Review: NW Dance Project’s Spring Premieres
The Portland company dives into new work by choreographers Yin Yue, Ihsan Rustem, and Joseph Hernandez.
The Portland company dives into new work by choreographers Yin Yue, Ihsan Rustem, and Joseph Hernandez.
Love and loss seesaw deliciously in CMNW lieder recital at The Old Church.
The stars show up, a cinemonster crashes the party at Tuesday night’s Cinema Unbound Awards – and the film center forges a new identity.
Ten days and nights of live music with Diane Schuur, Domo Branch, Mel Brown B-3 Organ Group, Brandee Younger, and more.
The Portland artist’s paintings, at the Salem museum through March 26, tackle American history, culture, and racial injustice.
Dmae Lo Roberts talks with the playwright and Borderlands Theater leader whose U.S. border adaptation of “Antigone” opens at Milagro Theatre.
In a gallerist’s anti-vaxx crusade and shaming of a Jewish museum, Jennifer Rabin writes, the systems of power reinforce themselves.
The group exhibition features quilts from the Springfield History Museum in conversation with quilt-inspired works by contemporary artists.
How does the arts world respond to Putin’s invasion of Ukraine? Memories of a time in Russia suggest a war nurtured in fields of beauty and danger.
Excerpt: The Eugene author, poet and teacher’s new memoir reveals a life continually inspired by the music that accompanied his journey.
This month brings a feminist book club, a look back at the Rajneeshees, plenty of author readings, and Oregon Book Award finalists
Director Jessica Wallenfels and PSU actors dig marvelously into family dynamics and the myriad aspects of negotiating the deaf and hearing worlds.
The storied veteran dance artist makes connections as she creates a memorial to colleagues who’ve passed on.
In a time of crisis, the art and dance of a vibrant culture find a light. Plus highlights of Oregon’s dance calendar.
Shaking the Tree searches for the baddest femme fatale of all time. Plus “Without Rule of Law,” audience behavior and more.
Psych-pop, smoldering jazzy backbeats, hellgrazing black metal, exploratory rap, Kulululu.
The managing director of the city’s biggest theater company will become vice president of a national arts consulting firm, helping to shape the next generation of leaders.
A fascinating and empathetic sci-fi family drama explores the ever-thinning line between artificial and “real” intelligence, and what being human is.
Reser Center marches forth in Beaverton; Black music still matters; “Ladies’ Night” with Third Angle.
Gordon Grdina at Holocene with Creative Music Guild; Circuit Des Yeux’s visceral psych-folk.
Portland’s beloved Elk statue and accompanying fountain were removed after sustaining considerable damage in the protests of 2020. The city recently announced an imminent, yet imperfect, return.
American-Israeli pianist jets in to save Beethoven piano concerto with Mario Venzago and the Oregon Symphony
“Rosalie Knox: Conversation with the Last Unicorn” features abstract compositions inspired by the club scene and the unexpected medium of nail polish.
Art on view in March includes quilts, photographs, installations, paintings, and films. Lindsay Costello previews the shows that will welcome spring around Oregon.
A Tuesday ribbon-cutting sets the stage for art and performance at the new, $55 million Patricia Reser Center for the Arts.
Give to our GROW FUND.