
Vision 2020: Ella Ray
“There is this level of resistance coming from formerly colonized people … I feel something bubbling under the surface.”
“There is this level of resistance coming from formerly colonized people … I feel something bubbling under the surface.”
New leaders take the renamed Five Oaks Museum deeper into the arts and the diversity of culture around it.
Oregon has two winters as well as two summers. We’ve just wrapped up First Winter: the time when it hasn’t gotten too terribly cold and miserable, holiday cheer is in the air, and everybody’s all excited for the solstice and the new
Vision 2020, new/old Five Oaks Museum, Second Winter music, blood sweat & fears onstage, storm of the (last) century.
As her career soars, a Eugene playwright says “access is the foundation for a vibrant arts scene.”
The Power & Magic of an indie comics universe that tells tales of adventure in a nonbinary culture of color.
Washington County Museum branches out under a new name, Five Oaks Museum, and a broader cultural umbrella.
“This IS Kalapuyan Land” at the newly renamed Five Oaks Museum makes an emphatic case for a reclaimed history.
Book author John Dodge will speak in Cannon Beach about the 1962 Columbus Day Storm.
The director of the Hallie Ford Museum of Art praises Salem’s thriving arts and culture community.
Sue Taylor reviews Kerry Skarbakka’s recent exhibition at Northview Gallery, PCC Sylvania
Wobbly duo see a dangerous world: “Hate based crime directed against people with disabilities has gone up.”
The new year rolls in with a little of everything: gallery exhibitions, TEDx talks, readings, and music.
A leading Oregon theater artist says extending equity to all groups is a way forward for everyone.
At Ori Gallery: “We often joke about how we would love to not be the only Queer, Black-run art space in town.”
Reality, virtual and otherwise, mingles with fantasy, virtual and otherwise, on Portland streets, theater and galleries. Jae Carlsson takes the trip.
Leaders of an art center in La Grande say funding cuts could have been dire, but the community stepped up.
The Oregon percussionist, composer, and conductor for more than 40 years thinks about thorny issues ahead.
A Newport dance teacher’s “small” goals: keep kids motivated to dance, give low-income kids a place to go.
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