum Kimberly Clark, which runs through Sept. 1. A discussion will follow the lecture.
Continuing:
“The Record: Contemporary Art and Vinyl,” through Oct. 7. explores the world of vinyl records from the 1960s to the present through sculpture, installation, drawing, painting, photography, video, performance and — of course — sound. Accompanied by “” in the Henry’s Test Site, which looks at the history of music production in the Pacific Northwest.
2012 International Conservation Photography Awards Exhibit, through Nov. 25. The Burke Museum hosts this of photographs by the winners of a biennial juried competition started in 1997 by nature photographer Art Wolfe.