CASCA D E SEPTEMBER
2018
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ISSUE
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A Picker’s Paradise by Dennis McGregor
Inspired. Inspired. Inspired. A Modern Mexican Kitchen A Modern Mexican Kitchen A Modern Mexican Kitchen
Inspired.
A Modern Mexican Kitchen
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One of Bend’s Most Awarded Mexican Restaurants serving a fresh perspective on cuisine withMexican signature margaritas for over 12 years. One ofauthentic Bend’s Most Awarded Restaurants serving a fresh perspective on
Patio Heated Patio | Banquet Loft authentic cuisine with signature margaritas forHeated over 12 years. CATERING | VEGETARIAN | VEGAN | GLUTEN FREEPLAZA OPTIONS NORTHWEST CROSSING BROOKSWOOD 541-647-1624 541-318-7210 LaRosaBend.com Happy to take reservations for parties of 5 or more! Lunch & Dinner | Open Daily Dinner | Tues - Sun Heated Patio Heated Patio | FREE Banquet Loft CATERING | VEGETARIAN | VEGAN | GLUTEN OPTIONS NORTHWEST CROSSING BROOKSWOOD Happy to take reservations for parties of 5 or PLAZA more! LaRosaBend.com 541-647-1624 541-318-7210 NORTHWEST CROSSING PLAZA Lunch & Dinner | Open Daily BROOKSWOOD Dinner | Tues - Sun 541-647-1624 541-318-7210 CATERING | VEGETARIAN | VEGAN | GLUTEN OPTIONS Heated Patio Heated Patio | FREE Banquet Loft Lunch & Dinner | Open Daily Dinner | Tues - Sun Happy to take reservations for parties of 5 or more! Heated Patio Heated Patio | Banquet Loft
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T e r r e s a W h i t e Yupik Eskimo, Sculptor
in person Show Raven Makes Gallery Sisters, Oregon
Walrus Dance Transformation, Bronze, 16” x 9” x 11”
September 7 - 9 Artist Reception 4 – 7pm Friday (Folk Festival Weekend in Sisters)
182 E Hood Ave www.ravenmakesgallery.com
Open September 22 through January 20
NEW EXHIBIT
59800 South Highway 97 | Bend, Oregon 97702 541-382-4754 | highdesertmuseum.org
Smithsonian Affiliate
This exhibition has been organized by the Christopher Cardozo Collection and is circulated through GuestCurator Traveling Exhibitions. This exhibition has been funded in part by the Oregon Heritage Commission, Oregon Parks and Recreation Department. Mother and Child
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September 2018 | www.CascadeAE.com
From the Cover, SFF featuring: Justin Townes Earle • Dar Williams • Robbie Fulks • Amy Helm • Hot Club of Cowtown • The Lil Smokies • Kahulanui • Rob Ickes & Trey Hensley • Susan Werner • The Dustbowl Revival • Claire Lynch • Ron Artis II & The Truth • Talisk • Joe Purdy • Phoebe Hunt & The Gatherers • Sam Reider & The Human Hands • Battle of Santiago • The Accidentals • Haley Heynderickx • Freddy & Francine • Lindi Ortega • Joe Pug • Jerron ‘Blind Boy’ Paxton • James Hill & Anne Janelle • The Stash! Band • Gangstagrass • Banda Magda • Martha Scanlan • The Weather Machine • Western Centuries • Jon Stickley Trio • Chuck Cannon • Anna Tivel • Marshall Ruffin • Trevor Green • Kaia Kater • Amber Rubarth • Beth Wood • Erin Cole-Baker • Danny Schmidt & Carrie Elkin • Scott Cook • Tremoloco • The Talbott Brothers • Dennis McGregor & The Spoilers • David Stoddard • Brother Roy • Ben Hunter & Joe Seamons • Justin Farren
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COMAG • At Liberty • Bend Exhibits Caldera Artists in Residence
Central Oregon Exhibits
ART
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CENTRAL OREGON
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CALL TO ART
MUSIC
CATS! • High Desert Chamber Music
My Magic Kingdom by Dorothy Eberhardt
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FILM & THEATRE
2nd Street Theater • Sunriver STARS
COVER STORY
Sisters Folk Festival
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LITERARY
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FIRST FRIDAY
Downtown Bend & Old Mill District
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Stone scape pendant courtesy of COMAG
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SUNRIVER
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Betty Gray Gallery • Sunriver Library
PHOTO PAGES
August First Friday
SISTERS
Editorial Advisory Board
Pam Beezley Dawn Boone Maralyn Thoma Dougherty Susan Luckey Higdon Billye Turner Howard Schor Ray Solley Lori Lubbesmeyer Lisa Lubbesmeyer
Sunriver Music Festival Bend Art Center 2nd Street Theater Tumalo Art Gallery Art Consultant B.E.A.T. Tower Theatre Lubbesmeyer Studio & Gallery Lubbesmeyer Studio & Gallery
Hopi Women • Sisters Exhibits
CALENDAR
WORKSHOPS
Producers
Pamela Hulse Andrews Jeff Martin Marcee Hillman Moeggenberg David Phillips Kalea Aguon
Founder President Production Director Advertising Executive Production/Design/ Online Communications Natalie Nieman Production David Hill Distribution
Cascade A&E is a publication of Cascade Publications Inc., locally owned and operated since 1994 and published in Bend, Oregon the Wednesday before First Friday every month. For editorial and advertising information call 541-388-5665. Send calendar and press releases to ae@cascadeae.com or A&E 404 NE Norton Ave., Bend OR 97701. Cascade A&E is available for free all over Central Oregon or $25 for a year subscription. Subscriptions outside Central Oregon are $30 a year. cascadeAE.com
Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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Photo by Lynn Woodward
World-Class Roots Music Folk & Americana Musicians Entertain in Sisters he Sisters Folk Festival (SFF) runs September 7-9. Performers represent an ever-widening sample of Americana and Folk music. Organizers came back strong after last year’s cancellation due to smoke from nearby fires. Creative Director Brad Tisdel and the SFF Talent Committee invited all the 2017 performers to come back. 75 percent were confirmed. “To deliver a world-class experience, we filled the rest of the lineup with dynamic artists and performers,” said Tisdel. The Festival doesn’t just attract local and world-wide audiences, it’s also highly sought-after by touring professionals. The experience shared by musicians and students at the Americana Song Academy, held at the spectacular Caldera campus is well known. Festival staff and volunteers make sure that artists are treated with respect, understanding and great food during their stay in Sisters. The Sisters Folk Festival has become an important stop for touring musicians who want to establish an audience base in the Pacific Northwest. Artists understand the unique quality the Festival provides, but it’s an ongoing process to educate people on the elasticity of the term “Folk.” Once thought of as, “Your parents’ Peter, Paul & Mary,” attendees are spreading
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the word that American Roots music encompasses a vast territory of talent. Artists take traditional Americana instruments like banjos, guitars, mandolins and Dobro’s and breathe new life into them. Genres like Indie Folk, Alt-Country and cross-genre musical explorations like Hip-Hop Bluegrass all blow the socks off of the old definition. “Americana is many strands of American folk music coming together in contemporary ways,” explained Tisdel. 2018 performers offer powerful, passionate voices that tackle tough social issues and celebrate the joys found in sharing music with an appreciative crowd. The rural town hosts eleven stages ranging in capacity from 120 to 1400. From the charming intimacy found at the Open Door, party atmosphere of Melvin’s By Newport Avenue Market, outdoor beauty at Five Pine and the large tent feel of Sisters Art Works and Village Green Park, the Festival provides many types of listening experiences. Then there’s the music! New artists booked this year such as Hawaiian blues and soul guitar player, Ron Artis II & The Truth, Indie-Folk songwriter Haley Heynderickx and folk rockers, The Accidentals help to round out an already
COVER STORY Academy who refer to themselves as “the tribe.” Some have attended for more phenomenal lineup. than a decade. Past and present Americana Project students and those who Tisdel is proud of acts like Banda Magda, Kahulanui, Tremoloco, have built their own ukulele or guitar all share a bond with SFF. There’s also Afro-Caribbean, claw hammer banjo player Kaia Kater and the community of volunteers, sponsors, donors and Sisters Scottish band Talisk. “We booked artists to Folk Arts Circle members who support the organization make it interesting and powerful both musically in a myriad of ways. “They have an engagement and and culturally.” experience with SFF that the general public doesn’t,” With all these captivating options Tisdel suggests doing added Remington. your research before the Festival. Listeners can look at the The Thursday night event, was more or less a private SFF website where there’s samples of every artist. “Patrons concert and dinner to honor sponsors, donors and Folk can map out both venues and the musical experience they Arts Circle members will feature information about the want to have.” Tisdel suggests keeping an open mind. SFF Capital Campaign. “It’s a wonderful opportunity to “Allow yourself to see something new that you didn’t create a permanent center for creativity and community expect; because you can expect to see that at the Festival,” music in Sisters,” said Remington. he laughed. “Purchasing the Sisters Art Works building, its property “We curate the festival intentionally to provide a broad and developing it further will allow us to create even more spectrum of Americana music. Most will appeal to a large 2015 performer Liz Longley, photo by Rob Kerr programs and services to better serve the community. We audience and some will surprise people with acts and artists are able to do this because of the generosity who are different and innovative artistically,” of Frank and Kathy Deggendorfer, who have he added. offered the building at half its current market Festival-related activities begin before value,” said Remington. the Friday night opening acts. The week This represents the largest gift in the history before, musicians perform in all three Sisters of SFF. Remington wants to celebrate that on public schools. Many musicians teach at the Thursday night with all of SFF’s supporters. Americana Song Academy, do performances “We’ll really explain in detail how this in the schools and then go back to Caldera for opportunity allows us to grow and take the more time with “Song Campers.” organization to the next level.” The Festival poster, created once again by After the short presentation, patrons will be local artist and musician, Dennis McGregor entertained by Rob Ickes and Trey Hensley. captures the idyllic mountain town of Sisters as The event will be capped off by an evening of a destination for world-class music. Entitled, dancing to The Dustbowl Revival. Both will Picker’s Paradise, McGregor’s inspiration Photo by Lynn Woodward be performing throughout the weekend on came from fruit crate art from the 1940’s multiple stages. and 1950’s. Remington will reveal the capital campaign’s progress so “Between the programming, the festival and the amount far. “We will announce that along with the Deggendorfer’s of creativity coming out of Sisters, we wanted to get back contribution, our lead donors, as well as the SFF board to what it’s all about, which is the music. When it all comes members, have pledged $700,000 which brings us half-way down to it, it’s about sharing music and being together,” to the $1.4 million first phase goal. The board is 100 percent said Tisdel. committed.All that generosity reflects the theme,“Connected To keep all that creative activity going in a small town by Creativity.” takes an incredible amount of work by staff members and Throughout the campaign, Remington is collecting the SFF board. Steven Remington, the new Development stories from community members about how they’ve Director for SFF will be experiencing his first Festival this personally been connected by creativity because of SFF year. He’s enjoying learning just how vast and intricate the programming. “We have a link on the SFF campaign organization has become since it began in 1995. website where people can submit their stories and be part “The interesting thing about SFF Inc. is that many people Molly Cherry Holmes, photo by Jay Mather of the campaign,” said Remington. don’t know about our year-round presence,” he said after Staff and community members are optimistic about the a long day writing grants and preparing for the Festival. Festival. It’s the last big infusion of capital for local businesses and a hearty, “They don’t know unless they’re a parent of a student in one of our Americana “goodbye” to summer. There’s still time to purchase tickets to the Festival. Check programs or perhaps a retired person who’s volunteering in the schools. Just out their website for current ticket information. Once you’ve experienced the as we have many programs throughout the year, SFF has many communities Festival, it’s a good bet you’ll be back every year. within it,” he added. sistersfolkfestival.org Remington explained SFF communities include people of the Song Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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FIRST FRIDAY IN BEND
CASCADE
september 7 printed at Whit Print Studio in Eugene, Oregon at a Big Ink event in 2018. Artists were selected, either by personal invitation or through a call-for-entry process, to print original woodblocks at least 24” x 36” in size. Our featured Exhibit is by A6 Artist Adell Shetterly. Local artist Adell Shetterly presents a new series of prints which combine multiple printmaking processes. The exhibit opens Friday, September 7. Gallery hours: Monday-Friday 10am7pm, Saturday 10am-6pm, Sunday noon5pm. Exhibit admission is free.
Art in the Atrium, Franklin Crossing 550 NW Franklin St. Franklin Crossing features Ian Factor’s paintings, The Baristas of Bend, August 30 to September 30. The artist will attend the public opening on September 7 from 5-8pm. During First Friday, Noi Thai serves wine and appetizers. Tommy Leroy Freedman (bass) brings Portland musicians with storied global careers, Caterina New (sax and vocals) and Al Martin (congas) to Franklin Crossing. Also appearing is Scott “straight out of Brooklyn” Johnson (guitar) and Jodi at Palate Matthew Williams (drums). For more information contact Billye Turner, Art Consultant, at 503-780-2828 or billyeturner@bendnet.com. Bend Art Center 550 SW Industrial Way, Ste. 180 541-330-8759 • bendartcenter.org A second collection of large-scale prints goes on display for Bend Art Center’s Big Ink II exhibit on display September 7-30, with an opening reception on Friday, September 7, 5-9pm. Big Ink is an organized network of artists who promote large-scale woodblock printing. The works in Bend Art Center’s exhibit were
Crow's Feet Commons Cafe Big Ink II print 875 NW Brooks St. 541-728-0066 Crow’s Foot Common Cafe is hosting SageBrushers Art Society artists Jennifer Ware-Kempke, Kathleen Riopelle, Bette Butler and Sue Lever for First Friday in September. Come and enjoy a range of subjects in this mixed media show. Jeffrey Murray Photography 118 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-325-6225 jeffreymurrayphotography.com Features American landscape and fine art images captured by Bend nature photographer, Jeffrey Murray. Visit and enjoy Spanish Manor House by Bette Butler
Fine Art & Contemporary Craft
103 NW Oregon Avenue Bend, OR 97703 541.306.3176 Open Every Day www.redchairgallerybend.com
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September 2018 | www.CascadeAE.com
Featuring Works by
Local Artists and Quality Framing Jewelry by Anne von Heideken
834 NW BROOKS STREET • BEND 541-382-5884 • www.sageframing-gallery.com
Please Send First Friday Submissions No later than September 19 for the October issue to:
ae@cascadeae.com a visual adventure of illuminating light and captivating panoramas from scenes in Central Oregon and across North America. John Paul Designs Custom Jewelry + Signature Series 1006 NW Bond St. johnpauldesigns.com Specializing in unique, one of a kind wedding and engagement rings in a variety of metals. Karen Bandy Design Jeweler 25 NW Minnesota Ave., Ste. 5 541-388-0155 • karenbandy.com Tucked between Thump coffee and Alleda Real Estate, Karen Bandy a Central Oregon national/international award-winning jewelry designer and abstract painter, specializing in custom design in downtown Bend since 1987. Her designs are bold, fun and very wearable. Open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 11:30am-5pm, First Fridays and by appointment. Karen Ruane Studio + Collective 835 NW Bond St. #200 karenruane.com First Friday $100 Art Sale - Benefitting Humane Society of Central Oregon. Join The Collective and Humane Society of Central Oregon for a fantastic $100 art sale, and foster program information night! 30% of every painting sold will go directly to the HSCO. Representatives from HSCO will be there to answer questions about their foster program, and you’ll even get to snuggle some furry babies. Lara House Bend & Breakfast 640 NW Congress St. 541-388-4064 Join us every First Friday at the Lara House Bed and Breakfast from
5-7pm. Enjoy the artworks from six local artists: Ann Gibson, Karen Eland, Dorothy Holmes, Michelle Lindblom, Kristine Cooper and Angela Schwer. We will also have free yoga on our side lawn with live music. Yoga will be taught by Autumn Adams and Helen Cloots and live music from Amy Bathen. Yoga will start at 5:30pm. Check out the inside of our beautiful historic bed and breakfast. We have been apart of Bend since 1910. Layor Art + Supply By Mary Medrano 1000 NW Wall St., Ste. 110 541-322-0421 layorart.com Layor artist for September is Contemporary artist, Mary Medrano. Mary will be showcasing her abstract acrylic work.
Lake Grass, 2018 by Lubbesmeyer Twins
Lubbesmeyer Studio & Gallery Old Mill District, second story loft 541-330-0840 • lubbesmeyer.com The Lubbesmeyer twins offer a range of work created in fiber and paint. Through the twins’ collaborative process, they distill literal imagery into vivid blocks of color and texture, creating an abstracted view of their surroundings. Working studio/gallery open Tuesday thru Saturday.
Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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CASCADE
FIRST FRIDAY IN BEND september 7
Mary Medrano Studio 25 NW Minnesota Ave., #12 408-250-2732 • marymedrano.com Step away from the crowds and relax in an art studio that is filled with the latest works by Mary Medrano. Located above Thump Coffee and across from the Oxford Hotel in the heart of downtown is a hidden gem of a studio. Stop in and see what’s new. Mockingbird Gallery 869 NW Wall St. 541-388-2107 • mockingbird-gallery.com On First Friday, September 7 from 5-9pm, Mockingbird Gallery will feature the work of John DeMott and Mick Doellinger in our show titled Beyond the West. Please join us and meet the artists, sip some wine and enjoy the Ryan Camastral Trio. In his search to conjure up on canvas the American West during the 1850’s to the turn of the century, John DeMott does more than work from models. He stands in the path of stampeding buffalo, participates in 1880-style shootouts and spends time on Civil War battlefields. Mick Doellinger grew up in Australia surrounded by a vast primitive landscape and abundant wildlife. In the 1970’s he came to California, met a couple of taxidermists and became fascinated with the craft. In his practice as a taxidermist, his goal was to create the most lifelike forms possible. This background aided him in his future as a renowned sculptor. Oxford Hotel 10 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-382-8436 The Oxford Hotel presents Joanne Donaca’s oil paintings of Oregon landscapes from August 31-October 26. Donaca will attend the Oxford First Friday champagne reception on September 7, from 5:30-7:30pm. Steelhead Falls II by Joanne Donaca
Peterson/Roth Gallery 206 NW Oregon Ave., Ste. 1 541-633-7148 • petersonroth.com • thegallery@petersonroth.com Peterson/Roth Gallery is proud to continue our 2018 season and our second year by sharing with you some of the talented work of the 18 artists we represent. Our artists represent Maine to California, including Central
Oregon, of course. The gallery will be hung with fresh art for First Friday, which opens on September 7 from 5-9pm. Please come on down and join us for some wine, cheese and fun. A few of the artists will also be on hand to answer any questions you might have. We are located beneath Silverado, next to Bend Alterations. Just follow the black staircase railing to find us. This presentation will hang through the month of September. Peterson/Roth strives to cultivate a welcoming environment; to connect artists and the public. We are Bend’s only modern/contemporary gallery and are thrilled to provide this community with an alternative option for their art needs. Photography by Dorothy Eberhardt
Red Chair Gallery 103 NW Oregon Ave. 541-306-3176 • redchairgallerybend.com September signals a change in season as we focus on the photography of Dorothy Eberhardt. Her new work is a perfect reflection of the coming forecast. Eberhardt spends hours that turn into days studying and capturing the perfect moments in time that become her exceptional photography. The joy for us as viewers is in the sharing. Anne von Heideken creates jewelry with everyday and special events in mind. From big, chunky turquoise pieces to fine, delicate pearls, her work is perfect for every occasion. She travels the southwest and beyond to find those perfect pieces that make her art truly one of a kind. Sage Custom Framing & Gallery 834 NW Brooks St. 541-382-5884 • sageframing-gallery.com Featured artists at Sage Custom Framing for September are Nancy Misek, Denise Rich, Laura Jo Sherman and Jane Tolve. The show will run through September 29 with a First Friday reception on September 7 from 5-8pm. Nancy Misek, working in pastels, captures the beauty of our Oregon landscape in her Summer Foursome by Laura Jo Sherman
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September 2018 | www.CascadeAE.com
Please Send First Friday Submissions No later than September 19 for the October issue to:
ae@cascadeae.com sensitive and beautiful renderings of the natural world. Denise Rich focuses on a favorite subject, trees. Both plein air and studio paintings done in “Open”(slow drying) acrylics will show her exploration of the beauty of junipers and pines. In Laura Jo Sherman’s work, a passion for life long learning is evident. Approaching each new painting as a challenge, and favoring expressive techniques in her pastel paintings, she may use mixed media, unusual color combinations and varying textures. Jane Tolve, also preferring to use pastels, as her medium of choice, takes an intuitive approach to her paintings. Starting with an idea, she lets her imagination taker her where it may, experimenting with bold color combinations and injecting energy and movement, often with a touch of whimsy. TIAA Bank 5 NW Minnesota Ave. Watercolor by Jennifer Ware TIAA BANK is hosting SageBrushers Art Society artists for First Friday in September, featuring the multimedia work of Jennifer Ware-Kempke. First Friday Opening. Tumalo Art Company Old Mill District 541-385-9144 • tumaloartco.com In celebration of a new season full of color, Tumalo Art Co. artists present Autumn Joy, a group show opening September 7 from 4-8pm and continuing all month. Mixed media by Shelli Walters, Marty Stewart’s atmospheric pastels, photography by Bruce Jackson and Dorothy Freudenberg’s vivid digital media, Sarah B. Hansen’s interpretive landscape, Annie Ferder’s floral in fall colors and new paintings by many more artists. Tumalo Art Co. is an artist-run gallery in the heart of the Old Mill District open seven days a week. The Wine Shop 55 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-389-2884 • thewineshopbend.com Continuing through September, the Wine will feature Nature’s Wild World in Light and Texture, an exhibit of paintings by local Bend artist Jean Vertefeuille-Cutler.
A lifelong naturalist, Vertefeuille-Cutler uses her work to explore nature in its many moods and manifestations across a wide geography of landscapes. The paintings emphasize her affinity for natural light as it transforms color, shape, texture and mood in wild environments. Autumn Rhodes by Annie Ferder Water is also a strong theme in her work. “It calls to me from the deepest places of my being,” she says. “Whether it’s a puddle, a pond, a roaring creek or a vast expanse of open ocean, water tugs and teases me to capture it along with all its habitats and creatures.” A newcomer to Bend, Vertefeuille-Cutler says she’s been fortunate in getting to study and experience nature in many wild places: “From the gentle hills of New England to the boreal forests of northern Minnesota to rugged mountain life in Colorado and now the high desert of central Oregon and Pacific Northwest coast and rain forests, I am constantly inspired to bring these special lands into my work.” Jean lives in Bend and is available for interviews and additional information as needed. Village Interiors 750 NW Lava Rd. 541-389-6515 • villageinteriorsdesign.com Village Interiors is pleased to announce a varied collection by artist and oil painter Sandy Melchiori. Her work features lush vibrant landscapes and whimsical roosters, jackrabbits and farm animals. Sandy’s love of nature and world travel have influenced her creative and imaginative style. Regarding Melchiori’s exhibit at Village Interiors, comments shared include “a Coastal painting by Jean Vertefeuille-Cutler joyful feeling” and “ a love of color”. Join us on September 7 from 5-8pm for light fare and beverages.
Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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At Liberty
Red Chair Gallery
At Liberty
LAYOR
First friday artwalk at Tumalo Art Co., Red Chair Gallery, LAYOR, Mockingbird Gallery & At Liberty in Downtown Bend & the Old Mill District Photos submitted by Red Chair Gallery, Natalie Nieman & David Phillips
Red Chair Gallery
Tumalo Art Co. At Liberty
Cascade Sothebys
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September 2018 | www.CascadeAE.com
At Liberty
Jeffrey Murray Photography
PHOTO PAGES
Red Chair Gallery
Tumalo Art Co. Red Chair Gallery
Red Chair Gallery Mockingbird Gallery
At Liberty
LAYOR
LAYOR
Red Chair Gallery
Red Chair Gallery
LAYOR
Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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Yup’ik Eskimo Artist Visiting Sisters for Weekend Show
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bronze sculpture depicts a Yup’ik Eskimo performing an ancient dance and transforming into a walrus mid-sway. A ceramic mask of a sea otter on its back reveals it stomach to be a human’s face, ready to devour a small fish. These images are both powerful and ethereal in announcing the Yup’ik Peoples world, consciousness, and metaphysical connections. In order to create the works, Terresa White must flow into the mystical realms of her grandmother, her grandmother’s grandmother, and their handed down oral stories of the subarctic world. Imbued with this ancestral awareness, she shares these perspectives about the distant lands in contemporary art forms. Maker Raven: Pushing Back the Mask by Terresa White Terresa grew up in Rainier, Oregon, 2000 miles away and a full generation removed from her family’s remote homelands in Western Central Alaska. Her HIGH DESERT ART LEAGUE grandmother Clara and great aunts were forcibly taken from their home in AN ASSOCIATION OF PROFESSIONAL ARTISTS remote Alaska for the purpose of educating them in Western World schooling s o as to ‘civilize them.’ Clara, living in Fairbanks, Alaska with a young daughter who would become Terresa’s mother, married a man of German descent; the family resettled in Oregon. Clara’s sisters followed. Though fluent in their own language, they formed a community within a community and, in the English language, taught their children the Yup’ik perspectives, culture, and values, while never identifying that the family’s norms, organization, and virtues were derived from a completely different environment 6 SW Bond St. & and culture. Terresa became a tribally enrolled member of the Yup’ik People, “Luscious” by 450 Powerhouse Suite 400 Karen Maier and her traditional tattoos—three lines from the lower lip to chin— express A Sustainable Cup - Drink it up! that identity and heritage. www.highdesertartleague.com www.strictlyorganic.com Terresa’s account of her identity and artistic beginnings coming together— "I experienced Eskimo dancing for the first time in a field in rural Oregon with my granny, aunties, mom and cousin. We’d been invited by an acquaintance from the Northwest Inupiaq Dancers to attend their gathering. The drums, songs, and dances lit a circle in the grass around our gathering. They cleared a path to my heart’s home! We danced the closing song with the group—it was my first time dancing, and my thousandth time, I knew it by heart and found myself dancing with my eyes lowered and my vision soaring. I left the gathering inspired to dance and compelled to create." "For years my hands had been itching to make and they saw a path in the traditional, carved wood masks worn by the dancers that day in the field. I joined the dance group after that, found my way to other Alaska Native friends in the Portland and Seattle areas, and soon sculpted my first mask from clay. It was a self-portrait mask, white-faced and wrinkle-eyed, its berry-stained mouth grinning wide." "The transformation masks that followed were born of Yup’ik and other Eskimo stories. They express my understanding of the personhood and interrelationship of all human and non-human beings. Walrus Dance Transformation, my first bronze sculpture, had its inspiration in the powerful masked Walrus Dance I saw performed that day in rural Oregon." On August 17 , Terresa received First Place for Class (Bronzes) and First Place for Division (sculptures) for the work Sedna at the premier Native American art show The Santa Fe Indian Market, held the third weekend of each August. For the next year at least, Terresa now enjoys status as one of the elite Native American artists. Terresa will be offering an in person show in Sisters September 7-9, with an artist reception on Friday from 4 to 7pm. All events will take place at Raven Makes Gallery on Hood Avenue.
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The Baristas of Bend
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ARTS ranklin Crossing features Ian Factor’s paintings, The Baristas of Bend, August 30 to September 30. The artist will attend the public opening on September 7 from 5-8pm.
On Friday, September 14 from 4-7pm, Factor presents a live, portrait painting demonstration in the Franklin Crossing Atrium. He will discuss his process, materials, the current exhibition and take questions from the audience. The public event is complimentary. In The Baristas of Bend, the artist presents recent oil paintings celebrating individuals who the artist identifies as some of the “unsung heroes of today’s social structure.” He notes, “For many, the first person seen during the day is the barista …their positive attitude and friendly conversation, accompanying that early morning energy cup, is integral to many people’s daily ritual.” The exhibition’s theme speaks to the artist’s experience—devoting breaks in studying or teaching to sitting in coffee shops and cafes, sketching.
Phoebe at Bluebird
Factor’s advanced art education led to New York and an MFA in painting, drawing and sculpture from the New York Academy of Art graduating in 2014, magna cum laude. Syracuse University, New York, granted his BFA, awarded cum laude in 1991. In addition to painting, his extensive work teaching led to recently founding the Bend Academy of Art where he serves as director and lead instructor, as well as teaching fine art at COCC. He previously served as assistant instructor of painting to noted artist, Everett Kinstler, at the National Academy of Art & Art Students League in New York City. His work abroad included: Visiting Professor, Painting and Illustration, Guangxi Arts University in Nanning, China; Visiting Professor, Anatomy and Figure Drawing, Altos de Chavon Art & Design School in the Dominican Republic and at Parson’s School of Design in New York City. He also served as director, painting program and professor of drawing at the Siena School for Liberal Arts, Siena Art Institute, Italy, and other respected locations. The artist’s solo exhibitions include: Drawing Near, COCC, Bend; Recent Work The Marblehead Arts Association, Marblehead, MA; New Works from Italy, Portugal, NYC, Gallery 55, Natick, MA; Recent Paintings, The Copley Society of Art, Boston, MA; and, Florentine Portraits, Ciberia Gallery, Florence, Italy, with many others. His selected invitational group exhibitions include: Special Invitational Exhibition, New Britain Museum of American Art, New Britain, CT; Take Home a Nude, Sotheby’s, NYC; Winter and the Holidays, Salmagundi Club, NYC; Artist’s Fellowship – 150th Anniversary Exhibition, The National Arts Club, NYC; and, Hall of Fame Portraits, The Players Club, NYC. Factor’s work appears in noted public and private collections including: the Uffizi Gallery (Ufficio della Belle Arti), Florence, Italy; The National Arts Club, NYC; Random House Publishing, NYC; and Burton Snowboards Inc., Burlington, VT. International publications including Vogue, Fine Art Connoisseur and American Art Collector featured his art.
Jodi at Palate
For information, contact Billye Turner, Art Consultant at 503-780-2828 or billyeturner@bendnet.com Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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Owl Armor
Central Oregon Metal Arts Guild
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n a chilly April evening in 1998, seven bench jewelers met over pizza and beer at Stuft Pizza on Third Street in Bend to discuss what was to become the Central Oregon Metal Arts Guild (COMAG). What started 20 years ago as an association of a handful of goldsmiths, both self-employed and working at various jewelry stores in Bend and Sisters. Early on, the group grew as the first blacksmiths, steel fabricators and even a bronze caster started to show up. Now it has grown into a group of creative metal artisans working in a variety of metal disciplines throughout Central Oregon. Today, membership hovers around 60 members, with jewelers making up about half of that number. Meetings happen the first Tuesday of each month, with the location moving from one studio/workshop to another as different members host. Meetings usually consist of regular business that keeps the guild running, a demonstration sharing the expertise of artist with each other and plenty of quality social time. Of the original seven members, four are still active in the group, have served as president at one time or another and are still working full-time in their craft. The first president, Steven Douglas and his wife Elyse, own The Sunstone Store in downtown Bend. John Paul runs John Paul Designs, also in downtown Bend. MaryJo Weiss is Josepha Weiss Designs at Torch Jewelry Collective and James Dixon is the lead goldsmith at Saxons. Also among
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the 20 year alumni Joe Elliot of Dry Canyon Forge, Goph Persuit of Perfection, photos courtesy of COMAG Albitz of Goph Studios, Nina Hurst local artisan, Suzy Williamson also at Torch Jewelry Collective. Since it’s second year, COMAG has sponsored a members show, the first one being held at John Paul Designs with members having one piece that was a collaboration with another member. The shows evolved to where each member had their own display at Art Central’s Mirror Pond Gallery. In between it grew to a show of each exhibitor having their own booth. First downstairs in the Oxford Hotel next to 10 Below and now at the old Liberty building on Wall Street known as At Liberty. In the early years, the show had a collaboration theme, and to participate, any member had to collaborate with another on at least one project. This is no longer a requirement, but the shows always dazzle with an impressive array of local talent. This year show is October 5 and 6 open Friday for Art Walk 1-9pm and Saturday 10am-6pm. The show has expanded diversity to include many local jewelers, four local sculptors, three blacksmiths, two stone and gem collectors and a custom knife maker. All those attending can sign up for a drawing of two $100 gift certificates given the end of each day for towards an artist of your choice. Hope to see you there.
Caldera Announces 2019 Artists in Residence
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aldera announces 23 artists who have been selected for residencies in winter 2019. These artists will spend up to a month at the Caldera Arts Center near Sisters. “Caldera is honored to announce three dynamic and diverse groups of Artists in Residence who will be creating, living, presenting and teaching this winter at our Arts Center,” said executive director Brian Detman. Every winter, Caldera welcomes artists from around the country accepted to the AiR Program for month-long stays at the Arts Center. Residencies are awarded based on a competitive application process open to artists from all disciplines. For many artists, residencies are a vital part of the artistic process, giving them time and space to focus, untethered by daily distractions, in a community of artists who can enhance reflection and energize new work in unexpected ways, while surrounded by a different landscape than their home environments. In 2019, residents will create new works in theatre, sculpture, nonfiction, dance, poetry, film and many other genres. While in residence, these artists will also offer workshop to students in Caldera’s Youth Program as well as to the public. More information on public workshops will be available in November. Doors to the Arts Center will open to the public for Caldera’s Artists in Residence Open Studios on January 26, February 23 and March 23 from 12:30-3:30pm. Artists in Residence, as well as Caldera students, share their work with the public through presentations and performances. Caldera is a catalyst for the transformation of underserved youth through innovative, year-round art and environmental programs. Caldera serves Oregon youth from both urban and rural communities with limited access to educational and economic resource opportunities. Our programs nurture individual creativity to ignite selfexpression and transform the way young people engage in their lives, families and communities. In 2015, Caldera received a National Arts and Humanities Youth WHAT’S FOR SALE IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD? Program Award from First Lady Michelle Obama, recognizing Caldera as one of the top youth arts programs in the nation. January Artists in Residence Farooq Ahmed Jess Arndt Maria Alejandra Barrios May Cat Andres Chang Anna Gray + Ryan Wilson Paulsen Anthony Hudson February Artists in Residence Sarah Abdel-Jelil Gisell Calderón Abigail Chabitnoy Ian Hanesworth Larry Krone Aurora Masum-Javed Jamila Osman Sa’dia Rehman March Artists in Residence Kemi Adeyemi Julie Hammond Alexandria Martinez Carolyn Monastra With sweet flavoring to mask tobacco’s harsh taste, cheap prices, Emily X.R. Pan and bright and colorful packaging, it’s even hard for adults to tell Analise Cleopatra the difference between tobacco and candy. Is it any wonder ninety Alisa Yang percent of smokers start before they are eighteen? For more information about each of
IF YOU WERE SEVEN YEARS OLD, COULD YOU TELL THE DIFFERENCE?
Caldera’s Artists in Residence, please visit the Artists in Residence section of Caldera’s website. Applications for 2020 residencies will be open in January 2019. calderaarts.org
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Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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My Magic Kingdom
For the Love of Photography
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orothy Eberhardt has always loved to create. This love has led her to a lifetime of investigating different mediums and varied aspects of the art world. Dorothy began as an art teacher and then transitioned into a 35 year career of creating and selling fine crafts at art shows from Oregon to Florida. Copper enameling was her first medium. When her husband left the ski industry to join the business, her medium became enamel and wood. After her husband passed away, Dorothy again changed her medium, this time to photography. Her love of photography started when her father (an avid photographer) gave her a Brownie camera at the age of ten. Living in beautiful Central Oregon since 1972, Dorothy’s love of nature grew and her photography changed to become landscape photography. Her goal is to create fine art photographs that capture the magic of a particular place in its best form. Dorothy’s degree in art education and the many years of creating artwork, allow her to achieve that goal. Design elements like value, shape, color, line, form, texture, pattern and light are used to create a painting as well as a magical fine art photograph. The challenge of how you find and capture the magic is the story behind every photo. Just being out in nature is the bonus that Dorothy says feeds her soul. She may not come back with a printable photo, but she always has a good time. One of the joys of photography for Dorothy is that it allows her to share the many magical moments that she has experienced in nature with everyone who sees her photos. Dorothy Eberhardt has been a member of the Red Chair Art Gallery for eight years. She will be the featured artist for September. A collection of photos can be seen at Dorothy Eberhardt Photography on Facebook. facebook.com/Dorothy-Eberhardt-Photography-1012285552184145 Feed Your Soul | September 2018 www.CascadeAE.com 16
ARTS
At Liberty Continues Exhibition The Hidden Hypotenuse Recent works by Christian Brown
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t Liberty, a year-round dedicated arts space and cultural hub in Downtown Bend, is pleased to announce up coming events related to their exhibition: The Hidden Hypotenuse recent works by Christian Brown. The exhibition will be open for September’s First Friday Art Hop on September 7 at 5:30pm and will host an Artist Talk with Christian on Thursday, September 13 at 6pm. At Liberty is honored to be exhibiting the largest show of Christian Brown’s work in Oregon. The Hidden Hypotenuse will feature over thirty of his new pieces including drawings, sculpture and mixed media work. Christian’s artwork is intricate and compelling, Art in America described him as having created “a distinct visual language as captivating as it is cryptic.” With works inspired by myth, book making, and artifact, The Hidden Hypotenuse examines themes of perception, choice, and utility while considering that the most direct path is often the one hidden to us. Christian Brown received a BFA from Rhode Island School of Design in 1994 and worked as an artist in New York City for most of the last two decades. Christian now makes his home in Bend where he and his wife Cari Brown currently operate The Workhouse, an artists collective. Christian’s work has been exhibited in New York, San Francisco, Miami, Portland and Bend. He has illustrated for newspapers, magazines and album covers as well as writing and illustrating two books, one of which has won several design awards. “Christian Brown’s art is always engaging and thought-provoking. To look at his work is to discover different worlds and meanings layered within” says Jenny Green, a partner At Liberty. The Hidden Hypotenuse will be on display through September 29. True to its mission the space will continue to provide a home to three creative nonprofits (Arts & Culture Alliance of Central Oregon, ScaleHouse and World Muse) as well as be available as an event venue. At Liberty, located in Bend’s historic Liberty Theater provides an inspiring and dynamic space for the exploration of arts and culture, through exhibitions, collaborations and events. At Liberty Arts Collaborative is open Wednesday through Saturday from 11am-6pm or by appointment. For more information on the space, renting the space or ideas for collaboration, visit www.atlibertyarts.com.
Mystique of the Cartographer Copper, photos courtesy of At Liberty
BAC Sparks Interest in Woodcut Printing with Workshops & Big Ink Exhibit
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Print from Big Ink II exhibit, courtesy of BAC
ne of the oldest forms of printmaking is generating new interest, thanks to the unusual Big Ink II exhibit at Bend Art Center (BAC). September’s Big Ink II exhibit offers a fresh take on woodcut printing, a process that was first developed in 13th century China and later refined by Japanese artists in the 18th and 19th centuries. While most artists create woodcuts on a smaller scale, artists of the Big Ink II exhibit were challenged to make woodcut prints larger than 24x36. Printed in black and white, the resulting images range from highly graphic to dark and moody. Created by 15 artists from across the
country—and printed at Whit Print Studio in Eugene— the works in Big Ink II have a wide stylistic range and show off the flexibility of woodcut. For visitors who are inspired to learn the process, Bend Art Center is offering fall workshops in woodcut printing and linocut printing (a close cousin). Taught by local artists, workshops range from beginner-level “intro” classes to advanced classes in color relief printing. Workshops take place in A6 Print Studio at Bend Art Center. Find workshop information online at bendartcenter.org or call 541-330-8759.
Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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Diane Ottenfeld, Owner & Operator
Quilts by Diane, photos courtesy of Memories to Quilts
Preserving the Past: Memories to Quilts by JULIE E. FURNAS AE Feature Writer
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hat once started out as a necessity for bed coverings and evolved into a true art form, the process of quilting continues to see new techniques, use of fabric and creative designs. Diane Ottenfeld, owner and operator of Memories to Quilts has thrusted the art to another level by taking old t-shirts and preserving them into one of a kind show pieces. “Quilting has a long history of using scraps leftover from making clothing. When quilts were made of scrap fabrics — it became a history of the clothing itself. I’m working in the opposite way by taking people’s old clothes and preserving the history of the person who wore them,” says Ottenfeld. A Born Quilter Coming from a long line of sewers in her family, her mother, grandmother and great aunt all taught Ottenfeld a lot of the skills she uses today. After high school, she left for college in Santa Barbara with a tent and a sewing machine where she studied photography and graphic arts. After moving to Sisters, Ottenfeld quickly learned that
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quilting was a part of the Central Oregon culture. She has been in the area for over 30 years. “I had been given a Folkwear pattern for a Turkish coat and it called for quilting. I decided before I make the coat I should try quilting something [else] first and I fell in love with it,” says Ottenfeld. During the recession in 2008, she took on a second job at Quilt Works in Bend where she would stay for the next five years. During her time there, people would come in and ask for ‘odd ball’ things to be sewn. Never one to pass up an opportunity, she became the person who would repair quilts, finish existing projects and make new quilts out of people’s old t-shirts — the three elements that grew her business into what it is today. Repair and Restore When a quilting piece comes in for repair, Ottenfeld takes several things into consideration and after asking the customer several questions, she determines how long the project will take, what type of fabric she’ll use and how much care is needed, as most of what she does is done
by hand. When t-shirts come in for a quilt project, the ten step process, is mathematical and intentional. “For my customers I have developed my own way of laying out each quilt, so it becomes a unique, one of a kind, memory [piece]. I use my background in graphic design to create a mosaic layout that keeps the eye moving from block to block,” says Ottenfeld. “My goal is to keep each row the same width and each “block” cut to the size that works best with the graphic on the shirt,” she adds. Each piece is truly exclusive, as the t-shirts all range in size, color and graphics. Ottenfeld’s past work can be found in the gallery section of her website alongside details of her t-shirt to quilt process. Ottenfeld has a true passion to create and loves living in a place where the sense of community is strong. You can see her around the area regularly involved with the Sisters Quilt Show, a repeat blood donor to the Red Cross and volunteering for several local events. memoriestoquilts.com
Art at the Oxford
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he Oxford Hotel presents Joanne Donaca’s oil paintings of Oregon landscapes from August 31-October 26. Donaca will attend the Oxford First Friday champagne reception on September 7 from 5:30-7:30pm. A Bend artist and northeastern Oregon native, Donaca derives inspiration from the striking beauty of Central Oregon and other nature scenes. In her current exhibit, she presents Steelhead Falls near Tumalo, Old Mill District Sunflowers, plush vineyard scenes from the Willamette Valley, and Avalanche Lake from travels to Glacier National Park. In seeking to “generate a strong emotional response” from viewers, the artist uses a boldly enhanced, yet realistic palette, chosen to powerfully depict light/shadow contrast These landscapes feature accentuated, gestural strokes as well as softer, more integrated brushwork. Her noted impressionistic style shifts slightly toward a more expressionistic Avalanche Lake by Joanne Donaca style in varied compositions and she also employs palette knife to create strong, textural variations. Donaca is recognized in the Northwest through her signature membership in the Watercolor Society of America, the Pastel Society of America, the Northwest, and of Oregon, as well as her membership in the Oil Painters of America. An award winner in several mediums, her paintings appear in numerous corporate and private collections including Pronghorn’s Golf Resort and Sunriver Resort where she was previously honored as the poster artist for the Sunriver Music Festival. Billye Turner, art consultant, coordinates the Oxford Hotel exhibition schedule. For additional information please contact 503-780-2828 or billyeturner@bendnet.com.
BEND EXHIBITS At Liberty 849 NW Wall St. • 458-209-3040 • atlibertyarts.com At Liberty, a year-round dedicated arts space and cultural hub in Downtown Bend, will continue their exhibition: The Hidden Hypotenuse recent works by Christian Brown through the month of September. The exhibition will be open for September’s First Friday Art Hop on September 7 at 5:30pm and will host an Artist Talk with Five in One Tool Christian on Thursday, September 13 at 6pm. by Christian Brown Bend Art Center 550 SW Industrial Way, Ste. 180 • 541-330-8759 • bendartcenter.org Gallery Hours: Mon-Fri. 10-7pm, Sat. 10-6pm, Sun. Noon-5pm. A second collection of large-scale prints goes on display for Bend Art Center’s Big Ink II exhibit on display September 7-30. Big Ink is an organized network of artists who promote large-scale woodblock printing. The works in Bend Art Center’s exhibit were printed at Whit Print Studio in Eugene, Oregon at a Big Ink event in 2018. Artists were selected, either by personal invitation or through a call-for-entry process, to print original woodblocks at least 24” x 36” in size. Featured Exhibit: A6 Artist Adell Shetterly. Local artist Adell Shetterly presents a new series of prints which combine multiple printmaking processes. The exhibit opens Friday, September 7. Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Rd. Bend Senior Center is showing rotating works by the 100+ members of the SageBrushers Art Society. Included are beautiful paintings in acrylic, oil and watercolor, as well as outstanding photography. Showing through September. High Desert Museum 59800 S Hwy. 97 • 541-382-4754 • highdesertmuseum.org By Her Hand: Native American Women, Their Art and the Photographs of Edward S. Curtis is an in-depth exhibition of photographs spanning a 30-
year period, opens at the High Desert Museum on Saturday, September 22. By Her Hand celebrates Indigenous artistic traditions that have existed for centuries and continue to thrive within American Indian communities today. Marking the 150th anniversary of Edward S. Curtis’s birth, the exhibition features Curtis’s photographs of Native women from the Christopher G. Cardozo Collection. From the High Desert Museum’s permanent collection, the exhibit includes historical and contemporary pieces by female Native artists, giving greater historical context to Curtis’s work and showing the continuation of traditional artistic Photo courtesy of practices by artists today. High Desert Museum The artwork of photographer Edward S. Curtis is striking, complex and controversial. His significance lies not only in the sheer volume of his work, but also the historical and cultural knowledge collected on the subject of Native American life. Over the decades, his sepia-toned prints of Native people have shaped the ways that many nonNative people think about American Indians and the American West. At the beginning of the 20th century with funds provided by J.P. Morgan, Curtis undertook the enormous project of documenting Native people from over 80 Tribes to record Native American culture amid rapid societal changes. SageBrushers Art Society 117 SW Roosevelt Ave. SageBrushers Art Society presents their Annual Watercolor Exhibit continuing through November 2. Come and enjoy this showcase of new and established artists. The SageBrushers gallery is open Wednesday Watercolors by Jennifer Ware-Kempke and Friday, 1-4 pm. Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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An Invitation to the Jellicle Ball CATS the Musical
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eptember 14-22 the nonprofit Tower Theatre Foundation and Thoroughly Modern Productions invite you to the Oregon Premiere of CATS the Musical! Based on T. S. Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats, CATS is one of the longest-running and most revered shows in musical theatre history. The musical score composed by the legendary Andrew Lloyd Webber (Evita, Jesus Christ Superstar, Phantom of the Opera), includes the poignant hit song Memory to be sung by Central Oregon’s Mollie Tennant (Les Miserables, Spamalot, Tower Christmas). Directed by David Dacosta (Beauty and the Beast, Rock of Ages, Annie, Mary Poppins), CATS features a larger-than-life junkyard playground, a GRAMMY-award winning score, mischievous costumes and choreography from professional dancer, Shannon Elliott. Says DaCosta, “Simply put, everyone is extremely excited to be the first in the region to perform this show.” Elliott learned and taught Gillian Lynne’s original choreography from the inaugural 1981 London production of CATS for Royal Caribbean’s recent restaging of the classic musical. Additionally the Tower is hosting pre-show behind-the-scenes theatre talks with Crook County Drama Teacher, Anita Hoffman. The $10 talks include a free drink, a drawing for Beach Hut gift cards, signed posters and an insightful look at the ins and outs of this production. All proceeds benefit the Tower Theatre Foundation’s education outreach program, LessonPLAN. Tickets are on sale now. Membership, program information and individual and group tickets are available at the box office, by phone or online. Details on events are also at facebook.com/TheTowerTheatre. The nonprofit Tower Theatre Foundation owns and operates the historic stage in downtown Bend. The Foundation’s mission is to be the leading performing arts organization, providing cultural and education programs that make an essential contribution to Central Oregon’s lifestyle and strengthen the community. CATS the Musical September 14-22 Tickets: Reserved Seating $27, $37, $42 Tower Theatre 835 NW Wall St. 541-317-0700 • towertheatre.org
Head and the Heart, Blind Pilot End LSA Season with a Bang Outdoor amphitheater hosted a record 17 shows in 2018
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ack together after a prolonged layoff, Head and the Heart concludes the 2018 Les Schwab Amphitheater summer concert series on September 19 with special guests Blind Pilot. In 2014, exhausted after four years of non-stop touring, the six members of the Head And The Heart pointed their individual compasses to new cities, new relationships and new adventures. After an extended break, the band regrouped during the summer of 2016 in Stinson Beach, California, to start writing together again. “It almost felt like we were a new band, trying Photo courtesy of LSA things we hadn’t tried,” bassist Chris Zasche recalls. “We stayed at a bungalow on the beach. We’d wake up, have coffee and go boogie boarding. We were ready and excited to be back together.” That renewed sense of purpose can be felt throughout Signs Of Light, the group’s first release for Warner Bros. Records. Recorded in Nashville with producer Jay Joyce (Eric Church, Cage The Elephant), Signs Of Light crackles with the upbeat, sing-a-long energy of the Head And The Heart’s finest work. Throughout, the colors are brighter, the electric guitars are louder and the musical touchstones more universal. The propulsive, smile-inducing ode to Los Angeles City Of Angels and the head-nodding Rhythm & Blues nod to classic Fleetwood Mac, while the organ-flecked Dreamer is a timeless-sounding ballad that could have been beamed straight out of an old jukebox.
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September 2018 | www.CascadeAE.com
Sold Out Crowds at Sunriver Music Festival’s 41st Season Celebrating Bernstein
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he musical heritage of the great Leonard Bernstein and inspired programming by Festival artistic director George Hanson, a protégé of Bernstein, proved a winning combination for the Sunriver Music Festival’s 41st season last month in Bend and Sunriver. “Bernstein’s accomplishments and legacy resonated more than ever,” states Pam Beezley, Festival executive director. “Full houses at seven performances in Bend and Sunriver were the norm thanks to the enjoyable programs created by Maestro Hanson and our guest musicians from prestigious orchestras throughout the United States.” Artistic Director Hanson, who returned for his seventh season, filled each concert with personal reflections of his seven years working with and for the most influential American musician of all time. “It was wonderful sharing my love of Bernstein with festival audiences,” adds Hanson. “Bernstein broke down the barriers between jazz, Broadway, popular music and the classical realm. He, along with his dear friend Aaron Copland, defined the sound we now recognize as American classical music.” Beezley pointed out that numerous guest soloists highlighted the season including: • Pianist Drew Petersen’s performance of Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue • Clarinetist Ben Lulich’s performance in both the Bernstein Prelude Fugue and Riffs and the Mozart Clarinet Concerto • Mountain Dulcimer Stephen Seifert from Nashville, delighted the audience with educational demonstrations of his two dulcimers and he described the history of where they were made and where they were predominantly played • Pianist Kenny Broberg closed out the season with two fantastic concerts—a Solo Piano Concert Matinee and the Mozart Piano Concerto with the Festival Orchestra A unique Discover the Symphony Concert attracted many young families with children and folks who wanted to learn more about the joy of classical music. Final season ticket sales and income will be reported in September at the nonprofit’s festival board meeting. The Festival is now planning its popular Fall Fireside Concerts starting December 8 with Boogie Woogie Pianist Arthur Migliazza. sunrivermusic.org Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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Trevor Green with Pete Kartsounes at Volcanic Theatre
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arallel 44 Presents singer songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Trevor Green live at Volcanic Theatre Pub on Thursday, September 6. Tickets are $10 in advance and $12 at the door. Pete Kartsounes will be opening for an evening of beats your inner drum will beat to all night long. This show is all ages. Doors open at 8pm, opener starts at 8:30pm and Trevor Green at 9:30pm. Trevor Green Spirited, deep, and thought provoking are just a few words to describe the artist known as Trevor Green. His music is something fresh and distinctly new, yet is deeply woven in the spiritual fabric of our ancient ancestors. Surrounded by five guitars, three didgeridoos, an array of percussion instruments and decorated of symbolic ancestral nature, Green’s stage appears to be a musical playground not for the faint of heart. On the heels of Green’s recent EP Collide, comes the latest and most anticipated of his musical offerings. Voice of the Wind, Green’s fifth studio album, is a captivating sonic journey exposing the foundational fabric from which his inspiration is born. Traveling the depths of emotion and musical experience, Voice of the Wind brings the listener into the haunting mystical realms of songs like Rainbow Medicine, to the foot stomping grooves of Let it Go and into the celebratory experience of the songs like Red Road and the title track Voice of the Wind. This record is a culmination of Trevor’s music and spiritual experiences to date and expresses the willingness to invite each listener into his personal journey as a reflection of their own. “I follow the music where it leads me. Through this process I find the music always comes from an honest place and that is most important in receiving the songs when Trevor Green courtesy of Parallel 44 they come through.” What deepens the music is Trevor’s ability to connect with his audience. Threading together sing-able and uplifting melodies, dynamic instrumentation, heart pounding rhythms and the haunting sounds of the didgeridoo, with his spontaneous improvisational ability, Green’s performance is a one man powerhouse with universal appeal that seems to come from the ground up. With his honest delivery and ability to extricate the music from a deep place of truth, he leads his audience through vast landscapes of sound, weaving together a magnetic and spellbinding performance. Through Green’s devotion to bring forward the messages of our ancestors and connect deeply with culture, he recently launched a successful crowdfunding campaign that sent him, his wife, two young children and the son of his adopted Navajo brother on a two month journey into the heart of Australia to discover the roots of the aboriginal culture and the story behind the didgeridoo (yidaki), which has been such a fundamental part of the sound scape of his music. Performing 25 shows across the region and meeting with various wisdom keepers from the indigenous aboriginal cultures, this would prove to be yet another life altering journey of deep magnitude. In seeking a deeper understanding and connection to didgeridoo, he was lead to a far deeper connection with the aboriginal community of Northeast Arnhem Land where he and his family were adopted into the Galpu clan. Given the name “North Wind” by elder Djalu Gurruwiwi, Trevor brings the blessing back to North America where he offers his fifth studio album Voice of the Wind. Pete Kartsounes An award winning singer-songwriter, flat picker, and cutting-edge musician’s musician, Pete Kartsounes is no stranger to life out on the road. He has spent over two decades bringing his voice and guitar to stages all over the world. After 19 years submerged in the Colorado bluegrass scene sharing the stage with bands such as Leftover Salmon, Greensky Bluegrass and Yonder Mountain String Band, Pete www.operabend.org now resides in Bend spending most of his days teaching guitar, song schools and Tickets: $15/$25 touring with his dynamic act The Good Time Travelers. Pete continues to push the 1-800-838-3006 boundaries of the eclectic world of acoustic music.
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MUSIC
NPR Host Christopher O’Riley
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orld renowned pianist and Steinway Artist Christopher O’Riley is known to millions as the host of NPR’s From the Top, America’s largest national platform celebrating the stories and talents of young, classically-trained musicians. He is credited for redefining the limits and possibilities of classical music to audiences and has interpreted some of the most important contemporary rock music of our time. Acclaimed for his engaging and deeply committed performances, he has a repertoire that spans a kaleidoscopic array of music from the pre-baroque to present-day and has garnered widespread praise for his untiring efforts to reach new audiences. Now in his fifteenth year on air, O’Riley introduces the next generation of classical music stars to almost a million listeners each week on From the Top, broadcast by 250 stations across the United States. He also hosted the Emmy Award-winning television series From the Top at Carnegie Hall, and has collaborated with Yo-Yo
Ma, Bobby McFerrin, Midori, Béla Fleck, Joshua Bell, Hilary Hahn, Sir James Galway, Michael Feinstein and many more. He is a recipient of numerous awards at international competitions and he has received the prestigious Avery Fisher Career Grant and an equally coveted four-star review from Rolling Stone magazine. As a performer, O’Riley has appeared as a soloist with virtually all of the major American orchestras, including the New York Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago Symphony, National Symphony and San Francisco Symphony. He led the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields on a two-week tour of ten American cities and toured throughout the United Kingdom with the Moscow Philharmonic. High Desert Chamber Music’s 11th season opens with Christopher O’Riley at Bend Church on September 28 at 7:30pm. Tickets are available through High Desert Chamber Music by phone or online. Come hear the music! highdesertchambermusic.com
Photo courtesy of HDCM
Tango of the White Gardenia Jocelyn Claire Thomas
Kari Burgess
Zachary Lenox, photos courtesy of OperaBend
In celebration of their tenth season, Cascadia Chamber Opera (also known as Cascadia Concert Opera) is producing Ethan Gans-Morse and Tiziana DellaRovere’s new opera in English, Tango of the White Gardenia. On Sunday, September 23 at 4pm, OperaBend will host Cascadia Chamber Opera’s production at the Pinckney Center for the Performing Arts on the campus of Central Oregon Community College in Bend. For tickets, go to www.operabend. org. OperaBend audience members will recognize some of the singers in this performance: Kari Burgess, Zachary Lenox, Jocelyn Claire Thomas, David Gustafson and Karen Esquivel have all performed in OperaBend productions in the past. The opera is a contemporary story of the lives of six tango dancers who have come together to dance the legendary Argentine tango. Anthony is the dance instructor who is teaching four aspiring dancers, sharing with them the spirit of tango while he mourns the loss of his beloved partner, Sofía. Sofía appears to guide Anthony and the young dancers, Sandra, Jojo, Justin and Victor as they compete at the great competition. Their lives are changed through the true lessons learned from the spirit of the dance. The entire story is told accompanied by the sounds of the on-stage tango musicians with beauty and the drama of the tango dancers. Featuring the voices of some of Oregon’s top opera singers, the dancers of Ballet Fantastique, and a virtuosic instrumental ensemble, Cascadia Chamber Opera’s production of Tango of the White Gardenia will be a performance you won’t want to miss! In addition, Cascadia Chamber Opera is touring this production throughout Oregon at the Lincoln City Cultural Center (world premiere and season sponsors), the Florence Events Center, the Clatsop Community College Performing Arts Center, and Beall Hall at the University of Oregon. For details, visit www.cascadiaconcertopera.org or check with the box offices of the venues listed.
HDCM Concert Series presents
NPR host and Steinway Artist
CHRISTOPHER O’RILEY
Friday, September 28, 2018 7:30pm Bend Church - 680 NW Bond St.
Tickets available through HDCM 541-306-3988 www.HighDesertChamberMusic.com 961 NW Brooks St. Downtown Bend
Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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Sunriver Stars Community Theater Updates & News
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ver the past six years the Sunriver Stars have progressively improved in many ways. Artistic director Victoria Kristy has provided leadership in finding better and better plays, and the future looks bright with a full slate of plays for the 2018/2019 season; which together looks like a wonderful assortment of music, comedy, mystery and holiday celebration. The Sunriver Theater is improving in the area of organization, with more expert contributors to the board. Our newest board member is Gary Sosinski. Gary joined the board in July as our director of marketing. The board sees this area of marketing as our number one priority, and Gary has a long history of sales and marketing experience and the energy to get the seats filled at our venue at The Door and to make our name familiar in the community of South Deschutes County. Gary will not be happy until every performance is a sell-out. “My number one goal is to increase AWARENESS of the Sunriver Stars! Once people are AWARE of the Stars I want residents to give the Stars a chance by attending a play. Once they attend a play I want to give them an experience that will make them want to return. I am looking for corporate sponsors that may be interested in investing in the Arts by becoming a STARS Sponsor. Please contact me at garys.srstars@gmail.com,” says Gary. Last spring Eileen Katz became our new treasurer, following in the steps of Joan Lewis. Joan will be going off the board after several years of service not only as treasurer, but also in technical help with sound and lights. She will continue as an integral part of the theater community. Eileen expresses her position in the following statement. “With my background in financial management for small companies, I have helped SSCT convert its books from excel spreadsheets to accounting software. This allows a great deal of flexibility in the type of financial reports I can generate. With these reports, I can guide
management in making sound financial decisions. When the president of a company I previously worked for asked me what exactly I did, I replied that I kept him from jumping off a cliff with his ideas. I think this is generally true of finance departments. I have also been working on fine tuning the budgeting process for SSCT. Budgets help SSCT forecast expectations of profitability and funds availability for desired expenditures.” Another recent addition to our board is Tom Hansen, who comes with years of experience in lighting technology. He was the lighting tech/operator at the theater in Newport, Oregon for years and he has assumed the position of director of technology. Tom’s explanation of his role with SSCT is “to enhance the audience experience in visual and audio perception of the production.” He is pursuing this goal by purchasing new lighting and additional audio equipment as we go to press. The next director which the SSCT needs is a director of development, who can search out and apply for grants, and expand our donor base, along with any other programs to help financially support the STARS. We are in contact with an expert in this field who is willing to consult and to give direction to this effort. If you are this person, or know of a person of this caliber, please contact president Sharon Sackett at slms@bendbroadband.com Speaking of The Door; if you have not attended one of our plays lately you will be pleasantly impressed with the many improvements that have been made to the facility. New paint, lighting and sound equipment improvements have made this venue even better. It is a cozy, close to the stage environment where the actors can be seen and heard with ease. I have also heard of possible changes to seating and floor coverings in the near future. It is a wonderful place to attend a performance. Follow the STARS on Facebook, and put the website www.sunriverstars.org on your favorites list, visit it often and always look for the STARS stories in local publications.
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Music & Art Festivals Bend Summer, Crawfest Newberry & Wildflowers Sunriver Festival Faire Balloons Over Bend
Transforming POWER OF DANCE Tapestry Masterpieces at Sisters Raven Makes
MUSIC ON THE GREEN
SISTERS RODEO Bobby Kerr's Mustangs
My Own Two Hands Celebration of Arts
Milky Sky by Kim Goldfarb
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MUNCH & MUSIC A6 Becomes Bend Art Center
Orphic by Kelly Thiel
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Time and Life by Gregory Strachov Photo courtesy of Art in the High Desert
September 2018 | www.CascadeAE.com
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Free Summer Concerts
Atelier 6000 Creative Feasts Mickey Mocking Musical Disenchanted! at 2nd Street
High Desert Museum Celebrating 35 Years
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ARTISTS’ GALLERY SUNRIVER Art Picks Up Where Nature Begins
Nature Unraveled in Spring EXHIBITS
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BendOpera Unveils La Bohème
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HOMEGOING A Novel Idea
Local Theatre Rocks
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CULTURAL BENEFIT Art of the River
Caldera Embraces Vibrant Writing Community
Body Image by Dee McBrien-Lee
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SISTERS OUTDOOR QUILT SHOW
FILM & THEATRE
Psychological Thriller Based on True Story Opens at 2nd Street Theater
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tage Right Productions/2nd Street Theater presents the West Coast Premiere of Under a Red Moon by New York Playwright, Michael Slade. The play opened August 31 and runs through September 15. Under a Red Moon, written by Michael Slade and directed by Juliah Rae is based on a true incident that occurred between serial killer, John George Haigh, aka “The Acid Bath Murderer” and two young American women in London in 1948, shortly prior to his arrest. The play focuses on Haigh’s psychiatric evaluation as he tries to prove himself insane and thereby avoiding standing trial. Joshua Curtis plays the smart and sinister Haigh, with Kelley Ryan portraying Dr. Ruth Covington. 2nd Street Theater has been host to several of Michael Slade’s plays, including BEAT’s production of And A Child Shall Lead and the World Premiere of Garden Politics, also directed by Juliah Rae. Michael recently co wrote an Amazon Web Series, After Forever, which was nominated for 12 IAWTV awards. Performances are Thursday-Saturdays at 7:30pm, Sunday matinees at 3pm. Tickets are $19 adults, $16 student/seniors (60+) and are available by calling the box office at 541-312-9626 or at www.2ndstreettheater.com.
Upcoming Events Photo courtesy of 2nd Street Theater
Fall Concerts
Featuring Cellist Cecilia Tsan
The Velveteen Rabbit at CTC
October 20, 2018 - 7:30PM October 21, 2018 - 2:00PM October 22, 2018 - 7:30PM Bend High School Auditorium Tickets Required
A Play by Thomas W. Olson Based on the Book by Margery Williams
Symphony Spotlight Recital
iven as a Christmas gift to a young boy, the Velveteen Rabbit lives in the nursery with all of the other toys, waiting for the day when the Boy will choose him as a playmate. In time, the shy Rabbit befriends the tattered Skin Horse, the wisest resident of the nursery, who reveals the goal of all nursery toys: to be made "real" through the love of a human. "'Real isn't how you are made,' said the Skin Horse. 'It's a thing that happens to you. When a child loves you for a long, long time, not just to play with, but REALLY loves you, then you become Real.'"
Music in Public Places Library Series
Nov. 3, 2018 - 2:00PM Coats Campus Center, Wille Hall CCOC Bend Campus Tickets Not Required
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The Velveteen Rabbit September 29 at 11am & 3:30pm September 30 at 3:30pm Cascades Theatrical Company 148 NW Greenwood Ave. cascadestheatrical.org
Join us for our 52nd Season! COSA, Inc. 15 SW Colorado Ave. Suite 320 Bend, OR 97702 541.317.3941 - info@cosymphony.com www.cosymphony.com
Nov. 3, 2018 - 2:00PM La Pine Library Prineville Library Redmond Library Tickets Not Required
Central Oregon Chamber Orchestra Nov. 18, 2018 - 2:00PM Bend High School Auditorium Tickets Available to Donating Members
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Know Dreams in September at Deschutes Public Library
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hether you’re a daydream believer or a dream weaver, you’ll find something dream worthy at your library. Interpret your dreams through psychology and the tarot, hear the current state of the American Dream from the view of an economist and learn tricks of the trade for catching those much-needed z’s at night with sleep hygiene and medicinal herbs. All programs are free and open to the public; no registration required. The Current State of the American Dream Is the American Dream alive and well? From Photo courtesy of Deschutes Public Library an economic perspective it is. Economics is the study of choices, constraints and consequences. Julian Caballero (M.A., LPC Intern), a therapist The outcomes, however, are not guaranteed. in private practice in Central Oregon. In America, we call these uncertain outcomes September 12 at 6pm • Downtown Bend Library opportunity: the opportunity of risk and reward, September 19 at noon • Sisters Library the outcome of hard work, determination and luck. Often this dream is characterized by our Nature’s Dream Makers consumption; it looks like a house, a car and Learn about herbs and natural remedies that a family and together these equate financial can help promote sleep. There exist a plethora of success. Yet this narrow definition overlooks herbs and plants with medicinal properties known other important aspects of the dream like to ease stress and tension and help you get your America’s inclusive institutional and government best sleep. Chelsea Phillips of Hawthorn Healing policies that facilitate economic advancement. Arts talks with us about jasmine, lavender, Professor Jon Wolf discusses the state of the chamomile and other calming, cleansing herbs. American Dream. Phillips earned a Masters in Oriental Medicine September 6 at 6pm • East Bend Library with additional studies in Naturopathic Medicine September 7 at noon • Sunriver Library from National College of Natural Medicine in Portland. Understanding Dreams September 14 at noon • Sunriver Library What can we learn from our dreams? In this class September 27 at 6pm • East Bend Library we will review Robert Johnson’s book Inner Work: Using Dreams and Active Imagination for Personal DACA and the Rocky Road to the G r o w t h . American Dream J o h n s o n We are in a critical time in history in which provides an immigration policy is at the forefront of public overview and debate. The future of DREAMers hangs in the context for balance between federal court decisions, changing a Jungian administrative policies and congressional action. understanding This discussion will break down the legal of dreams, obstacles and challenges many individuals face but he also provides practical steps that help to when seeking the American Dream. Presenters uncover the meaning of our dreams. Reading Callie Killebrew, Kendra Jimenez Baughman and this book is not a prerequisite, nor necessary for Micaela Guthrie are attorneys based in Central gleaning something from this class. There will be Oregon specializing in immigration law. some teaching, time for discussion and perhaps September 17 at 6pm • Downtown Bend Library dream analysis from a willing participant. Led by
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September 25 at 6pm • Redmond Library Sleep Is Not Just for Babies Discover how sleeplessness affects our cardio/pulmonary systems, as well as our brain function. Representatives from the St. Charles Sleep Center discuss the importance of sleep. During the presentation, staff will discuss how sleeplessness affects our entire body from our cardio/pulmonary systems to our brain function. Learn about sleep apnea and about sleep issues facing our aging population. September 20 at 6pm • East Bend Library September 22 at 2pm • Redmond Library Tarot Cards Discover the tarot through history and pop culture, plus tips for your own tarot readings and dream interpretation. The tarot has been used for anything from card games to fortune telling to problem solving. Learn how this 78-card deck developed and changed over time, hear the stories it has inspired and gather ideas for your own Fool’s Journey. Presenter Sara Q. Thompson, who has worked in libraries for 20 years, collects tarot decks. September 21 at 4pm • La Pine Library September 26 at 6pm • Downtown Bend Library The Bike Trip of Our Dreams Bend-based couple Ville and Kristen Jokinen completed a bicycle journey lasting 20 months and over 18,215 miles. They flew with bikes up to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska in June 2016, and rode into Bahia Lapataia, Argentina in February 2018. They dealt with everything from close encounters with bears, dog attacks, a bout with dengue fever and more. Now they are back, ready to share their stories and harrowing tales. September 29 at 1pm • Downtown Bend Library For more information about these programs visit the library website at www.deschuteslibrary.org. People with disabilities needing accommodations should contact Liz Goodrich at lizg@deschuteslibrary. org or 541-312-1032
Local Writer to Donate Proceeds of Class to BendFilm Festival
LITERARY
Gift in Memory of Pamela Hulse Andrews
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ocal writer Sarah Cyr will offer an eight-week writing class this fall and donate 15 percent of the proceeds to BendFilm in honor of the independent film festival’s 15th anniversary. The donation will be earmarked for Independent Women for Independent Film in memory of Pamela Hulse Andrews, who passed away this year. “There’s synergy between independent film and what I teach,” says Cyr. “Film is a powerful medium to tell story. So is the written word. In class, I share tools with writers that make the process of getting down the stories inside us easier.” Cyr’s teaching style is inspired by Natalie Goldberg, author of the landmark book Writing Down the Bones, which has sold over 1.5 million copies. Cyr has attended two writing retreats with Goldberg, and this past July began a yearlong intensive with the legendary writing teacher at the Upaya Zen Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico. “Sarah makes her students feel capable and connected to a larger community of writers,” says Shelby Little, manager at TDS Telecom, the parent company of BendBroadband. “She provides practical tools to overcoming common writing hang-ups. When I signed up for her class, I had little motivation to be creative in my personal time and seemingly no time to write. I’ve now found a way to access my creativity again with an active writing practice.”
Cyr’s work has appeared in Newsweek Magazine, ARTNews, The Boston Globe, Photo courtesy of Sarah Cyr and Cosmopolitan. Cyr contributed to the first ever Independent Women for Independent Film when Pamela Hulse Andrews launched the program in 2013. A long supporter of the arts in Central Oregon, Andrews recruited ten of her women friends to each pitch in $100 and sponsor the festival’s Best Director award. A few emails and 15 minutes later she received commitments from 22 women, for an early total of $2200. Support of the festival from this movement of women in Central Oregon grew from there. Attending the weekend-long festival has become an annual family tradition for Cyr. Her father, Robert Sennott, flies to Bend in October every year from his home state of Massachusetts to binge on independent film with his daughter. BendFilm has been voted one of the top fifty film festivals in the country by Movie Maker Magazine. Writing with Prompts: Crafting Stories through the Side Door will be held Monday evenings from 6:30-8pm at Hawthorne Healing Arts from September 24 through November 12. sarahcyr.com
Beautiful Inspiration by Local Authors by Marcee Hillman Moeggenberg AE Feature Writer Look What Kate Can Do, written by Katie Leatherwood and illustrated by Paul Leatherwood, is about their granddaughter Kate, who was born with one hand. Katie, who wrote the story as seen through Kate’s eyes, taught English at Summit High and Paul taught in Media Arts at Bend High, both having been Bend residents since 1981. The story is inspirational as well as educational — a story that children of all ages should read. The following are excerpts from a review written by a 13-year-old middle schooler who is close to Kate’s age — part of an age group that can grow, learn and be inspired by stories such as this.
One Hand Works as Well as Two by Emma Carpenter This book is about a Kate who was born with Symbrachydactyly, telling her story about how she can navigate the world with one had just as easily as having two. Through her story I learned that even if you’re missing a hand, you can still do the average/everyday things everyone with two hands can do. Kate’s story taught me it’s okay to be different, and that even though you may not have two hands, you can still do everyday tasks. It taught how to see difference from their point of view, not just my own. My favorite parts are when she proved that she could do any and every single thing she wanted, from ballet to tying her shoes. I was inspired by how she tries things most people can’t do that look fun, like learning to play the guitar, but finding out she sometimes doesn’t like them, even though she can do them. I [thoroughly] enjoyed the illustrations, they were both beautiful and realistic. Kate looks like a friend of mine, giving the story even more impact. I think Kate’s story is one every kid should read, as well as every adult. We can all learn from Kate, she is an inspiration. Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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Handcrafted cocktails
Scallops, photos by Linden
Bend’s New Citizen by LINDEN GROSS, One Stop Writing Shop
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omania-born Sandra Costello arrived in Bend in 2005 with a degree in environmental engineering. She was going to stay for three months and then return home. But life has a way of happening when we’re making other plans, and nowhere is that truer than in Bend. Finally, after nine years of working in local restaurants and then launching and running Bowtie Catering with co-owner Gene Soto—and just three weeks after becoming a U.S. citizen—Sandra opened Citizen Bar & Kitchen with Gene in the old High Tides Seafood Grill location on Bond Street. There was never any doubt about the establishment’s name. The same could not be said about the renovation. After ripping out the old carpet, it took a month just to restore the wood floors. But the packed restaurant, on a Monday night no less, clearly indicates that the effort was worth it. During our first visit, my two friends and I jumped in with a round of cocktails. That’s just what you do in a place that calls itself a bar and kitchen. Good move, as it turns out. In an era where bartenders seem to be trying almost too hard when it comes to their concoctions, this drink menu takes old standards from decades ago and gives them a little updated twist. The Tom Collins makes its return, but with muddled and
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then strained fresh blackberries and a long, metal straw. (You’ve got to love that. Yay, Citizen, for banning the plastic straw!) The Old Cuban has been stripped of its bitters and mint, so you can really taste the aged rum, lime juice and simple syrup topped with sparkling wine. There’s a drink I’ll add to my repertoire! Finally, with Smoke in the Citizen, the Bourbon Old Fashioned has been dressed up with walnut amaro and thyme. We were off to a swinging start. When the appetizers hit, we dug into an order of soft, house-baked bread served with blue cheese butter and smoked salt butter. Thumbs up all around. The grilled artichokes could have used a little more cooking. The heart was fantastic, but it was hard to get anything off the underdone leaves. Still, the preserved-lemon aioli would make me forgive just about anything. There was nothing to forgive about the steamed clams with big chunks of pork belly and a hint of fennel. Served with perfectly charred slices of baguette and spoons to mop and/or slurp up every drop of savory broth, this dish may have been the evening’s winner. On the other hand, both the entrees and dessert provided competition on that front. If you’re in the mood for crispy, seared scallops that are sweet and tender, you’ll be in for a treat
at this gastropub. We loved the accompanying cauliflower puree, sautéed leeks and bits of pancetta. The sweet rhubarb relish was less of a hit. I’d suggest you ask for it on the side or omit it entirely, so the rest of the flavors can shine through. The rib-eye was seared perfectly but was perhaps just a tad under-seasoned. However, the citrusy salsa verde made with parsley, green onion, capers and lemon atop the steak made up for that and then some. I’d buy that by the bucket. After sharing the roast half a chicken with crispy, golden skin, I understand why it’s a crowd favorite. I loved the ever-so-slight taste of scallion that came through, and whoever came up with the idea of putting two big slices of bread underneath and drenching them with chicken jus is a positive genius. We almost skipped dessert, but thankfully the vanilla panna cotta reeled us in. The light, creamy and not-too-sweet custard topped with crunchy little bits of graham cracker and fresh berries was a show stopper. Citizen 1045 Bond St., Bend 541-241-8711 citizenrestaurantbend.com Hours: Daily 4pm-close Chef/owner Jeremy Buck
CUISINE
Spice Merchant’s Tips
BBQ Street Corn, photo courtesy of Savory Spice
INGREDIENTS 6 ears corn, in their husks 1 Tbsp. choice of BBQ rub: Red Rocks Hickory Smoke Seasoning Long’s Peak Pork Chop Spice INGREDIENTS (Underlined items can be found at our Savory Spice shop.) Black Hills BBQ Seasoning Matt Perry, spice merchant · cup 6 hard-boiled · 1 to 2 tsp. choice of paprika-based 1/2 mayonnaise eggs, shelled 1/2 zested and juiced · lemon, 3 Tbsp. mayonnaise seasoning like: 3/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese · 1 Tbsp. Hot Pepper Vinegar · Cape Hatteras Smoky 2 Tbsp. fresh chopped chives Barbecue Sauce Seafood Rub his is my favorite season to be a home cook in Central Oregon. Our · ¼ tsp. Salt & Pepper Tableside · Table Mt. All-Purpose Seasoning DIRECTIONS local farms are overflowing with the results of our long summer days Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Set corn (in their husks) on a baking which means it is time to eat the bounty of vegetables. Sweet corn Seasoning · Homestead Seasoning sheet and bake for about 35 min. In the meantime, mix BBQ rub of from nearby farms is amazing but does not last long so get it while you can. · 1 tsp. Freeze Dried Chives, plus more · Old Market All-Purpose Seasoning choice, mayonnaise, lemon juice and lemon zest in a small bowl until My favorite method is to shuck the corn, season with your favorite spice blend for garnish thoroughly combined. Remove corn from oven and let it cool. Peel and put it on the grill or smoker. At our house we like to grill about six ears back husks; remove husks if desired or leave on for a sort of “handle” and cut it off the cob to use as a sweet crunchy garnish for almost any foods for the corn. (For char and color, grill corn over high heat for about 5 DIRECTIONS including salads and tacos. Tomato season is short but abundant in Central to 10Slice min.)eggs Liberally brush on the mayonnaise mixture to thoroughly and this is the time to eat and preserve as much as you can of these in half lengthwise. Scoop out yolks and mix them with Oregon mayo, Hot coat the ears of corn. Finish the corn by sprinkling all sides with a summer treats. One of my favorite simple ways to extend the life of tomatoes Pepper Vinegar Barbecue Sauce, Salt & Pepper Tableside, and chives. Fill egg generous amount of Parmesan cheese and chives. is to thickly slice as much as I can fit in the bottom of a large roasting pan, white halves with the yolk mixture. Sprinkle with seasoning of choice and more drizzle with olive oil, coarse grey salt, and my favorite herb seasoning and cook NOTES at about 225 to 275 degrees for up to four hours depending on how dry you chives for garnish. Cooking corn in the husk allows it to cook in its own moisture would like them. When you are done, just bag them up in quart size bags and and YIELD makes it much easier to take the husk off. If desired, finish stick them in the freezer until a cold winter day when you need a reminder corn on the grill to get some char and color before brushing on the of summer. 1 dozenmixture. mayonnaise
Harvest Season
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OLD MILL DISTRICT 375 SW Powerhouse Drive · Bend, OR 97702 · 541-306-6855 Mon-Sat: 10am-8pm, Sun: 11am-6pm Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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After 16 years of serving Central Oregon with the best selection of beads and jewelry making supplies Pam and Doug Blanton, the owners, are retiring! “I want to thank all my loyal customers for 16 amazing years of sharing ideas and creativity! I am heading toward my retirement goal with another reduction of prices on everthing.� -Pam Blanton Quantities are limited to stock on hand! So it will be first come, first served. Don't miss out on the best selection! Find out our hours each week by signing up to recieve texts by texting AZILLION to 51660. Wait and reply YES to the text sent back to you. You will receive texts with the days and hours open. Or call 541-617-8854 and leave a message or email me at azillionbeads@gmail.com. Thanks and I am look forward to seeing you! Pam and Doug
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, Artists Gallery is a great destination
SUNRIVER
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ne of Central Oregon’s finest art galleries is located in an unassuming building in the Sunriver Village. The Artists' Gallery is an example of what happens when 30 incredibly talented and diverse artists present the best of their work in a spacious and light filled environment. It becomes a destination. The gallery is open every day during the summer, but a really great time to visit is on the second Saturday of each month. On September 8 from 4-7pm, you are invited to party with the artists. Aside from the art and the fun, food and drink will be plentiful. Featured artist Bill Hamilton exhibits a devout attention to light and the way that it illuminates its subjects. Landscapes draw the viewer’s eye to the peaks of one of his favorite subjects, the Cascade mountains. The light softly falls and surrounds the mountains almost like a halo. Hamilton’s goal is to be able to paint any subject, in any light and not get stuck in a box painting a few subjects. When asked why he doesn’t paint more people, he bursts out laughing and says, “If you’re off a bit on a tree, not a big deal, but if you are off a bit on a nose…well…I rather stick to trees.” New to the gallery, jewelry artist Linda Barker shares her talent for beautiful, but quirky pieces that find the beauty in “found” items. Her pendent necklaces are spectacular – one piece utilizes a patina rich Mexican peso that someone shot a bullet through leaving a hole. Barker replaced the hole with a black seed pearl and then placed it on a silver bottle cap that had the misfortune of being smashed flat when a large vehicle drove over it. The result is a beautiful treasure. All the artist’s pieces are equally special as is the artist herself. Make sure to spend time with her when you visit for Second Saturday. Long time favorite, potter Diane Miyauchi has many useful and beautiful pieces for collectors to choose from. The artist has added some new glazes to her presentation making a departure from her ever popular blue/green pieces. Square shapes have been added to the plate selection. These items make perfect gifts and are a simple way to add art in a manner that can be appreciated and utilized daily.
Artwork by Jennifer Lewis
Jewelry by Linda Barker
Three Sisters by Bill Hamilton
Also new to the Gallery is painter Jennifer Lewis. Lewis uses colors and textures to convey different moods. She loves to experiment and play with her paintings often using everyday items like bubble wrap to create texture. The artist is a longtime student of Feng Shui and each of her paintings has a conscious play of energy vs calm. Some of her most popular pieces were inspired by the recent eclipse. Artists' Gallery Sunriver Village 57100 Beaver Dr., Bldg. 19, Sunriver 541-593-4382 • artistsgallerysunriver.com Pottery by Diane Miyauchi
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Elk, shaped stainless steel by Brent Lawrence with Luke Lawrence
sunriver resort lodge
betty gray gallery
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unriver Resort Lodge Betty Gray Gallery presents painter Courtney Holton with metal sculptors Brent Lawrence and Luke Lawrence. The three artists’ work will appear in both the upper and lower galleries beginning September 12 through Thanksgiving weekend until November 25. Painter Courtney Holton exhibits his new “construction series, born out of the contrast of light and darkness.” The artist’s abstract artwork features a darkly hued background painted on canvases of varied sizes. To the painted canvases he adheres crushed and then re-formed metallic strips, arranged in crisscrossing patterns, lightly brushed with thinned oil paint of varied hues. On the darkened background, the painted metallic strips produce a 3D effect. Holton notes that inspiration for the “construction series” came from “wandering at nightfall in the forest – being urban or natural – seeing what light the eye catches and what lies beyond.” He further describes, “At times the paintings seem like the dark, underside of a bridge combined with the glow of a stained glass window at dusk. This contrast of hard and soft, light and dark invite the viewer to pause and reflect.” The artist, a native Oregonian, now divides his time between Bend and southern France where he presently studies printmaking with a renowned French printer. Holton has displayed work in the U.S., Turkey, Belgium, Switzerland and France. Over the past ten years, the artist has shown continuously at the Gallerie Expression Libre in Paris. Brent Lawrence, a third generation metal worker and a second generation artist, shows laboriously shaped, stainless steel constructions with an applied
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chemical patina suggesting weathered stone. Images on these constructions primarily depict wildlife from around the globe in a primitive style similar to prehistoric cave paintings. Luke Lawrence, a fourth generation metal worker and third generation artist, assists his father, Brent, in collaborative sculpture. The younger artist also creates his own unique images, often of wildlife. Brent Lawrence works as a professional artist since 1987 with his sculpture appearing in fine art galleries throughout the west including Oregon, Washington, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, California and New Mexico. Cowboys and Indians Magazine and Southwest Art Magazine also featured his artwork. His honors include the Peoples’ Choice Award of the High Desert Museum in 2007 and invitational appearances at the Loveland Sculpture Show from 1997-2006. His work appears in the collections of Stephen Forbes (Forbes Magazine), Larry Graveel (formerly owner of Under Armor), noted golfer Mark O’Meara, Y.A. Tittle (Pro Football Hall of Fame) and others. Galleries in Park City, Utah; Sedona, Arizona; Whitefish, Montana and Portland, Oregon feature the art of Luke Lawrence who works as a professional artist since 2009. His fire art sculpture received the third place award in the 2018 Bend Winter Arts Festival. Sunriver Resort invites the public to the exhibition, open all hours. Billye Turner curates exhibitions for the resort and for information, contact her at 503-780-2828 or billyeturner@bendnet.com
Sunriver Library Art Show
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oin us in enjoying the artwork of Langford Barksdale and Peter Gundy at the Sunriver Library in September and October. Langford has painted all of her life and studied extensively including RISD in Providence, University of Georgia and Cortona, Italy. She gathers inspiration from her extensive travels in Europe. She did two residencies in Northern California through the Mendocino Art Center which gave her the momentum and time to focus on creating a series of wonderful tapestries that were displayed from the local old growth trees. Langford has also led children’s workshops at Cheekwood Art Center, Aspen Art Museum and served as Children’s Program Director at the Anderson Ranch Art Center. Peter Gundy's designs blend rustic and refined elements to create functional art. His custom work combines elegant functionality with the client’s personal style. Central Oregon Juniper is his favorite material for its variety of caramel and cream coloration, tight growth ring and grain density. Peter describes woodworking as both therapy and gift in recovering from Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI). Peter Gundy, photos courtesy of Sunriver Library Woodworking by Peter Gundy “I’ve grown more patient and pay more attention to details since my concussions. Sanding and polishing wood is a fitting metaphor for TBI recovery. Time and effort are rewarded as slowly the subtleties of the wood emerge. Similarly, as I learn new skills explore new design and work with different materials, my confidence returns.”
Ceramic long chai by Diane Miyauchi
SUNRIVER EXHIBITS Artists' Gallery Sunriver 57100 Beaver Dr. Bldg 19 541-593-4382 • artistsgallerysunriver.com Artists’ Gallery Sunriver features four artists during the month of September: Bill Hamilton, Linda Barker, Diane Miyauchi and Jennifer Lewis. Featured artist Bill Hamilton exhibits a devout attention to light and the way that it illuminates its subjects. Landscapes draw the viewer’s eye to the peaks of one of his favorite subjects, the Cascade mountains. New to the gallery, jewelry artist Linda Barker shares her talent for beautiful, but quirky pieces that find the beauty in “found” items. Her pendent necklaces are spectacular. Long time favorite, potter Diane Miyauchi has many useful and beautiful pieces for collectors to choose from. The artist has added some new glazes to her presentation making a departure from her ever popular blue/green pieces. Also new to the Gallery is painter Jennifer Lewis. Lewis uses colors and textures to convey different moods. Sunriver Public Library 56855 Venture Ln. 541-312-1080 • deschuteslibrary.org/about/libraries/sunriver Join us in enjoying the artwork of Langford Barksdale and Peter Gundy at the Sunriver Library in September and October. Langford has painted all of her life and gathers inspiration from her extensive travels in Europe. Peter Gundy's designs blend rustic and refined elements to create functional art. His custom work combines elegant functionality with the client’s personal style.
Sunriver Resort Lodge - Betty Gray Gallery 17600 Center Dr. 503-780-2828 • billyeturner@bendnet.com Sunriver Resort Lodge Betty Gray Gallery presents painter Courtney Holton with metal sculptors Brent Lawrence and Luke Lawrence. The three artists' work will appear in both the upper and lower galleries beginning September 12. Painter Courtney Holton exhibits his new “construction series, born out of the contrast of light and darkness.” The artist’s abstract artwork features a darkly hued background painted on canvases of varied sizes. Luke Lawrence, a fourth generation metal worker and third generation artist, assists his father, Brent, in collaborative sculpture. The younger artist also creates his own unique images, often of wildlife. The Wooden Jewel 57100 Beaver Dr. 541-593-4151 • thewoodenjewel.com • info@thewoodenjewel.com Resident artist Michael Bryant is a gifted Untitled by Courtney Holton sculptor with a long list of accolades. He carves wildlife, people and places from one solid pieces of fine wood. Michael does not use models or pictures only his personal vision from deep within. By incorporating innovative materials with her exceptional design sense, Sarah Graham creates jewelry that is unlike anything else: organic, textural, with a muted palette that is subtly feminine, yet substantial, unique, yet universal in its appeal. Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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Hopi Women
Stitchin’ Post Gallery
4th Friday Art Stroll • September 28, 4-3pm Featuring the works of Tonye Belinda Phillips
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hree great plateaus of sun baked, wind scrubbed Earth rise into the sky in Northeastern Arizona. These island mesas of smooth yellow sandstone boulders, laying in both tight, neat stacks and pell-mell jumbles, offer elevated vistas that seemingly reach beyond distant horizons and into the dimension of timelessness. Long ago, a people were drawn to settle these mesas that provide secluded natural springs. Whether or not they were the first to occupy these Islands in the Sky matters not, the Hopi stayed. One thousand years later they remain, their traditions still very much alive. Sonwai, Verma Nequatewa of 3rd Mesa, became a preeminent Native American Rod Frederick Oil painter
541.719.1800 357 W Hood Ave, Sisters
HOODAVENUEART.COM Featured artists for September
311 W. Cascade Ave. Sisters, Oregon • (541) 549-6061 stitchinpost.com
Danica Curtright Glass lampwork bead jewelry
A RT I S A N C R A F T E D G I F T S • F O O D • F R E E A D M I S S I O N
Saturday & Sunday October 13-14 10am-4pm Main Avenue • LIVE MUSIC Dry Canyon Stampede Bill Keale
2018 SISTERS AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
SISTERS AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
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541.549.0251
866.549.0252
www.SistersCountry.com
Artists Offering Show jeweler 30 years ago, after apprenticing for 25 years beside her uncle, the legendary Charles Loloma. Charles redefined the concept of Native American jewelry; his works are revered for their innovation, the skill required to create them, and their astounding beauty. First learning the basics of metallurgy and lapidary from her uncle, then the guiding concepts of form and content, Verma eventually came to understand the rich subtleties and nuances that define a true masterpiece from a fine work of art. She carries forward the understanding that, when a work is being constructed, there is only absolute precision with every detail. The end result is jewelry that has distinguished styling, is refined yet visionary, and leads one to consider something distant and ageless. The Hopi are structured as a matriarchal society. Upon marrying, the man goes to live with the woman’s family, adopting her clan. A sovereign nation, each village is divided into clans and governed by a headman or chief, who also serves as the spiritual leader. Dry land
farming and ranching are the primary livelihoods. Pesavensi, Donna Humetewa of 3rd Mesa, belongs to the Rabbit/Tobacco Clans. She makes her paints using local earthen and mineral pigments; her depictions of patterns, land and sky, along with sacred symbols literally reflect the beauty surrounding her home. Upon concluding a career working for the Hopi Tribe, she began painting. Donna, who had long worked with fiber arts, found a mentor in James McGrath. The former Art Director of the Institute of American Indian Art college encouraged her to use the resources from her home when creating the works and to follow her intuitions. Her warm earth tone images are now seen each year at the juried Santa Fe Indian Market and Heard shows. The Hopi attribute success to their Spiritual Ways, known as the Katsina religion. Their ceremonies and dances are prayers for moisture, germination and the well-being of everyone. They believe their land to be the center of the universe, their prayers essential to
SISTERS the harmony of humanity. Many Native American tribes acknowledge the Hopi as a model for peace and sustainability; theologians note a similarity between the Hopi and traditional Tibetans. Dorothy Ami comes from the ancient pottery making village of Polacca on 1st Mesa. She began making pottery in her late teens. It was in her late 20’s when her cousin, the celebrated potter Mark Tahbo, began guiding her and she evolved into an award-winning potter herself. Dorothy’s works are fully traditional—coiled with local earth materials, fired outside with cedar wood and sheep manure, stone polished and painted with natural clay pigments, bee-weed being used for the black. Sonwai, Pesavensi and Dorothy will be offering a show and exhibition of their works September 28-30, with an artists reception on Friday from 4-7pm. They will offer an open forum, question and answer session on Saturday from 1:30-2:30pm. All events will take place at Raven Makes Gallery.
SISTERS EXHIBITS Canyon Creek Pottery 310 North Cedar St. • 541-390-2449 • canyoncreekpotteryllc.com Fine handmade pottery by Kenneth G. Merrill made in Sisters. Clearwater Art Gallery 303 West Hood • 541-549-4994 • theclearwatergallery.com 4th Friday Art Stroll, Navajo rugs, jewelry and baskets made 50 or 100 years ago, prevalent in museums and Native American Antique Galleries, need to be regarded as representing people of a former time. Cowgirls & Indians Resale 160 SW Oak St. • 541-549-6950 Gently used Western wear, art and furniture. Art by M. Barbera Bronze, Ed Morgan, William F. Reese, Heinie Hartwig originals, Native American baskets and jewelry, buying Native American jewelry and artworks. Hood Avenue Art 220 S Pine St. #103 • 541-719-1800 September 28 from 4-7pm, Fourth Friday Art Stroll Sisters artists’ reception features internationally recognized wildlife painter Rod Frederick who exhibits new oil paintings; see his Bald Eagle, Cougar or Zebra. Danica Curtright of Morning Star Designs delights with color, texture and rhythm unique to her lamp work Cat Calls by Rod Frederick technique of torch made, glass bead jewelry. Exhibit runs September 26 to October 23. Ken Scott’s Imagination Gallery 222 West Hood Ave. • 541-912-0732 Scott’s fabulous designs in metal prompt imagination and admiration, wide ranging decor with hints of other, more romantic eras, to a decidedly whirlwind love affair with the future. The Jewel 221 West Cascade Ave. • 541-549-9388 Ongoing exhibit, jewelry by Mary Jo Weiss.
Jill’s Wild (tasteful!) Women Showroom 183 E Hood Ave. • 541-617-6078 • jillnealgallery.com Artwork, cards, giftware and ceramics. Sisters Gallery & Frame Shop 252 W Hood Ave. • 541-549-9552 • sistersgallery.com Gallery open 11am-5pm daily, Sundays by appointment. Custom framing and photo restoration. Featuring creative work by Oregon photographers and artists Curtiss Abbott, Gary Albertson, J. Chester Armstrong, Paul Alan Bennett, Wendy Birnbaum, Candace Bruguier, Antonia Carriere, Jan Hanson, Jennifer Hartwig, Vicki Hodge, Norma Holmes, Ann Grossnickle, Kimry Jelen, Carol Grigg, Dennis McGregor, Laurie SantaMaria, Dennis Schmidling, Jodi Schneider, Pat Siegner and Caroline Stratton-Crow. Studio Redfield 183 East Hood Ave. • 541-588-6332 Featuring hand-painted tiles ceramics, art cards, jewelry, abstract paintings and impressionistic landscapes, hand-painted mugs, bright decorative ceramics, wire baskets, tiled end tables. Paintings by Randy Redfield and original hand-painted tile by Kibak Tile. The Porch 243 N Elm St. • 541-549-3287 • theporch-sisters.com Featuring Casey Gardner’s acrylic paintings. The Stitchin' Post ByTonye Phillips 331 W. Cascade St. • 541-549-6061 • stitchinpost.com THIS . THAT . THE OTHER THING An Eclectic Collection by Tonye B. Phillips. This group of “art quilts” comes in all shapes and sizes. Most feature a combination of hand and machine stitching and lean towards the abstract and the whimsical. A variety of fabrics and fibers are incorporated into the pieces as well as a bit of paper. And, some can hang on the wall, lay on the table or be draped over the shoulders. Tonye loves to work with a lot of color and mix diverse fabric prints together in interesting ways. Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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Crystal Crane Hot Springs "it's all about the water"
Karen's Wicker Restoration Contemporary. Comfortable. Intricate.
Founded in 1899 in Martinsville, Indiana, the Old Hickory Furniture Company is known for furnishing National Park Lodges, among other gems of hospitality. In 1904, Yellowstone received their furniture most of which is still in use today. This rocker hails from among those on the front porch of the Crater Lake Lodge. The woven sections are of heavy rattan slab cane which is extremely durable. This material and pattern can be easily used on many other chair frames. Call Karen for an appointment to learn. Redmond, Oregon 541-923-6603
541-493-2535 • 42456 Hwy 20E, Burns Oregon directions: 23 miles east of Burns on Hwy 20 going towards Ontario. On right hand side of Hwy
Oardsgallery.com
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CENTRAL OREGON EXHIBITS
Madras / Warm Springs The Museum at Warm Springs 2189 U.S. 26 541-553-3331 • museumatwarmsprings.org Tribal members demonstrate & share family heirlooms.
Prineville A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum 246 N Main St. 541-447-3715 • bowmanmuseum.org Open Tuesday thru Friday, 10am-5pm, Saturdays 11am-4pm Ponderosa Pine Capital of the World exhibit anchors the new exhibit space in the expanded museum. It includes The Woods & The Mill, two full size areas that highlight the workers, tools and history of the trade. Native American exhibit brings history of the people and land of Crook County.
Redmond/Terrebonne The Art of Alfred A. Dolezal Eagle Crest Resort, 7525 Falcon Crest Dr., Ste. 100 541-526-1185 • alfreddolezal.com • artofaad@yahoo.com Open daily, 10am–5pm Original oils, reproductions, classes, gift shop. The eclectic paintings of Austrian artist, Alfred A. Dolezal combine illuminant colors with alternative visions of reality. These contemporary oils on canvas examine the deeper meaning of life & tell a human interest story. Combining profound messages with thought-provoking imagery & evocative symbolism, they are much more than a painting. Come see why we were awarded the 2017 Certificate of Excellence by TripAdvisor. Maragas Winery Lattavo Gallery 15523 SW Hwy. 97, Culver 541-546-5464 • maragaswinery.com The caricature art adorning the bottles of Maragas wines was created by Doug Maragas’ mother, Joanne Lattavo, in the late ‘50s & early ‘60s. Joanne was an accomplished oil painter with a renowned art gallery. Redmond Library 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond 541-312-1050 • deschuteslibrary.org Continuing for the month of September, the Redmond Library will feature fiber art quilts by two Central Oregon groups, Undercover Quilters Book Club and The High Desert Quilt Guild. The Undercover Quilters Book Club, a local book club/quilters group will be showing their art quilts based upon the book Love to Water my Soul by Jane Kirkpatrick. Each artist brings a different image to life from their reaction to this
novel. The High Desert Quilt Guild of Redmond will exhibit an amazing variety of quilts from several of its members. Students from the REACH program have also collaborated on a group quilt, which will be on display. Linda Barker of SecondTour Design will be showing her wonderful wearable art. Linda is an eclectic, mostly self-taught artist who enjoys working in a variety of media. Her recent focus is creating unique, stylish jewelry and mixed media pieces using scrap metal and other repurposed materials. Her art reflects her value for protecting the environment through creating art from resources that others have tossed out. Linda has shown in galleries throughout Oregon and has participated in many local shows and exhibitions. Zach Thomack will be displaying his paintings in the Silent Reading Room. Zach is an emerging artist with a new unique approach to oil painting landscapes. A self-taught painter, Zach began painting in 2011 and his work ranges from beautiful forests to a towering waterfall. Each painting is fully from his imagination with no use of a reference photo. He is known for using bright eye-catching colors and creating a sense of depth, which pulls the viewer into each painting. “I want my paintings to make people feel as though they are there.” he said. His work is cheerful, and happy. Zach gives all credit to Jesus Christ, who he believes has blessed him with this wonderful gift. It is Zach’s hope that his work will bring joy to those who see it. Redmond Senior Center 325 NW Dogwood 541-548-6325 Sue McLaughlin was born in Germany, raised in Utah, but has called Central Oregon home for 20 years. Art was always a passion but put aside for work and family. Upon moving to Central Oregon that artistic passion was renewed through the beauty and grandeur of Oregon. Selftaught, she aims to give an artist’s view of her personal expressions of beauty. She is a member of Sagebrusher’s Art Society and shows both watercolor and oil paintings.” School House Produce 1430 SW Highland Ave. 541-504-7112 School House Produce is pleased to exhibit the work of SageBrushers Art Society member Linda Shelton. Linda’s multimedia work combines whimsey and imagination in a eclectic mix of subjects. The exhibit will be showing through September. St. Charles Hospital Redmond, 1253 NW Canal Blvd. 541-548-8131 Rotating local artists.
Kindred Spirit of the Night Owl by Linda Shelton
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CALL TO ART
ARTISTS GALLERY SUNRIVER VILLAGE 57100 Beaver Drive, Building 19 541-593-4382 www.artistsgallerysunriver.com Artists’ Gallery Sunriver Village celebrates nine years as a successful member gallery. We are looking for 2 D and 3D artists who can say YES to: I am a full time Central Oregon resident. I can work 2 days per month in the gallery. I will commit to a 6 month contract and serve on a committee. YES? Please contact jury chair, Dori Kite. agsrjurycommittee@gmail.com LITERARY ARTS Call for Submissions: 2019 Oregon Book Awards The deadline for submissions to the 2019 Oregon Book Awards is Monday, September 10 at 5pm in the Literary Arts office. The guidelines and application form are available online at literary-arts.org. Books written by Oregon writers, with an original publication date between September 1, 2017 and August 31, 2018 are eligible for the 2019 Oregon Book Awards. The 2019 Oregon Book Awards finalists will be announced in January 2019. Awards are presented in the following genres: poetry, fiction, drama, general nonfiction, creative nonfiction, children’s literature and young adult literature. Finalists and winners are determined by out-of-state judges. The guidelines are available on the Literary Arts web site at www.literary-arts.org/what-we-do/oba-home/book-awards/awards/. For more information about the programs of Literary Arts please contact us at 503-227-2583, visit Literary-Arts.org or contact susan@literary-arts.org. SUNRIVER STARS The Sunriver Stars Community Theater needs is a director of development, who can search out and apply for grants, and expand our donor base, along with any other programs to help financially support the STARS. We are in contact with an expert in this field who is willing to consult and to give direction to this effort. If you are this person, or know of a person of this caliber, please contact president Sharon Sackett at slms@bendbroadband.com. UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP OF CENTRAL OREGON ART RESOURCE TEAM The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon’s Art Resource Team invites artists to submit up to three digital images for consideration in the upcoming exhibit, Face It. We celebrate the character of each beautiful and unique face of our world. This exhibit will be hung in our Linus Pauling Gallery and will run from October 7 through December 2. We accept portraits in all media, with the prerequisite of secured wire hangers to accommodate hanging on our wires. Early submissions are appreciated, due by mid-September, with an absolute deadline of September 24. Please send a request for a contract, questions and digital images, including approximate dimensions to, Show Chair Ellen Atkin at atkin@bendbroadband.com or call 541-678-5016. UUFCO is located at 61980 Skyline Ranch Road in Bend.
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September 2018 KNOW DREAMS SERIES BEGINS East Bend Library 6pm • deschuteslibrary.org TREVOR GREEN WITH PETE KARTSOUNES Volcanic Theatre Pub 8:30pm • volcanictheatre.com BEND FIRST FRIDAY ARTWALK Downtown Bend & Old Mill District cascadeae.com YUP'IK ESKIMO ARTIST VISIT Raven Makes Gallery ravenmakesgallery.com ARTIST'S RECEPTION Artists' Gallery Sunriver 4pm • artistsgallerysunriver.org ARTIST'S TALK WITH CHRISTIAN BROWN At Liberty 6pm • atlibertyarts.com
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CATS! OPENING PERFORMANCE Tower Theatre 7:30pm • towertheatre.org TANGO OF THE WHITE GARDENIA Pinckney Center for the Art at COCC 4pm • operabend.org HOPI WOMEN EXHIBIT OPENS Raven Makes Gallery ravenmakesgallery.com FOURTH FRIDAY ART STROLL Downtown Sisters sistersartsassociation.org HDCM PRESENTS CHRISTOPHER O'RILEY Bend Church 7:30pm • highdesertchambermusic.com THE VELVETEEN RABBIT Cascades Theatrical Company 3:30pm • cascadestheatrical.org
See www.cascadeae.com for full Event Calendar
Oregon’s Only Arts Magazine Since 1995 | September 2018
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painting • photography •
CASCADE FINE ART WORKSHOPS Contact Sue Manley, 541-408-5524 info@cascadefineartworkshops.com www.cascadefineartworkshops.com Mary Marquiss Florals in Watercolor October 1-3 12 students minimum/16 students max $445 (FULL - Waitlist Available) PRE-REGISTRATION FOR Silas Thompson Workshop Oil February 26-28, 2019 Debora Stewart Pastel and Mixed Media May 13-17, 2019 Ted Nuttall Painting the Figure from Photographs Watercolor June 3-7, 2019
Art Workshops • printmaking • watercolor
JACQUELINE NEWBOLD Watercolor and Art Journaling Workshop in Provence, France • May 10-17, 2019 Join Jacqueline Newbold on an artistic journey of creative expression! Our home base will be a charming medieval village in Provence, France as we have fun painting and creating art in our watercolor journals. You will learn to incorporate watercolor and mixed-media techniques as we spend a magical time together exploring the area, rich with sights, sounds, and colors – all wonderful inspiration for developing your artistic eye. Our host will be frenchescapade.com. They will provide many delicious meals cooked by a French chef and transportation to painting sites. We will stay in a charming hotel with a little river meandering through the garden, an outside swimming pool, a hot tub and a riverside terrace bar all surrounded by impressive mountains. This workshop is available for all levels — all are invited to come along on this delightful trip! Visit my website to learn more: newboldart.com or email me at newbold0505@bendbroadband.com.
AT RODES SMITHEY STUDIOS MULTI MEDIA WORKSHOPS Discover and engage with Rand and Holly Smithey in wide ranging creative processes at our metalwork and painting studios near Tumalo. Complete descriptions at rodes-smithey.com/ workshops.html or contact Holly at info@rodes-smithey.com, 541-280-5635. SAGEBRUSHERS ART SOCIETY All classes listed below held at 117 SW Roosevelt Ave, Bend 541-617-0900 • sagebrushersartofbend.com The Joy of Creating Intuitively with Vicki Johnson First Wednesday of each month 6-8:30pm Intuitive painting is the process of painting spontaneously without fear and self-doubt. $25, all materials included. Contact Vicki at 541-390-3174 or coachvickijohnson@gmail.com.
New Perspective for September
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onversations over the first few days are pleasant and helpful. Recognize the work that needs to be done on the 5th and take care of it. Decisions made on the 7th are cooperative and create new guidelines. Turn a corner on the 8th and begin a series of changes. The New Moon on the 9th inspire healing solutions to challenging situations. Be receptive to an unusual approach. Open your mind to new opportunities on the 11th and 12th. Accept an invitation on the 15th and get ready to discover what is possible. Take a few extra deep breaths on the 18th and realize you are making big changes. Listen closely to conversations on the 20th and be willing to repeat what you learn over the next few days. The Fall Equinox on the 22nd brings news that leaves many questions. Be patient and life will make more sense very soon.
The Full Moon on the 24th is a time for solid decisions and clear action. Trust your choices as you move forward. Choosing to see yourself in a new way on the 27th will be both helpful and effective. Make a promise to yourself on the 30th to let yourself immerse in a personal transformation. You will be very glad that you did. Love and Light Always, Eileen Lock Clairvoyant Astrologer / Spiritual Medium 1471 NW Newport Ave., Bend, Oregon 97703 541-389-1159 eileenlock.freeservers.com • oneheartministry.freeservers.com Listen for the song in your heart, find the melody and dance to the music.
There is a charge of $20 to list classes and/or workshops or they are free with a paid display ad. Please keep text to 200 words or less. Email ae@cascadeae.com for more information. See full workshop listings at cascadeae.com
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Hopi Women’s Show
Sonwai, Distinguished Master Jeweler Pesavensi, Painter Dorothy Ami, Potter
18K Gold, Silver, Gem Quality Cloud Mountain Turquoise Ring
Traditional Hopi Polychrome Pot
Gem Quality Kingman Turquoise, 18K Gold Inlay
Raven Makes Gallery Sisters, Oregon
Cast Silver, 18K Gold, Gem Quality Bisbee Turquoise
Niman Ceremony, Earth Pigments Painting, 36”d Yungyapu, Earth Pigments Painting, 36”d
September 28 – 30
Reception Friday 4 – 7pm Forum Discussion Saturday 1:30 – 2:30
182 E. Hood Ave www.ravenmakesgallery.com
Standout style you can show off with your feet up. At first glance all you see is style, but look closer and you’ll find that this great-looking sofa also has the power to recline at the touch of a button. Yes, really. With duo™ by La-Z-Boy, you get the best of both worlds – the comfort you know and love, plus a variety of styles and over 900 fabrics and leathers to choose from. Discover duo, a sofa so surprising it will sweep you off your feet. See the full line at la-z-boy.com.
Medford, OR • 541-535-5242
Join the conversation.
Bend, OR • 541-617-1717