2025 Walk the Block Festival
The Northwest Biggest Black Art Fair and Festival
Location
Wa Na Wari
911 24th Avenue Seattle, WA 98122Refund Policy
Lineup
Agenda
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Institute- Terence Nance - August 8th, 2025
Terence Nance
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Institute - Amir George - August 22nd, 2025
Amir George
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Institute- Brian McDonald - September 5th, 2025
Brian McDonald
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Institute- Gilda Sheppard - September 19th, 2025
Gilda Sheppard
About this event
Wa Na Wari’s 2025 Walk the Block Focuses on Gratitude for Land & Community
Seattle - July 15, 2025 - Wa Na Wari is pleased to announce the return of Walk the Block, its signature art and culture festival that transforms Seattle’s Central District into a vibrant celebration of Black creativity, resilience, and community.
Walk the Block 2025 unfolds in two powerful parts: a four-week institute launching August 8, focused on building with and uplifting legacy community members, followed by a day-long public celebration on September 27. On that day, the streets, porches, gardens, and storefronts of the Central District will come alive with art activations, performances, and installations that honor the neighborhood’s cultural legacy and invite collective joy and reflection.
This year’s theme, gratitude, honors thankfulness as a living practice - not simply a gesture, but a way of being. This year’s theme serves as an invitation to tend to the land, care for one another, and carry forward the legacy of those who came before. In alignment with Wa Na Wari’s mission, Walk the Block 2025 channels this spirit through art, music, and performance, encouraging the community to engage gratitude as a form of stewardship - of culture, connection, and shared space.
Returning this year to offer an even more in-depth and immersive experience,Wa Na Wari welcomes both local and national artists to build upon the foundation of past seasons and continue the tradition.
“Throughout the year we are constantly collaborating with the most incredible artists, thinkers, oral historians, small businesses, cultural workers and community organizers in our various program areas. Walk the Block is our way of bringing all of this creative energy together. We are celebrating those collaborations in a way that makes what we do accessible and exciting for everyone, especially those who don’t come to Wa Na Wari on a regular basis.”, says Inye Wokoma, Wa Na Wari Co-Founder.
Wa Na Wari continues that tradition through this year’s event and by integrating a dynamic mix of visual art, sound, performance, and community engagement in a neighborhood-wide format. This year’s event will feature a wide-range of artists who reflect the theme while invoking cultural memory and intentional reflection.
Performances & Artists
Headlining this year’s event is Saul Williams, a multidisciplinary artist celebrated as the “global ambassador of modern poetry.” He brings a powerful voice and visionary presence to Walk the Block 2025. Additional participating artists include Natalie Ball, Kamari Bright, Creative Justice, Dez’mon Omega Fair, Femme du lit, Curry Hackett, Maria Kang, Briana Kennedy, Zahyr Lauren, Josh Nucci, Perri Rhoden, The Ancient Robotz, Tariq Sahali, Shanice Smith, Carletta Carrington Wilson, and Inye Wokoma. These artists will activate the Central District with works that reflect the spirit, complexity and beauty and convergence of Black, human experiences. Learn more about the artists at www.wanwari.org/events.
In addition to the visual and performance art, Walk the Block 2025 will include a dedicated Comedy Stage curated by Nate Jackson’s Super Funny Comedy Club, showcasing stand-up sets from Danny Meyerend, Frederick White, and Tyrik Woods. This multidisciplinary approach allows Wa Na Wari’s Walk the Block to foster deeper dialogue and engagement, creating a celebratory yet critically conscious environment rooted in the rich cultural legacy the Central District and Seattle has long been known for.
Since its founding, Wa Na Wari has honored the legacy of Seattle’s Central District and served as a cornerstone serving as a nurturing space for artists and community members far and wide. Wa Na Wari builds upon the foundation laid by those who understood the deep value of protecting Black history, art, and place.
This commitment to preservation is not about looking back -it’s about lighting the way forward. By activating the collective imagination, Wa Na Wari inspires communities across the region and the country to envision a future where cultural memory is safeguarded, and where Black communities can thrive, create, and remain rooted in the places they call home.
Through Walk the Block, Wa Na Wari reclaims space and uplifts the rich legacy of Black artistry that continues to shape and build the landscape of Seattle.
On Instagram: @wanawariseattle
Wa Na Wari is located at 911 24th Ave, Seattle, WA 98122. Phone: (206) 485-7563
About Wa Na Wari
Sited in a fifth-generation, Black-owned home, Wa Na Wari is an immersive community art project that reclaims Black cultural space and makes a statement about the importance of Black land ownership in gentrified communities. Our mission is to create space for Black ownership, possibility, and belonging through art, historic preservation, and connection. Referred to as a "container for Black joy,” Wa Na Wari incubates and amplifies Black art and belonging while providing a safe space for organizing and movement building. By renting a house from a vulnerable Black homeowner, and giving that space back to the Black community, Wa Na Wari is an active model for how Black art and culture can combat gentrification and displacement.
Website | wanawari.org
On Facebook | www.facebook.com/wanawariseattle
About Walk the Block Institute
Walk the Block Institute invites our community to explore strategies for creative community building. Each year, Walk the Block Institute is presented by a different Wa Na Wari program, reflecting its unique character and focus. This year our art program has curated a group of Black filmmakers to share their work and reflect on their roles as observers, narrators, futurists, and thought provocateurs in social movements.
About the Artists and Participants
2025 Walk the Block Artists:
Natalie Ball, Kamari Bright, Creative Justice, Dez’mon Omega Fair, Femme du lit, Curry Hackett, Maria Kang, Briana Kennedy, Zahyr Lauren, Josh Nucci, Perri Rhoden, The Ancient Robotz, Tariq Sahali, Shanice Smith, Carletta Carrington Wilson and Inye Wokoma
Comedy Stage curated by Nate Jackson’s Super Funny Comedy Club:
Danny Meyerend, Frederick White and Tyrik Woods
Dance Stage Curated by Black Collectivity
Activation Partners:
Arte Noir
EVENT DETAILS
Walk the Block Institute (4 weeks) | August 8, August 15, August 22, August 29
Location: Zoom
Walk the Block Community Festival | Saturday, September 27 from 1PM - 7PM
Location: Registration is on 24th and Union, Seattle, WA 98122
Frequently asked questions
Saturday, September 27th, 2025 from 1pm-7pm. Participants can arrive and begin the walk anytime between 1pm and 6pm.
Registration #1 is on 24th and Cherry and Registration #2 is on 24th and Union
What is the deadline for purchasing tickets? You can purchase tickets up to the day of. For swag tickets the deadline is September 15th.
We're very sorry but all registrations are final. This event will go on rain or shine. If you can no longer attend your registration can be a donation. Please contact us for a tax receipt if you can't attend.
Everyone will start the walk at registration and you will get your wristband, meal and food tickets there. To pick up swag ( shirts, sweatshirts, etc) go the merch table in front of Wa Na Wari, 911 24th Ave, Seattle, WA 98122.
The total distance of the walk is about .8 miles. You can walk, ride a bike, or drive. Rest and bathroom spots will be located on the event map.