The award from the National Endowment for the Humanites will help the Bend museum revitalize its permanent collection dedicated to Indigenous peoples of the region.
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The classical group’s spring season of free pop-up and full-length shows gets out of the concert halls and into book stores, cafes, churches, and other places where people gather.
Celebrate a slightly belated April Fools’ Day with a fittingly foolish crossword puzzle.
The classical group’s spring season of free pop-up and full-length shows gets out of the concert halls and into book stores, cafes, churches, and other places where people gather.
Every singer in Oregon, voices raised for spring.
Famed performance artist Annie Sprinkle and her collaborator Beth Stephens were in residence at the college in early April. Their work, ‘The Forest as Lover,’ is in the college’s EAR (Experimental Art Research) Forest through the end of June.
At the clifftop museum overlooking the Columbia Gorge, two new exhibitions follow the river’s flow for 300 miles to create art of the land, water, and Northwest cultures.
Portland Center Stage opens an updated “translation” of Shakespeare’s tragedy of political and moral downfall. Plus: A multi-show triumph of women; Irish myth and more.
As the Oregon Shakespeare Festival emerges from pandemic woes, the Scottish play and “Born with Teeth” shine brightly with smart design, pared-down staging and top-flight acting.
Plus: Guy Ritchie’s “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare,” Anthony Mann’s “The Tin Star” on Blu-ray, and a few 4/20 highlights.
Kirsten Dunst is exceptional in Alex Garland’s emphatically non-partisan vision of a war-torn future America.
The Australian dance company closed White Bird’s season with a bold performance, as the powerful and confident dancers brilliantly executed Rafael Bonachela’s technically demanding choreography.
Portland’s longest running dance company celebrates their 48th season at their annual performance, as artistic director Steve Gonzales marks his 25th year leading the nationally recognized high school dance program.
For nearly 60 years, the non-profit program has been offering residential music and arts summer camps where youth can further their artistic interests while forging lifelong friendships.
Portland’s longest running dance company celebrates their 48th season at their annual performance, as artistic director Steve Gonzales marks his 25th year leading the nationally recognized high school dance program.
“Honey in the Horn,” a coming-of-age tale that shows how environmental settings mold human ideas and actions, won the literary distinction, but detractors said it was too critical of Oregon and its people.
Other winners during Monday’s Literary Arts event included Waka T. Brown for young adult literature and poet Daniela Naomi Molnar.
As the Oregon Shakespeare Festival emerges from pandemic woes, the Scottish play and “Born with Teeth” shine brightly with smart design, pared-down staging and top-flight acting.
“Honey in the Horn,” a coming-of-age tale that shows how environmental settings mold human ideas and actions, won the literary distinction, but detractors said it was too critical of Oregon and its people.
Cultural centers are essential gathering places that uniquely serve and reflect their communities.
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Arts education helps young people learn and think.
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Hannah Krafcik explores the gender nonconforming and trans experience in a series of essays.
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