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Thursday August 2, 2007

05:00 PM : Art Openings @ Portland West Side

Visual Arts / Architecture Flyered by Rob W.

First Thursday is becoming simpler. DeSoto Block, Everett Block, NW 5th x Couch art megaplex. Here are some notes:

In the DeSoto Block check all the spaces, though the exhibit in the Contemporary Crafts Museum, free anytime, deserves more than a quick scan.

At Blue Sky, there are some great pieces in a group show in the Nine Gallery conceptual space. There is also a reprieve of the Rephotographic Survey Project. The government trained photographers to document the Civil War. After, it sent them West. At the time, there was a strong transcendental movement and a belief that dramatic natural vistas, then unspoiled, were proof positive of the hand of a creator. The landscape photographs captured by these expeditionary photographers were also used by the government to market the West to settlers. These first photographers transported glass plates up to 24 inches square, coated them on site, exposed the glass negative, developed them in a tent darkroom, then carried them back, all by pack animal. The first Rephotographic Survey Project was conceived in 1977 by East Coast photography students in Rochester, NY, Mark Klett, trained as a geologist, Ellen Manchester, JoAnn Verburg and others. They journeyed West to photograph the classic landscape images of the mid-late 1800's from exactly the same vantage point. The resulting photographs were displayed side by side with the originals. The results of mining, erosion, logging and diminishing water are plainly visible. Klett returns with a third view show of recent photos at Blue Sky now. Something to think about.

Blue Sky Gallery in the DeSoto building, NW Broadway and Davis

The Everett Station Lofts are always recommended for your viewing pleasure. Bounded by NW Broadway, Everett, 6th and Flanders.

You may have noticed there is some construction along 5th and 6th downtown. Hopefully you have not fallen down the rabbit hole because it is max treach. To celebrate the almost finishedness of the Old Town section, the City is throwing a free block party at 5th and Couch.

See the photo show at upper playground by Ricky Powell, "illy funksters", documenting the 80's hip hop scene in NY where it began. Powell also presents a slide show 4PM Saturday at the Gallery Upper Playground 23 NW 5th

At Compound, it's Bliss E*press: Illustrating Happiness. Artists Ogushi, Aya Kondo, Marcos Chin, Rain and Fuco Ueda show. Just Be Megaplex 107 NW 5th

Stop into the Portland Art Center which never disappoints. 32 NW 5th

On the Portland Transit Mall the Music Population Orchestra:PDX will play new chamber music. This is part of a series of performances held simultaneously in Oslo.

Just look for a small chamber orchestra with music stands and classical instruments. The plan, subject to improvisation is to begin at 7:00 at NW 4th and Flanders and continue South towards Burnside for a performance near the Chinatown Gateway Arch.

At 7:30, from the arch the orchestra will head West on Burnside and NW Couch until they reach the Park Blocks West of Broadway.

At 8:00 they will continue West a bit for as long as their weary legs will hold them, offering more of our "urban guerrilla chamber music" along the way.



Pushdot are some of the few local masters of putting digital photography to print. To do so is actually harder than with wet processing film and paper. That is pretty complicated in itself! The once mighty Kodak spent over 120 years getting film just right. There is a pile of color science including studies of what colors are found in nature, the inexact color temperature concept, CIE and Munsen mapping, multi primaries, the complexity of RGB-CMYK mapping and handling our uber-sensitivity to skin tone.

Pushdot helps photographers through the process. For select art photographers they mount exhibitions. Past work is available for sale on their website, a virtual gallery. This month they mount a 5 year retrospective group show. Soon they will move to the East side, reopening in a few months.
Pushdot Studio 830 NW 14th

The Art Institute of Portland is adapting to a cozy niche training industrial clothing designers and animators, as it should, because there are Portland jobs for them. There are also plenty of one person fashion units here turning out clothing you should wear. A world, national and local vector in clothing is sustainability. One look at the mountains of fabric never used, clothing never sold, rarely worn then sadly discarded and you get the idea. In the gallery, the AI shows clothing by local designers using sustainable materials including Emily Katz, Entermodal, Anna Cohen, Sameunderneath, Blairwear, Knot Ugly Designs, Faith Jennings and Flood Clothing.
AI Portland 1122 NW Davis until 8

The Portland City Hall has been doing early art openings every First Thursday. They run on narrow rails between populist and multicultural and that is fine. Tonight the theme is skate related. It's a perfect opportunity to collar your commissioner and tell them what you think. You can bring your board too, or better, go by board. Board of Art: A Historical Perspective of Stumptown Skate City Hall 1221 SW 4th 5-8PM

Self taught artist Joe Thurston shows new abstract work at Elizabeth Leach. Thurston previously produced glowering portraits that were strangely affecting. For this show he continues with wood as a canvas which has been meticulously incised with a hand chisel. See it at Elizabeth Leach Gallery 417 NW 9th

PDX presents a varied group show "True Bearing" with work by Sam Beebe, Christophe Berhault, Nick Blosser, Harrell Fletcher, Lucas Foglia, Justine Kurland, Raymond Meeks, Megan Murphy, Barbara Stafford, and Nell Warren. PDX Contemporary Art 925 NW Flanders until 8

Http://portlandorusnow.blogspot.com

05:00 PM : 5th Avenue Street Fair @ Old Town/Chinatown

Party (Launch/B-Day/Etc.) Flyered by kmikeym

http://portlandmall.org/events/streetfair.htm

Come join friends, family and neighbors on First Thursday for a fun-filled neighborhood street fair to celebrate the completion of light rail construction on 5th Avenue in Old Town/Chinatown. Just stop by NW 5th Avenue between Burnside and Glisan streets.

August 2 • 5-10 p.m.

07:00 PM : Can You Hear It @ The Portland Bus Mall

Music Flyered by kmikeym

CHAMBER MUSIC CHALLENGING ARCHITECTURE

The chamber orchestra music population orchestra (mpo:oslo) invites the public to the launch of the international project Can You Hear It with an outdoors concert series in four city rooms in Oslo from July 11th to August 2nd. The audience will be given the opportunity to experience the architecture in the four city rooms, colored by the chamber music.

Locations and times

OSLO
Wednesday, July 11th, 7pm – Ibsenkvartalet
Saturday, July 21st, 2pm – Vaterlandsparken
Sunday, July 29th, 4pm – Tullinløkka
Thursday, August 2nd, 7pm – Fridtjof Nansens Plass

PORTLAND

Thursday, August 2nd, 7pm - The Portland Bus Mall

The concerts are free and open to the public.


Interdisciplinary, international collaboration
By challenging the passive relationship many have to chamber music and architecture, Can You Hear It creates a dialog between music and architecture to involve and engage the audience, as well as academic and professional communities. The project is a collaborative effort between the music population project (mpp), Sister City – the underground bridge building project between Portland, Oregon and Oslo, and architectural communities in both Portland and Oslo. Partners also include the National Museum of Norway, Oslo Architect Association, the City of Oslo and the City of Portland. The concerts will be take place in parallel in Portland and Oslo with a total of eight concerts in eight city rooms.

Back to the people
mpp was founded in Portland, Oregon in 2005 to bring chamber music back to the people. By rethinking all aspects around the sharing of chamber music, mpp reaches out to the audience on their premises. At the same time, the audience is given an opportunity to discover what chamber music can sound like in 2007, when influenced by contemporary aesthetics, while still carrying on old chamber music traditions. The Music Population Orchestra takes part in mpp’s work and the mpo:oslo premiers on the July 11th concert, expanding to project’s reach to Norway and Europe.

To start out with, the project will be carry on with a documentary film based on the concert series, before the project enters different mediums, such as interdisciplinary dialog in and outside of professional communities, collaborative projects and more concerts.

09:00 PM : The Killing @ Hotel Deluxe Parking Lot

Movie/Film/TV Flyered by kmikeym

Join us five stories up atop the Hotel deLuxe's parking structure (729 SW 15th Ave) to enjoy the magic of a balmy summer night in Portland (yes, we have them) with 360 degree, moonlit views of the city at its most urban and urbane. The evenings begin at 8pm with live music and refreshments. Gracie's Restaurant will offer easy-to-juggle meals, snacks and cocktails, and additional beverages will be available from TAZO and Sierra Nevada Brewing. The screenings start at dusk-around 9pm-depending on the somewhat predictable, but ever-changing, whims of darkness. Bring your favorite portable chair or blanket, but please, no pets or outside food, or drink. Admission $7.

THE KILLING
US 1956
DIRECTOR: STANLEY KUBRICK
THU AUG 02 8:00 PM HOTEL DELUXE - 729 SW 15TH AVE
After spending five years in Alcatraz, Johnny Clay (Sterling Hayden) decides that if he's going to commit crimes, the risk had better be worth the punishment-so he masterminds a brilliant scheme to steal $2 million from a local racetrack. The beauty of the plan is that it's foolproof and "no one will get hurt..." Hitchcockian suspense and a fresh take on noir enrich this classic heist film from a young Kubrick, subject of a NWFC retrospective indoors) through August. (85 min)

Music: Bright Red Paper