RACC Blog

RACC Opportunity: 17th annual ALL THE ART THAT FITS exhibition (Portland & Multnomah employees only)

The Regional Arts & Culture Council invites all City of Portland and Multnomah County employees to submit their artwork for the 17th annual ALL THE ART THAT FITS exhibition in the Portland Building lobby Installation Space. The exhibition runs from November 20th, 2013–January 3rd, 2014. Only original artwork created by current employees is eligible.

Artwork is limited to a size of 36” x 36” x 4” or less and will be installed floor to ceiling in the exhibition space.Submissions must be dropped off Wednesday, November 20th, between 8:00 and 10:00 am at the Portland Building lobby located at 1120 SW 5th Ave. between SW Main and SW Madison. For further information see the Submission Guidelines.

 
 
 

Artists in residence at Portland Archives will discuss their project on October 24

PORTLAND, ORE. — The Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC) has commissioned local artists Kaia Sand and Garrick Imatani for an artists-in-residence project with the City of Portland Archives & Records Center (PARC). In celebration of National Archives Month, the artists will discuss their work in progress on October 24th at 6:30pm, followed by a short reception.

Admission is free but seating is limited, and RSVPs are encouraged; please RSVP Ahmed Yusuf ayusuf@racc.orgwith “Archives Talk” in the subject line.

WHO: Kaia Sand and Garrick Imatani
WHAT: A discussion with artists-in-residence at the Portland Archives
WHEN: Thursday, October 24th at 6:30 p.m.
WHERE: City of Portland Archives & Records Center (PARC), 1800 SW 6th Avenue, 5th floor

In exploring materials at PARC, the artists have titled their work The Watcher Files Project. For the past several months, they have been focusing on the surveillance files the Portland Police Bureau gathered on activist groups in the 1960s, ’70s, and early ’80s. Much of their work centers around unheard voices and visual gaps in the official record, asking the questions “How would people who were surveilled talk back?” and “How do we find form for this?” This residency is a Percent for Art project funded through the building of PARC, administered by RACC.

The artists have collaborated with Sasha Burchuk to launch a website with progress reports based on their art, poetry and research. Each report includes a document or photograph from the files. The artists are also creating a limited edition loose-leaf notebook publication that will be built and delivered to subscribers in four installments. The first issue will include a sculpted binder designed by Garrick, poetry by Kaia, and various material works in collaboration with Katherine Ball, Jules Boykoff, Inge Bruggeman, and Lloyd Marbet. The publication can be purchased online.

The artists are providing some of the materials free of charge in electronic (PDF) format. Subscribe to the artists’ website to receive materials and occasional updates via email.


Ariana Jacob’s “As you make your bed, so must you lie in it?” at the Portland Building Installation Space

PORTLAND, ORE – Beginning October 21st in the lobby of the Portland Building artist Ariana Jacob will present a new participatory installation to instigate conversations about what it means to be part of the United States. By presenting the U.S. Constitution as the bed we made for ourselves as a country, the artist will invite people to consider what lying on that foundation means in both poetic and practical terms—for themselves as individuals, and for the collective entity that is our country. Jacob will keep regular hours, inviting people to join her in bed to talk casually about who they are in relation to America’s foundational document and the realities and dreams those words evoke. As the installation progresses, the text of the Constitution will be collaboratively commented upon and edited on the walls of the exhibition through discussions between the artist and participants. Jacob, a veteran of conversation-based art, welcomes people to join her in contemplating American identity, addressing this document that legally and symbolically binds us together as a people.

“Our Constitution was created by individuals out of their ideals for how to best organize people to live together in a society, but it was created in a time that was very different than our present. This project explores both the possibility of renewing and making responsive this foundational document and the experience of having to live with it no matter what, whether we consciously consider it or not.”

Participate in the Installation: Meet the artist on-site Mondays from 11:30am-2:30pm, Thursdays from 2-5pm, or by appointment (contact publicwondering@gmail.com).   

About the Artist: After working as an assistant for noted artist and innovator Mierle Laderman Ukeles in New York, Portland artist Ariana Jacob received her MFA in Social Practice Art from Portland State University in 2010. She has exhibited and completed a number of projects on both coasts including her recently completed residencies for Artspace in New Haven, CT and Intersections/BCCTV here in Portland. She is a Regional Arts & Culture Council Project Grant recipient and has been both a planning committee member and panelist for the Open Engagement Conference at PSU.

Viewing Hours & Location:  The Portland Building is located at 1120 SW 5th Avenue in downtown Portland and is open 8 am to 5 pm, Monday – Friday.  For more information on the Portland Building Installation Space series, including images, proposals and statements for all the installations since 1994, go to www.racc.org/installationspace.
 


RACC adds 17 new works to The Visual Chronicle of Portland

PORTLAND, ORE – The Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC) is pleased to announce the addition of 17 new works to The Visual Chronicle of Portland collection. The new additions, all works-on-paper, represent 14 different Oregon artists and cover a wide variety of media—collage, watercolor, powdered pigment and wax, ink, graphite, charcoal, silkscreen and color photography.

Background: The Chronicle functions as a visual archive of prints, photographs, paintings and drawings that present artists’ views of Portland’s social and urban landscapes. The intent of the collection is to capture and preserve the zeitgeist, or spirit of the times, as our city evolves and changes. The City of Portland funds new additions to the Chronicle once a year in the amount of $10,000, which must cover both the purchase of new artwork and archival matting and framing. By tradition the Chronicle is restricted to works-on-paper of limited size to keep the cost of individual pieces modest and allow new purchases to represent multiple artists.

Since its beginning in 1985, this collection has grown to 320 pieces by 193 different artists and has established itself as an important archive of life in greater Portland. RACC oversees the day-to-day management of the Chronicle for the City and insures that the collection remains available to the public by hanging the works in publically accessible spaces in City and County buildings on a rotating basis. The collection strives to reflect a diversity of populations, artistic disciplines and points of view.

The new additions listed below were selected by a panel of an independent artists and curators who reviewed submissions by over 100 artists. As in the past, the final selections were made based on how well the work matched the purpose and spirit of the Chronicle. This year however, in an effort to better represent the uniquely textured quality of greater Portland, the selection panel encouraged submissions that focused on communities and landscapes that exist beyond downtown and outside of the mainstream.

On Display at RACC in November: Once these new works are matted and framed they will be displayed as a group in the RACC office before they are dispersed to City and County buildings. The RACC office is located at 411 NW Park Avenue, suite 101—visitors are welcome. Details of the entire collection can also be browsed online by going to www.racc.org/visualchronicle.  

Checklist – 2013 purchase for the Visual Chronicle of Portland:

Andrew Auble, Relationships, 2013, Collage, 18” x 28”
Andrew Auble, Kenton Club Choir, 2011, Collage, 14” x 21”

Shelley Chamberlin, Long Distance Communication, 2010, Acrylic and hand-stitching on paper, 21” x 29”

David Chelsea, Nine Minty Green Houses, 2013, Watercolor, 9.7” x 14.2”

Molly Cliff Hilts, Chinese Village, SE 82nd North, 2013, Powdered pigment, graphite, wax, lithographic ink,  28” x 21”

Sarah Ferguson,Tideman Johnson Overlook, 2010, Watercolor on paper, 11” x 14”

Joel Wellington Fisher, Oregon Lottery (Daniel Baldwin Crossing His Fingers) 2012, Archival inkjet print, Edition 1/5, 24” x 24”

Bruce Forster, Rodbusters at Portland Milwaukie Light Rail Bridge 2012, Photograph, 14” x 21”

Brian Foulkes, 2 Rides in Portland (Pink Bike), 2010, Ink jet print, 11” x 30”

George Kelly, TV Antenna, 2011, Color C-print, Edition of 5, Image 13” x 13”, sheet 16” x 20”
George Kelly, Wheel Barrow and Walker, 2011, Color C-print, Edition of 5, Image 13” x 13”, sheet 16” x 20”

Matthew Miller, Child Watching Community Bike Hub Construction: Design Build 2012 (2012), Color photograph, 14” x 21”

Roger Peet, Elementary, 2012, 4 Color silkscreen print, hand-cut from Rubylith, 20” x 16,” Edition 31/50

Veasna Sa, Visited My Friend, 2013, Magazines, newspapers, paper, glue on a paper, 22”x 28″

David Shratter, Duke’s Landing, SE Belmont, 2011, Pen and ink on rice paper, 5” x 7”

Samantha Wall, Gia, 2013, (From the portraits of multiracial women in U.S. cities series—Portland), Graphite and charcoal on paper, 22” x 30”
Samantha Wall, Nadia, 2013, (From the portraits of multiracial women in U.S. cities series—Portland), Graphite and ink on paper, 22” x 30”
 
 


RACC workshop will help artists understand Portland’s mural application process

PORTLAND, ORE – On October 12, the Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC) and the City of Portland will help artists and community members learn how to organize and navigate two different paths for creating murals in the City of Portland. The free workshop will be led by Peggy Kendellen, manager of RACC’s Public Art Murals Program, Jean Hester from the City’s Bureau of Development Services, and local artists Addie Boswell, Gage Hamilton, and Antwoine Thomas. 

There are two options for painting a mural on a wall in Portland: the City has an Original Art Mural Permit Program, which costs only $50, and RACC’s Public Art Murals Program, which is free, and approved projects may receive up to $10,000 in matching funds. The RACC process requires building owners to provide easements that allow the mural to be added to the city’s public art collection. The workshop is designed to help artists, property owners, business owners and community members understand the two options available for creating murals.

Participants will hear from artists Antwoine Thomas and Addie Boswell who (along with almost 100 community volunteers) created the community mural on SE 162nd & Stark. Also presenting will be Gage Hamilton, who, along with Hellion Gallery, organized the recent Forest For the Trees project using the City’s process to obtain permits for ten murals by 16 local and international artists.

The workshop is free but space is limited and RSVPs are required. To sign up, contact us at info@racc.org or call 503-823-5865.

Public Murals Application Workshop
Date: Saturday, October 12, 2013
Time: 10:00 AM – 12:00 Noon
Place: Miracle Theater, 425 SE 6th Avenue in Portland


New public art for the Portland Streetcar will be dedicated on September 30th

PORTLAND, ORE. — Portland’s newest public artwork, Jorge Pardo’s “Streetcar Stop for Portland,” will be dedicated on Monday, September 30 at 11:00 a.m. The sculpture is located on North Broadway at the triangle of Wheeler Avenue and Weidler Street. The artist will be present and available for interviews, and Portland City Commissioner Steve Novick will officiate.

RACC will also host a conversation with the artist later in the evening on September 30th at 6:00 p.m. at the Left Bank Annex, 101 N. Weidler. Both events are free and open to the public.

Fabricated of steel, wood and fiberglass, the new shelter measures 35’ long by 18’ wide by 16’ tall. The multi-faceted structure includes over 300 individual panels in vibrant shades of orange, yellow, red and grey.

Jorge Pardo was born in Havana, Cuba, and emigrated to the United States in 1969. He studied at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena from 1984-1988 and has exhibited globally since his first solo show in Los Angeles in 1988. In 2010 he was awarded a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship (see http://www.macfound.org/fellows/38/). Pardo lives and works between Merida, Mexico, Los Angeles and Long Island; currently his studio is in the Yucatan. This is his first municipal project in the United States.

Streetcar Stop for Portland was funded by a 2%-for-art set-aside for the Portland Streetcar east side expansion project. The shelter is a complement to another large scale project commissioned for the Portland Streetcar expansion, Lead Pencil Studio’s Inversion: Plus Minus which is a series of three sculptures located at SE Grand Avenue at Hawthorne and at Belmont. RACC manages all aspects of public art projects for the City of Portland and Multnomah County, including artist selection, design approval, fabrication, installation and maintenance.
 
 


Paula Rebsom and Grant Hottle present “Forecast” at the Portland Building Installation Space, 9/16-10/11

Project Background: Forecast, which marks the first in a series of collaborations between installation artist Paula Rebsom and painter Grant Hottle, opens in the lobby of the Portland Building September 16th and runs through October 11th. These two artists work in very different ways but share a common interest in shifting perspectives, imagined realities and broken landscapes. Their joint project draws on the strengths of both by combining painted 2-D work with sculptural elements to build a thought provoking installation.

As the viewer approaches the piece they are confronted by a massive rectangular object (a painting?), nearly too large for the space. Inside the industrial blacks of the plastic-like surface, subtle blues and purples provide a visceral and atmospheric quality. The odd protrusions in the canvas become difficult to ignore. A view from the stairs offers a peek behind the painting, imposing a whole new set of questions rather than answers. Forecast is meant to be seen from two viewpoints—the lobby, where one sees the front of the industrial black painting, and the stairs, where the white light and poles causing the disruption in the canvas become visible. The physical tension in Forecast mirrors the conceptual tension between opposing forces—light and dark, hidden and revealed, intentional and accidental.

“We are two artists that improvehearingnaturally.com work in very different ways but share a common interest in shifting perspectives, imagined realities, and broken landscapes. We became interested in collaboration as a way to think about our work outside the context we have built for it over the years…It is in this space that we find the greatest potential for our ongoing collaborative endeavor. We are fashioning a new visual language based off of a simple foundation, adding complexity as we learn how the work speaks to others.”

About the Artists: Portland artists Grant Hottle and Paula Rebsom both received MFAs from the University of Oregon in Eugene, in 2007 and 2006 respectively. Individually they have shown widely on the West Coast and elsewhere in the U.S. Grant Hottle currently teaches at Clark College in Vancouver, WA, and at Lewis and Clark College in Portland. Paula Rebsom just completed a month long residency the Djerassi Resident Artist Program in Woodside, California and currently teaches at Marylhurst University south of Portland. 

Viewing Hours & Location: 8 am to 5 pm, Monday – Friday. The Portland Building is located at 1120 SW 5th Avenue in downtown Portland. For more information on the Portland Building Installation Space series, including images, proposals and statements for all the installations since 1994, go to www.racc.org/installationspace.
 
 


Regional Arts & Culture Council awards $1.7 million to 48 local arts organizations

PORTLAND, ORE. – The Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC) has awarded a total of $1,745,354 in grants to 48 local arts organizations. Awarded annually, these grants provide general operating support to 501(c)(3) arts organizations that deliver year-round programs and have at least $80,000 in annual revenues.

“RACC is honored to invest public and private dollars in these outstanding organizations,” said executive director Eloise Damrosch. “They make significant and varied contributions to the cultural and economic vitality of the region, including Clackamas, Multnomah and Washington Counties.”

Grant recipients are selected in a rigorous application review process that includes a panel of community volunteers and RACC staff. Applicants are evaluated on artistic excellence and fiscal responsibility, and must demonstrate broad community support including a stable base of audiences and donors. The $1.7 million total is a slight increase over last year because of an increase in contributions through RACC’s workplace giving program, Work for Art.

Organizations receiving RACC general operating support in 2013-14 are:
Artist Repertory Theatre, $57,576
Bag & Baggage Productions, $11,600
Blue Sky Gallery, $13,890
Bodyvox, $25,546
Broadway Rose Theatre Company, $36,740
Cappella Romana, Inc., $13,350
Chamber Music Northwest, $53,450
Children’s Healing Art Project, $12,760
Do Jump! Extremely Physical Theatre, $30,396
Ethos Music Center, $17,700
Friends of Chamber Music, $21,796
Hollywood Theatre/Film Action Oregon, $17,970
Imago Theatre, $30,406
Independent Publishing Resource Center, $12,136
Lakewood Center for the Arts, $37,320
Literary Arts, Inc., $45,726
Live Wire!, $12,710
Metropolitan Youth Symphony, $30,986
Miracle Theatre Group, $30,646
Northwest Children’s Theatre, $28,390
Northwest Dance Project, $16,000
NW Documentary Arts & Media, $12,136
Oregon Ballet Theatre, $85,900
Oregon Children’s Theatre, $60,936
Oregon Repertory Singers, $26,630
Oregon Symphony Association, $144,516
PHAME Academy, $12,136
Playwrite, Inc., $17,386
Portland Art Museum, $194,396
Portland Baroque Orchestra, $25,500
Portland Center Stage, $91,216
Portland Chamber Orchestra, $15,710
Portland Columbia Symphony Orchestra, $14,090
Portland Gay Men’s Chorus, $16,790
Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, $29,656
Portland Opera, $140,716
Portland Piano International, $15,630
Portland Taiko, $37,420
Portland Youth Philharmonic, $31,706
Profile Theatre Project, $23,360
Tears of Joy Theatre, $31,966
The Portland Ballet, $19,166
Third Angle New Music Ensemble, $11,500
Third Rail Repertory Theatre, $13,400
White Bird, $52,116
Wordstock, Inc., $15,436
Write Around Portland, $20,796
Young Audiences of Oregon & SW Washington, $28,050

RACC receives funding from a variety of public and private partners to serve artists, arts organizations, schools and residents throughout tri-county region. The City of Portland provides the majority of support at nearly $1.1 million, with additional funding from Work for Art donations as well as Multnomah, Clackamas and Washington Counties.

These 48 organizations have combined purchasing and payroll power of $86.7 million and an extended economic impact of $151 million annually, including all of the audience-related spending that occurs before and after an arts event. Their total combined attendance last year was 2.9 million, including 679,000 K-12 students.

Organizations interested in participating in the 2015 grant application process can visit www.racc.org/grants for information including guidelines, application deadlines, and additional contact information.

A note on the City of Portland’s Arts Education & Access Fund
The City has not yet distributed to RACC any proceeds from the new Arts Education & Access Fund, so these grant awards do not include any “arts tax” money. RACC funding from all sources currently represents 2% of the grantees’ annual revenues, including an average of 1.3% funding from the City of Portland general fund. RACC expects to receive its first proceeds from the Arts Education & Access Fund next spring, and at that time can begin working toward the goal of providing qualified arts organizations with 5% public support. Funded organizations will still rely on ticket sales, contributions, and other income to make up the other 95% of their budgets.

About RACC
RACC provides grants for artists, nonprofit organizations and schools; manages an internationally acclaimed public art program; raises money and awareness for the arts through workplace giving; convenes forums, networking events and other community gatherings; provides workshops and other forms of technical assistance for artists; and oversees a program to integrate arts and culture into the standard curriculum in public schools throughout the region through “The Right Brain Initiative.” For more information visit us online at www.racc.org.