| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||
| 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
| 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 |
| 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 |
| 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 |
Willamette University
900 State Street
Salem, Oregon 97301
503-370-6014 voice
503-370-6153 fax


A small exhibition of color photographs by Adam Bacher, a Portland photographer who captures the remote alpine regions and backcountry wilderness of the western U.S., will be on display May 24–July 27 at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Adam Bacher: Earth, Water, and Sky will showcase an array of subjects photographed by Bacher, including the Oregon and Washington Cascades, the Sierra Nevada of California, the Sawtooth Mountains of Idaho, the Wind River Mountains of Wyoming and the rugged terrain of Glacier National Park in Montana.
In conjunction with his exhibition, Bacher will deliver a free lecture about his work Thursday, June 12, at 7 p.m. in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum. He also will offer a free nature photography workshop for adults Saturday, June 21, from 1–4 p.m. in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall and at Bush’s Pasture Park. Enrollment in the workshop is limited to 15; pre-registration is required by calling (503) 370-6855.
Bacher was born, raised and educated in Michigan and came west to work on a PhD in international relations at the University of Oregon. He enrolled in a photography class at the university for fun, and it literally transformed his life. He abandoned his graduate study, took additional photography classes and has worked as a professional photographer ever since. Bacher has exhibited at the World Forestry Center and the Seges Art Gallery in Portland, and the governor’s office at the Oregon State Capital in Salem.
The exhibition is been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]
A wide variety of exhibitions are planned at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art for 2008–09, Museum Director John Olbrantz announced recently.
Major exhibitions scheduled for the Melvin Henderson-Rubio Gallery include:
Michael Dailey: Color, Light, Time, and Place (June 7–Aug. 31). Michael Dailey is a Seattle abstract painter and professor emeritus from the University of Washington. His work focuses on the deconstruction of the landscape to its basic elements of horizon, color, light and atmosphere. The exhibition features 44 paintings and works on paper, spanning a 45-year period, drawn from public and private collections throughout the region.
The Art of Ceremony: Regalia of Native Oregon (Sept. 28, 2008–Jan. 18, 2009). This exhibition features historic and contemporary regalia from native Oregon, offering visitors a rare glimpse at the beauty, history and meaning of regalia in tribal life and thought. Included are objects made of buckskin and beadwork from the Plateau region of eastern Oregon, objects with condor feathers from the Columbia River Gorge, and objects with feather and abalone shell decoration from the Oregon Coast. The exhibition was chosen as Oregon’s 2008 American Masterpieces project and was awarded $50,000 from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Harry Widman: Image, Myth, and Modernism (Jan. 31–March 29, 2009). Harry Widman is a Portland painter and professor emeritus from the Pacific Northwest College of Art. The exhibition surveys his career over a 60-year period in works that explore the possibility of a “meaningful shape” in abstract painting, the role myth can play in contemporary expression, and the interplay between the physical strength of the athlete and the intellectual delicacy of the poet or philosopher in expressionist modern art.
Senior Art Majors (April 11–May 10, 2009). Each spring, the Hallie Ford Museum of Art features the work of senior art and art history majors at Willamette. The exhibition includes work in a variety of media, including painting, sculpture, printmaking, drawing, ceramics, photography and mixed media. In addition, the exhibition features senior theses in art history.
James Thompson: The Vanishing Landscape (April 11–May 10, 2009). This exhibition focuses on a body of work that the artist has been developing for some time exploring the transformation of the rural western U.S. Thompson holds an MFA degree from Washington University in St. Louis and has been on the art faculty at Willamette University since 1986.
Smaller exhibitions scheduled for the Study Gallery include Adam Bacher: Earth, Water, and Sky (May 24–July 27); The Collector’s Eye: Contemporary Art from the Leo Michelson Collection (Aug. 2–Oct. 5); The Second Crow’s Shadow Institute for the Arts Biennial (Oct. 11–Dec. 21); Mary Randlett: Artist Portraits (Jan. 10–March 8, 2009); and From Hestia’s Sacred Fire to Christ’s Eternal Light: Ancient and Medieval Lamps from the Bogue Collection (March 14–May 17, 2009).
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed on Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]


An exhibition of works by South African painter and sculptor Andries Fourie, the newest member of Willamette University’s art faculty, opens April 12 and will be on display through May 11 at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art.
Andries Fourie: Recent Work will be held in the Atrium Gallery and will coincide with the senior art majors exhibition in the Melvin-Henderson-Rubio Gallery. Fourie will give a free gallery talk about his work Tuesday, April 15, at 12:30 p.m. at the museum.
“Andries Fourie is doing some of the most exciting and thought-provoking work in the region,” Museum Director John Olbrantz said.
Fourie, of Afrikaner heritage, was born and raised in South Africa and educated in California as a painter and sculptor. He uses his art to address the horrors of war and the tragedy of apartheid. The exhibition will feature a range of work from the past few years, including such powerful recent works as “Asking the Ancestors for Answers” and “Denial’s Antidote.” Fourie joined the Willamette faculty in 2006.
Andries Fouries: Recent Work is supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]
A small exhibition of prints by Giovanni Battista Piranesi, an 18th-century Italian etcher and archaeologist, opens March 22 and continues through May 18 at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Organized by Ann Nicgorski, professor of art history at Willamette and faculty curator at the museum, Piranesi: Views of Rome will include a range of prints drawn from regional collections, including the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon, Reed College, the Portland Art Museum and a private collector. The exhibition will include Piranesi’s “Arch of Titus” from the collection of the Hallie Ford Museum of Art.
From 1748–74, Piranesi (1720–78) created his famous “Views of Rome,” a series of prints that depicted the eternal city’s majestic ruins and served for generations as the standard representations of Roman grandeur.
In conjunction with the exhibition, Marnie Stark, assistant curator of prints and drawings at the Portland Art Museum, will give a free lecture Thursday, April 3, at 7 p.m. in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum. Stark will discuss Piranesi’s prints within the context of the Greco-Roman controversy in which French and German scholars dismissed Roman architecture and design as derivative and inferior to that of the Greeks.
Piranesi: Views of Rome is supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]
A small exhibition of African prints and related etching plates from Ashland painter and printmaker Betty LaDuke will be presented Jan. 19 through May 10 in the lobby and Print Study Center of the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Betty LaDuke: Prints displays the artist’s longtime interest in the people and cultures of Africa. The daughter of Russian and Polish-Jewish immigrants, LaDuke focuses her work on multicultural issues and the international places she has visited during the past 40 years. Her African work portrays the color, texture and rhythms of African rural life, exploring universal themes such as creation myths, birth and death, food production and the spirit’s journey.
LaDuke traces her interest in other cultures to her work with African-American artists Charles White and Elizabeth Catlett, both of whom she credits as mentors and role models. LaDuke earned her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from California State University in Los Angeles. In 1964, she accepted a full-time faculty position at Southern Oregon University in Ashland, where she taught for 32 years.
Betty LaDuke: Prints is supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University will host a series of free gallery talks and a workshop for teachers in conjunction with the exhibition James Lavadour: The Properties of Paint, on display Feb. 2 through March 30.
The workshop, for teachers interested in bringing their classes to see the exhibition, will be Feb. 5 from 4 to 5:30 p.m. at the museum. The workshop will help teachers prepare their students for a field trip to the museum, develop strategies to tour the exhibition and reinforce the gallery experience and broaden curriculum concepts back in the classroom.
Elizabeth Garrison, the museum’s Cameron Paulin Curator of Education, will teach the workshop. She has written a teacher guide that will be available after Feb. 6 at www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art. The workshop is free, although advance registration is required by calling (503) 370-6855.
Free gallery talks about the exhibition, presented by museum docents, will be every Tuesday, Feb. 5 through March 25, from 12:30 to 1 p.m. at the museum.
James Lavadour: The Properties of Paint features a range of recent work by this Native American painter and printmaker. Since 2000, Lavadour has focused intensely on the properties of paint, creating works that he describes as the intersections between his better-known landscapes and his lesser-known architectural structures.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]

An exhibition of work by James Lavadour, a Native American painter and printmaker known for his exploration of landscape as both inspiration and subject, will be on display Feb. 2 through March 30 at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
James Lavadour: The Properties of Paint, organized by anthropology Professor Rebecca Dobkins, faculty curator of Native American art at the museum, examines the conceptual layers underlying Lavadour’s work of the past eight years. Since 2000, Lavadour has focused intensely on the properties of paint, creating works he describes as the intersections between his better-known landscapes and his lesser-known architectural structures.
The exhibition includes 12 works drawn from regional and national collections and will be accompanied by a full-color brochure. Once the exhibition closes in Salem, it will be displayed at the Tamastslikt Cultural Institute near Pendleton, Ore., from April 10 through June 10, and the Schneider Museum of Art at Southern Oregon University in Ashland, Ore., from July 10 through Sept. 13.
A free forum and symposium are planned in Salem. The forum, “Art/Culture/Homeland: Voices from the Umatilla Reservation,” is Feb. 1 from 4 to 6 p.m. in Hudson Hall at Willamette and is part of the Indian Country Conversations series. It will introduce the Umatilla Indian Reservation in northeastern Oregon, which is the home and inspiration for Lavadour, and address the tribes’ philosophy and strategies for sustainable community development.
Participants include Lavadour, founder of the Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts on the reservation; Roberta “Bobbie” Conner, director of the Tamastslikt Cultural Institute; Antone Minthorn, chairman of the board of trustees for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR); and Donald Sampson, executive director of CTUIR. An opening reception at the museum will follow the forum.
The free symposium, “The Properties of Paint,” is March 13 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum. The event will bring artists and scientists together to discuss the material and philosophical properties of paint and the interconnections between art, geology, the environment, physics and human creativity. Participants include Lavadour and Willamette faculty members.
James Lavadour: The Properties of Paint is supported by an endowment gift from The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde through the Spirit Mountain Community Fund. Additional support was provided by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]

An exhibition of ritual objects found among the Yoruba people of West Africa opens Jan. 19 and is on display until March 16 at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Organized by museum Director John Olbrantz, Yoruba Sculpture: Selections from the Mary Johnston Collection features 24 objects on loan from Johnston’s collection in Florence, Ore.
Special events connected to the exhibition include a free lecture and a film showing. Pam McClusky, curator of African and Oceanic art at the Seattle Art Museum, will give a free lecture on Yoruba sculpture Jan. 31 at 7 p.m. in the Paulus Lecture Hall at the College of Law. An evening of free films on Yoruba art and culture is scheduled for Feb. 7 at 7 p.m. in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum.
The exhibition includes masks worn in various festivals and rituals, such as the Gelede and Egungun ceremonies; cult figures made of bronze and wood, including Shango wands and Ibeji figures; Dun Dun drums used in different ceremonies; an elaborately carved 8-foot house post; a king’s beaded crown; and an Egungun masquerade costume.
Mary Johnston, who holds degrees from the University of Oregon in anthropology and psychology, inherited the collection from her brother, who acquired it in Berlin, Germany in the early 1970s. She has devoted the past 20 years to studying the pieces.
Yoruba Sculpture: Selections from the Mary Johnston Collection has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]

An exhibition of work by Don Bailey, a highly regarded painter and art teacher at Chemawa Indian School in Salem, opens Dec. 1 and continues through Jan. 13 at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Don Bailey: Spider and the Bureau, The Blanket Series, organized by Professor Rebecca Dobkins, presents a new body of paintings created during the past four years that reframes the complex legacy that formal and informal institutions have had on Native American life. Bailey, a Hupa tribal member, was raised on the Hoopa Valley Reservation in California. For nearly 30 years, he has taught art at Chemawa Indian School, the oldest federal Indian boarding school in the U.S.
Bailey will give a free lecture about his work Friday, Nov. 30, from 5 to 6 p.m. in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum. A free reception follows from 6 to 8 p.m. in the lobby and galleries. A free full-color brochure with an essay by the artist and eight color illustrations accompanies the exhibition and will be available at the museum.
Don Bailey: Spider and the Bureau, The Blanket Series is supported through an endowment gift from the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, through the Spirit Mountain Community Fund. Additional support has been provided by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]

The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University will open a major exhibition of work by women printmakers Oct. 27. Women’s Work: Contemporary Women Printmakers from the Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation will be on display until Jan. 20.
The exhibition presents a broad range of prints from the past 35 years by some of the foremost women printmakers at work in the U.S., Europe, Africa and Asia. Once the exhibition closes in January, it will travel to the Art Gym at Marylhurst University in spring 2008 and to several other venues in 2008 and 2009.
“This is the third major print exhibition that we have borrowed from Jordan, who continues to be a remarkable and amazing collector and donor,” says Museum Director John Olbrantz, who co-curated the exhibition with Marylhurst Art Gym Director Terri Hopkins.
The exhibition will include a full-color brochure by Robin Reisenfeld, an associate professor at Christie’s Education in New York and a leading authority on modern and contemporary printmaking. She will deliver a free lecture on contemporary women printmakers Friday, Oct. 26, at 5 p.m. in the Paulus Lecture Hall at Willamette’s Collins Legal Center. A free preview reception will follow from 6 to 8 p.m. in the lobby of the museum.
Included in the exhibition will be works by Anni Albers, Louise Nevelson, Louise Bourgeois, Suzanne Caporeal, Fay Jones, Judy Pfaff, Kiki Smith and Kara Walker, among others. A number of themes will be explored, including abstraction, humor and satire, race and gender, politics, and the environment.
Women’s Work: Contemporary Women Printmakers from the Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]

A small selection of paintings of houses, farms, boathouses and other structure-like formations by Oregon artist Amanda Snyder will be on display Oct. 13 to Nov. 25 at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Amanda Snyder: Structures features the work of Snyder (1894-1980), who is well known for her paintings of birds and clowns but whose works based on architectural structures are less frequently seen. Characterized by a strong sense for geometric form, vigorous brushwork and rich color, the works reflect the emotional intensity of this self-effacing and reclusive artist.
Organized by Willamette Professor Roger Hull and drawn from public and private collections throughout the region, the exhibition will be accompanied by a Hull-penned article on Snyder in the October issue of American Art Review.
Amanda Snyder: Structures has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or visit www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
[ email this story ]
The Oregon Arts Commission has selected “The Art of Ceremony,” planned by the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University in Salem, as Oregon’s 2008 American Masterpieces project. The commission has awarded the project a $50,000 grant using funds from the National Endowment for the Arts.
“The Oregon Arts Commission reviewed many strong proposals in this second round of special American Masterpieces grant funding. 'The Art of Ceremony' project was selected because of its potential to show work rarely seen by the public and to examine the concept of a 'masterpiece,'" said Christine D’Arcy, executive director of the commission. “We are very pleased to announce this award.”
Organized by Willamette anthropology associate professor Rebecca Dobkins in collaboration with Native community curators, “The Art of Ceremony” will be a groundbreaking exhibition of and book about historic and contemporary ceremonial regalia from Oregon tribes.
“Ceremonial regalia is perhaps the most highly regarded art form within American Indian groups and thus truly represents an indigenous definition of master work,” Dobkins said. “‘The Art of Ceremony’ promises to contribute profoundly to the national conversation about what constitutes American art and American masterpieces. We are honored to be working in partnership with Oregon tribes on this project.”
Museum staff will work closely with the Siletz, Umatilla, Warm Springs and other Oregon tribes in the development of the exhibit, which will open at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art in fall 2008 and then travel to the Tamastslikt Cultural Institute and the Museum at Warm Springs at no cost to those institutions. “We are extremely honored to have the exhibition selected as Oregon’s 2008 American Masterpieces project, excited to be able to work with Native communities on the exhibition’s development and thrilled to be able to share the exhibition with audiences throughout the state,” Museum Director John Olbrantz said.
The collaborative curatorial process will identify the complex aesthetic criteria by which regalia-makers judge their own and others’ work, apply these criteria to the selection of work for the exhibition, and then articulate them within the exhibition itself. In this way, the public will come to understand the multiple meanings of “masterpiece,” “beauty,” “excellence” and “innovation,” as expressed in Native community standards.
Regalia from Oregon is exceptionally diverse, from the Plateau area’s buckskin and beadwork, to the Columbia River region’s use of condor feathers, to the coastal area’s feather work and abalone shell decoration. “A lot of people attend intertribal events such as powwows and mistake what they see there as our traditional dances and regalia,” said Bud Lane, vice chairman of Siletz Tribal Council. “Each tribe has its own regalia and dances that go way back. We want people to see that each tribe has its individual traditions and cultures that vary from region to region.”
In all areas, regalia reflects environmental and cultural transformations and generates spiritual power and social status. The exhibition will include contemporary regalia from the Siletz, Umatilla and Warm Springs communities and borrow historic regalia from major American collections. “It’s extremely rare for the public to see this traditional regalia,” Lane said. “Outside of our dance houses, we don’t do many public appearances.”
A full array of public programming, including artist demonstrations and workshops, is envisioned. The accompanying book will be completed following the exhibit.
In addition to the NEA American Masterpieces grant, the project is supported by a Millicent McIntosh Fellowship from the Woodrow Wilson Foundation granted to Rebecca Dobkins for 2007–09.
The Oregon Arts Commission provides leadership, funding and arts programs through its grants, special initiatives and services. Nine commissioners, appointed by the governor, determine arts needs and establish policies for public support of the arts. The commission is supported with general funds appropriated by the Oregon legislature and with federal funds from the National Endowment for the Arts as well as funds from the Oregon Cultural Trust. More information about the Oregon Arts Commission is available online at: www.oregonartscommission.org.
[ email this story ]

Film reel guitars, cowboy boot violins, axe cellos and Styrofoam packaging pianos are among the “hybrid” musical instruments that will be on display this summer at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University. Ken Butler: Hybrid Visions, featuring 56 of the mixed media artist’s inventive and humorous instruments, opens June 9 and continues through Aug. 26.
Butler studied viola as a child and maintained an interest in music while studying art at Colorado College and Portland State University. He has shown and performed at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Lincoln Center and the Metropolitan Museum of Art and has been featured on PBS, CNN, MTV and NBC’s Tonight Show with Jay Leno. His music and performances have been described as “Kurt Schwitters meets Rube Goldberg meets Laurie Anderson meets Miles Davis.”
In conjunction with the exhibition, Butler will lead a free sound workshop for youths (grades K–8) June 9 from 1 to 2:30 p.m. in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum. He will show how simple instruments can be created from household objects, and participants will discover the relationship between sound, noise and music and hear their voices altered with electronic effects. Enrollment is limited to 25 students plus their parents, and pre-registration is required. To register, call (503) 370-6855.
Also on June 9, Butler will present a concert at 7:30 p.m. at the Historic Elsinore Theatre in Salem. The concert will be an evening of mesmerizing sounds and melodic grooves as Butler performs on an arsenal of amplified hybrid string instruments made from household objects and tools. Neil Strauss of The Village Voice has said of Butler, “It’s not just that Ken Butler knows how to bow stringed instrument parade rifles, play dental dams like trumpets and construct keyboards from aluminum crutches, it’s that he knows how to play them well.”
Admission to the concert is free to Hallie Ford Museum of Art and Historic Elsinore Theatre members, but a ticket is required at the door (tickets may be picked up at the museum or theatre). Tickets for non-members are $10 and may be purchased at the museum or theatre, or online at www.elsinoretheatre.com. The box office and doors open at 6:30 p.m. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or (503) 375-3574.
Ken Butler: Hybrid Visions was organized in collaboration with the Art Gym at Marylhurst University. Local support for the exhibition was provided in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855 or go to www.willamette.edu/museum_of_art.
Please note that the concert and workshop scheduled for June 9 have been canceled due to health reasons. More Information
[ email this story ]
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University will present several free educational programs to help contextualize its exhibition When 6 WAS 9: Rock Posters from San Francisco, 1966-71, on display through Aug. 26.
All events are free and will be held in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum.
Salem collector Gary Westfjord, whose 56 posters are featured in the exhibition, will present a lecture June 8 from 5 to 6 p.m. on the history of rock posters during the late 1960s and early 1970s. The posters, used to promote concerts at the legendary Fillmore Auditorium and Avalon Ballroom, were created by Rick Griffin, Stanley Mouse and other major poster artists. They are characterized by their psychedelic colors and powerful imagery.
The documentary film “Monterey Pop” will be shown June 14 at 7 p.m. The film features the Monterey International Pop Festival, held in June 1967, which captured the mood, spirit and tempo of the 1960s and helped launch the careers of Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and others.
Bob Schnepf, a 1960s poster artist and longtime Portland resident featured in the exhibition, will participate in a roundtable discussion with Westfjord and Museum Director John Olbrantz on June 23 from 2 to 3 p.m. They will discuss the San Francisco music scene.
In addition to these programs, the Humanities and Communications Department/Film Studies Program at Chemeketa Community College and the Historic Elsinore Theatre in Salem will present “Altered States: The Cinema of the Sixties,” at the Elsinore during the summer months. For more information on films in that series, call (503) 375-3574 or visit www.elsinoretheatre.com.
When 6 WAS 9: Rock Posters from San Francisco, 1966-71 has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855.
[ email this story ]


The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University will mark the 40th anniversary of the “Summer of Love” — when thousands of young people flocked to San Francisco for free love, drugs and rock ’n’ roll — with an exhibition featuring rock posters created in the Bay Area during the late 1960s and early 1970s. When 6 WAS 9: Rock Posters from San Francisco, 1966-71, featuring 56 posters from the collection of Salem resident Gary Westfjord, will be on display May 26 to Aug. 26.
The museum will present a free lecture, roundtable discussion and film in conjunction with the exhibition. On June 8 from 5 to 6 p.m., Westfjord will give a lecture on the history of rock posters. The museum will show the documentary film “Monterey Pop” June 14 at 7 p.m. Poster artist Bob Schnepf, Westfjord and Museum Director John Olbrantz will have a roundtable discussion June 23 from 2 to 3 p.m. about the San Francisco music scene. All events are free and will be held in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum.
Included in the exhibition will be posters by major San Francisco poster artists of the period, including Rick Griffin, Alton Kelley, Bonnie Maclean, Stanley Mouse, Victor Moscoso, Bob Schnepf and Wes Wilson. These posters, remarkable for their strong design, psychedelic colors and powerful imagery, promoted concerts at the Fillmore Auditorium and the Avalon Ballroom by such legendary performers as Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead and others.
Originally tacked on telephone poles and displayed in storefronts, the posters were commissioned by music impresarios Bill Graham and Chet Helms and were often given away at weekly concerts. In recent years their value as works of art has been firmly established as they have been featured in major exhibitions in San Diego, New York and elsewhere.
A companion exhibition, American Music Posters, 1935-2007, will be presented at the Bush Barn Art Center in Salem from July 6 to Aug. 5. The Bush Barn Art Center is located at 600 Mission St., in Bush’s Pasture Park. For more information, call (503) 581-2228.
When 6 WAS 9: Rock Posters from San Francisco, 1966-71 is supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855.
[ email this story ]
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University plans a wide variety of exhibitions for 2007–08, including musical instruments made from found objects, prints from contemporary women artists and works from a South African Willamette professor.
Major exhibitions scheduled for the Melvin Henderson-Rubio Gallery are:
Ken Butler: Hybrid Visions (June 9–Aug. 26) features the work of this mixed media artist who creates inventive and humorous hybrid instruments from found objects, including film-reel guitars, cowboy boot violins, axe cellos and Styrofoam-packaging pianos. Organized in collaboration with The Art Gym at Marylhurst University, the exhibition will feature about 60 works on loan from the artist.
Women’s Work: Contemporary Women Printmakers from the Jordan Schnitzer Collection (Oct. 27–Jan. 20) includes prints by a number of female artists, including Anni Albers, Louise Nevelson, Louise Bourgeois, Suzanne Caporael, Fay Jones and Kara Walker. A wide variety of themes will be explored, including abstraction, humor and satire, politics, race and gender, and the environment.
James Lavadour: The Properties of Paint (Feb. 2–March 30) features the work of this nationally recognized Oregon artist known for his exploration of landscape as both inspiration and subject. Since 2000, Lavadour has focused on the properties of paint, creating works he describes as “intersections” between his better-known landscapes and his lesser-known abstract architectural structures. The exhibition will examine the conceptual layers underlying Lavadour’s work of the past eight years.
Senior Art Majors (April 12–May 11) showcases the work of senior art majors at Willamette. The exhibition includes painting, sculpture, printmaking, drawing, ceramics, photography and mixed media. In addition, the exhibition features senior theses in art history.
Andries Fourie: Recent Work (April 12–May 11) will introduce audiences to the work of the newest member of the art faculty at Willamette. Born and raised in South Africa and educated in California as a painter and sculptor, Fourie’s work addresses the horrors of war and the tragedy of apartheid. The exhibition will feature a range of work from the past few years.
Smaller exhibitions scheduled for the Study Gallery include When 6 WAS 9: Rock Posters from San Francisco, 1966–71 (May 26–Aug. 26); Amanda Snyder: Structures (Oct. 13–Nov. 25); Don Bailey: Spider and the Bureau, The Blanket Series (Dec. 1–Jan. 13); Yoruba Sculpture: Selections from the Mary Johnston Collection (Jan. 19–March 16); and Piranesi: Views of Rome (March 22–May 18).
The museum will be closed Aug. 27 to Sept. 30 for renovation and will re-open Oct. 1.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed on Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855.
[ email this story ]
Richard Brockway, director of Ancient Art International and one of the foremost collectors of ancient glass in the U.S., will present a lecture and slide show April 12 at 7 p.m. at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Brockway will speak about the history of ancient glass and the development of his collection. The event is free and will be held in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall.
Brockway received his bachelor of arts degree from Willamette University, his bachelor of science and master of science degrees from Stanford University, and did further graduate study at Harvard University. For nearly 30 years he worked as an engineer for GTE telephone company, and during that time he began to assemble his collection of antiquities, which includes ceramics, sculpture, mosaics, coins, glass and lamps from Egypt, Greece, Rome, India, China and Japan. His ancient glass collection is one of the finest private collections of its kind in the country.
Brockway’s lecture is in conjunction with Ancient Glass: Selections from the Richard Brockway Collection, an exhibition on display until May 20 at the museum. Organized by Director John Olbrantz, the exhibition features a range of ancient glass from 1500 BCE to the 6th century CE. Included in the exhibition are drinking vessels, tableware, toiletry vessels and other glass items from Egypt, the Near East, Greece and Rome.
Ancient Glass: Selections from the Richard Brockway Collection has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855.
[ email this story ]
An exhibition of ancient glass from 1500 BCE to the 6th century CE will be on display March 10 to May 19 in the Study Gallery at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Ancient Glass: Selections from the Richard Brockway Collection, organized by museum director John Olbrantz, features 46 pieces from the Richard Brockway collection, considered one of the finest private collections of ancient glass in the U.S.
Brockway is a 1957 graduate of Willamette University, a retired engineer with GTE telephone company and director of Ancient Art International. Brockway will present a slide show and lecture April 12 from 7 to 8 p.m. in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum.
Natural glass has existed since the beginning of time, formed when certain types of rocks melt as a result of volcanic eruptions, lightning strikes or the impact of meteorites, and subsequently cool and solidify. Early man is believed to have used cutting tools made of obsidian (a natural glass) to make primitive tools and weapons. According to the Roman historian Pliny the Elder (23-79 CE), Phoenician merchants were thought to have discovered glass on the Levantine Coast.
The Brockway collection features glass from Egypt, the Near East, Greece and Rome, including drinking vessels, tableware, toiletry vessels and a host of other glass items that demonstrate the ancient glass artists’ skill and mastery of glassmaking techniques. A wide variety of techniques are represented in the collection, including rod forming, core forming, mold casting, free blowing, mold blowing and pate de verre.
Ancient Glass: Selections from the Richard Brockway Collection has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call 503-370-6855.
[ email this story ]



The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University will present a lecture and discussion on artist George Johanson, who has been a major force in the Portland art scene for nearly 60 years. Both events are free and are in conjunction with the museum’s current exhibition, George Johanson: Image and Idea.
Prudence Roberts will present a slide show and lecture about Johanson as a printmaker, March 3 from 2 to 3 p.m. in the museum's Roger Hull Lecture Hall. Roberts is an art history instructor at Portland Community College and the author of numerous publications on regional art.
Curator Roger Hull will join Johanson to discuss his art and career, April 1 from 2 to 3 p.m. in the museum's Melvin Henderson-Rubio Gallery. Hull is a Willamette art history professor, curator of the Johanson exhibition and author of numerous monographs on regional artists, including Johanson, Carl Hall, Jan Zach and Charles Heaney.
George Johanson: Image and Idea chronicles the life and times of this distinguished Portland painter, printmaker and teacher whose work focuses on bathers, swimmers, artists and the streets and vistas of Portland, a place he has called home since the late 1940s. The exhibition is on display through April 1.
The exhibition has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem Transient Occupancy Tax and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Mondays. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information call (503) 370-6855.
[ email this story ]
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University will host free gallery talks and a workshop for teachers interested in bringing their classes to see the forthcoming exhibition George Johanson: Image and Idea.
Elizabeth Garrison, Cameron Paulin Curator of Education at the museum, will teach the workshop to help teachers prepare students for a field trip to the museum, develop strategies to tour the exhibition, and propose ideas that reinforce the gallery experience and broaden curriculum concepts back in the classroom. The free workshop is Feb. 7 from 4 to 6 p.m. at the museum. Advance registration is required by calling (503) 370-6855.
Garrison has written a teacher guide on Johanson that will be available online after Feb. 7 at the Hallie Ford Museum web site.
The museum also will host an ongoing series of free gallery talks on the exhibition every Tuesday, Feb. 6 to March 27, from 12:30 to 1 p.m. Gallery talks will be presented by Garrison or a museum docent.
George Johanson: Image and Idea chronicles the life and times of this distinguished Portland painter, printmaker and teacher whose work focuses on bathers, swimmers, artists, and the streets and vistas of Portland, a place he has called home since the late 1940s. The exhibition runs Feb. 3 through April 1.
The exhibition has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem Transient Occupancy Tax funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Mondays. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information call 503-370-6855.
[ email this story ]



A major retrospective of work by George Johanson — a distinguished Portland painter, printmaker and teacher whose work focuses on bathers, swimmers, artists and the streets and vistas of Portland — will open Feb. 3 and continue through April 1 at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Organized by Professor Roger Hull, George Johanson: Image and Idea will trace the artist’s career over a 60-year time period and will feature 68 works drawn mostly from regional collections. The exhibition represents the first time Johanson has been honored with a major retrospective.
Several lectures are planned in conjunction with the exhibition. Hull will present a slide show and lecture about Johanson’s career Feb. 2 from 5 to 6 p.m. in Cone Chapel, on the second floor of Waller Hall. A preview reception will follow from 6 to 8 p.m. in the lobby and galleries of the museum. On March 3 from 2 to 3 p.m. in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum, Prudence Roberts will discuss Johanson’s work as a printmaker. Hull and Johanson will discuss the artist’s life and career April 1 from 2 to 3 p.m. at the museum.
Born in Seattle in 1928, Johanson attended the Portland Art Museum School in the late 1940s, where he studied with Oregon modernists Louis Bunce, William Givler, Jack McLarty and Michele Russo. Responding to the work of these artists as well as to the New York School and European avant garde, Johanson forged a mature style and range of imagery characterized by its graphic immediacy, intense coloration and exuberant figuration.
A full-color, 128-page book will be published in conjunction with the exhibition. The book will include an extensive essay by Hull and more than 110 color plates and black and white illustrations. In his essay, Hull will discuss the inter-textual nature of Johanson’s work and the significance of his subject matter. As with previous Hallie Ford Museum of Art publications, the Johanson book will be distributed through the University of Washington Press, Seattle and London.
George Johanson: Image and Idea is supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax Funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Mondays. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information call (503) 370-6855.
[ email this story ]


A small exhibition of work by Salem painter John Van Dreal will open Jan. 6 and continue through March 4 in the Study Gallery of the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
Organized by Director John Olbrantz in collaboration with the artist, John Van Dreal: Still Lifes and Figures will feature 13 works created in 2006 specifically for the exhibition. Van Dreal draws on Old Master techniques to create still lifes, landscapes and figures.
Born in Colorado in 1962 and raised in Southern California, Van Dreal began painting when he was 7 with instruction from his father, an accomplished watercolorist. He received his formal art education at Brigham Young University, where he earned a bachelor of fine arts degree in studio art and a master of education degree in educational psychology. In addition to his art, Van Dreal has worked for the past decade as a school psychologist with the Salem-Keizer School District.
Van Dreal has been featured in dozens of one-person and group exhibitions over the years and his work is a part of numerous public and private collections throughout the region, including the University of Portland, Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon, the State of Oregon and the Hallie Ford Museum of Art, among others. He is a signature member of the National Oil and Acrylic Painters Society.
Van Dreal paints from photographs and sketches, choosing to portray subjects such as still lifes, landscapes, and the human figure that have a rich history in Western art. A great admirer of the Dutch masters of the 17th and 18th centuries, he prefers oil paint because of its richness, luminosity and slow drying time, allowing him to work and re-work a piece until he is completely satisfied with it. Van Dreal has said he wants to create imagery that is evocative, intellectual and spiritual, rooted in the past but with a contemporary edge.
John Van Dreal: Still Lifes and Figures has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and, starting Jan. 7, Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Mondays. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information call (503) 370-6855.
[ email this story ]



A major solo exhibition of work by Seattle narrative and symbolist painter Fay Jones will open Nov. 18 and continue through Jan. 20 at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University.
In conjunction with the exhibition, titled Fay Jones: Painted Fictions, the artist will present a slide show and lecture about her work from 5 to 6 p.m. Nov. 17 in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall at the museum. A preview reception will follow from 6 to 8 p.m. in the lobby and galleries downstairs.
Organized by director John Olbrantz, the exhibition will include Jones’ work from the past 15 years from Portland and Seattle collections, including the Microsoft Corporation, the Tacoma Art Museum, Harsch Investments and the Hallie Ford Museum of Art. Although Jones has shown in Portland since the late 1980s, the exhibition represents the first time a broad survey of her work has been seen in Oregon.
Fay Jones was born in Boston in 1936 and received her bachelor of fine arts degree in 1957 from the Rhode Island School of Design. In 1960, she moved to Seattle with her husband, Robert Jones, who accepted a position on the art faculty at the University of Washington. Although Fay Jones continued to paint in the 1960s and ’70s, her artistic career took off in the early ’80s as curators and collectors began to take a keen interest in figurative narration. Jones deals with a variety of autobiographical issues in her work.
Fay Jones: Painted Fictions is supported in part by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax Funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. The galleries are closed Sunday and Monday and will be closed Dec. 23 through Jan. 2 for winter break. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855.
[ email this story ]



A selection of contemporary prints created at the Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts on the Umatilla Indian Reservation in northeastern Oregon will be featured in an exhibition at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University. The Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts Biennial opens Oct. 28 and continues through Dec. 22 in the Study Gallery and Print Study Center.
Several events are planned in conjunction with the exhibition, including an artist lecture, a panel discussion and a printmaking workshop.
Founded in 1992 by Native American painter and printmaker James Lavadour, the Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts seeks to create educational and professional opportunities for Native Americans to use their art as a vehicle for economic development. The facility, housed in the historic St. Andrew’s Mission schoolhouse, features a state-of-the-art printmaking studio, classroom, computer lab, library and gallery.
The exhibition, organized by faculty curator Rebecca Dobkins, features work created in the past six years by 15 contemporary artists from throughout the U.S., including Rick Bartow, Joe Feddersen, James Lavadour, Edgar Heap of Birds, Truman Lowe, Lillian Pitt, Kay WalkingStick and Marie Watt. A wide variety of printmaking techniques are represented, including lithography, etching, linocut, woodcut and monotype.
On Oct. 27 from 5 to 6 p.m., master printer Frank Janzen will present a slide lecture on the history of the Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts. Janzen is a graduate of the University of Victoria and is the Tamarind Master Printer for the Crow’s Shadow Press.
On Oct. 28 from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Dobkins will lead a panel discussion with Native American artists about the impact of Crow’s Shadow on contemporary Native American art in general and their own work in particular. Included in the discussion will be Rick Bartow, Phillip John Charette, Joe Feddersen, James Lavadour, Lillian Pitt and Marie Watt.
The lecture and symposium will be held in the Roger Hull Lecture Hall on the second floor of the museum. Admission is free.
On Nov. 11 and 12 from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Janzen will return to Salem to offer a two-day workshop on monotype techniques. Students will work off of Plexiglas plates and will employ an etching press, giving them options for a variety of sizes and techniques such as the additive method, subtractive method, stencil work and use of non-traditional materials. No prior experience is necessary.
The workshop will be held at a yet-to-be-determined location in Salem. Cost is $100 per student for the two-day class. Enrollment is limited to 10 students and registration is on a first-come, first-served basis. Materials will be provided. Students are encouraged to bring their own lunch. To register, call 503-370-6855.
The Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts Biennial is supported by an endowment gift from The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde through their Spirit Mountain Community Fund, and by the Indian Country Conversations Series at Willamette University. Additional support has been provided by grants from the City of Salem’s Transient Occupancy Tax funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. The galleries are closed Sunday and Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For information, call 503-370-6855.
[ email this story ]
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University will host a second free artist demonstration and a jewelry workshop for adults in conjunction with its Recycled Art exhibition, which continues through Nov. 4.
On Oct. 21 from noon to 4 p.m. in the museum lobby, mixed media artist Marita Dingus will demonstrate how she fashions dolls, baskets and wall hangings from found objects. Dingus holds a bachelor of fine arts degree from Temple University and master of arts and master of fine arts degrees from San Jose State University. Inspired by African and African-American folk art, she is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and a National Endowment for the Arts Travel Grant to study and travel in Africa.
Jewelry artist and educator Laurie Hall will lead a jewelry workshop for adults entitled “Found Objects + Narrative” from 1 to 4 p.m. Nov. 4 in Room 301 of the Art Building on campus. Participants can bring their own found objects, saved memory pieces or personal photographs, or select from a wide range of materials on hand to create a unique, meaningful piece to wear in the tradition of found object and narrative jewelry.
Hall holds a bachelor of arts degree from Willamette and a master of arts in teaching degree from the University of Washington, where she studied with legendary jewelry teacher Ramona Solberg. Hall taught at Mercer Island High School and The Bush School in Seattle for many years and is represented by several galleries in the United States.
Admission to the workshop is free, but advance registration is required. Space is limited to 25 students and will be filled on a first-come, first-serve basis. To register, call (503) 370-6855.
Recycled Art is supported in part by grants from the City of Salem Transient Occupancy Tax funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Sunday and Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children younger than 12 are admitted free, and Tuesday is an admission-free day. For more information, call (503) 370-6855.
[ email this story ]
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University has planned an artist demonstration and family activity workshop in conjunction with its Recycled Art exhibition, which is on display until Nov. 4.
On Sept. 23 from noon to 4 p.m., mixed media artist Ross Palmer Beecher will make traditional quilts and flags from aluminum cans and other found objects. Beecher attended the Rhode Island School of Design and has lived and worked in Seattle since the late 1970s. She has been featured in numerous one-person and group exhibitions and was the recipient of the Betty Bowen Award in 2002, which is given by the Seattle Art Museum to visual artists in the Northwest.
Recycling artist and “Dumpster Diving Diva” Diane Kurzyna will lead a family activity workshop entitled “Curious Creatures” from noon to 4 p.m. Oct. 7. Participants will create interesting and unusual beasts from telephone wire, fabric scraps, bottle caps, candy wrappers and other junk. Kurzyna is a graduate of Rutgers University and an artist-in-residence with the Washington State Arts Commission. Learn more about Kurzyna at www.rubyreusable.com.
Both the artist demonstration and family activity workshop will be held in the lobby of the museum. Admission to both is free.
Recycled Art has been supported in part by grants from the City of Salem Transient Occupancy Tax funds and the Oregon Arts Commission.
The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is located at 700 State St. (corner of State and Cottage streets) in downtown Salem near the campus of Willamette University. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed Sunday and Monday. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children y