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Hugo House is a non-profit community writing center in Seattle, Washington.
Hugo House was founded in 1997 by Linda Jaech, Frances McCue, and Andrea Lewis. These three writers believed Seattle needed a center for local writers and readers to find a community and create new work. In 1999, Laura Hirschfield described the nonprofit organization: "Richard Hugo House is a two-year-old literary arts center in Seattle named after the Seattle-born poet and creative writing teacher Richard Hugo who wrote squarely and poignantly about people and places often overlooked." [1]
Several new programs were created at Hugo House during the 2000s by Program Director Brian McGuigan, including Cheap Wine and Poetry (in 2005) [2] Cheap Beer and Prose (in 2008), [3] and the Made at Hugo House fellowship. [4] McGuigan left Hugo House in 2014.
Tree Swenson was the executive director of Hugo House from 2012 to 2020. [5] The current Interim Executive Director is Rob Arnold.
Hugo House first occupied a 16,206-square-foot (1,505.6 m2) Victorian house originally built in 1902. Previous occupants of the building included New City Theater and before that the Bonney-Watson mortuary and funeral home.
In addition to administrative offices, the House included:
In June 2016, the organization moved to a temporary space adjacent to the Frye Art Museum on First Hill when the original house on Capitol Hill was razed. [6] [7] The property was redeveloped with a six-story mixed-use building which, starting in September 2018, serves as the permanent home for Hugo House. [8] [9]
Hugo House presents a number of programs, including:
Everyone will get their first look on Saturday, September 22, at the grand reopening celebration.
...a new and permanent space...on the same ground where we began...