RACC Blog

Installation of Jorge Pardo’s Streetcar Art Shelter now underway

RACC and artist Jorge Pardo have begun installing a new Streetcar Art Shelter at NE Broadway and Weidler. This eccentrically shaped sculpture will provide a shelter with “rainy on the outside, sunny on the inside” experience for waiting streetcar passengers.

Fabricated of steel, wood and fiberglass, the new shelter measures 35’ long by 18’ wide by 16’ tall. The multi-faceted structure will include over 300 individual panels in shades of gray and brown on the exterior, with warm hues of orange and yellow on the inside, sheltering passengers north of the Rose Quarter in a highly visible and fantastically colorful way.

Los Angeles based Pardo was the recipient of a 2010 MacArthur Foundation Fellowship who exhibits his work globally. This is his first municipal project in the United States. It is funded by the percent-for-art set-aside for the Portland Streetcar expansion project, and will take about a month to fully install.

The shelter is a complement to the other large scale project commissioned for the Portland Streetcar expansion, Lead Pencil Studio’s Inversion: Plus Minus which will be located at Grand & Hawthorne and Grand & Belmont. The installation of Inversion: Plus Minus is now over half complete, with completion expected this summer.
 
 


The Right Brain Initiative receives renewed support from the National Endowment for the Arts

The Right Brain Initiative, a Portland area arts education partnership, has been awarded a $25,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). This program of the Regional Arts &Culture Council was selected from a pool of 1,547 eligible applications. The renewed support follows Right Brain’s first NEA award in 2011.

The Right Brain Initiative coaches K-8 schools to integrate the arts into every aspect of the student experience. The Initiative receives this NEA funding to support classroom programming that combines the arts with other subjects, and hands-on professional development for school staff and community-based teaching artists. In the 2013-14 school year, Right Brain will provide 24 full-day trainings for over 350 educators and classroom experiences for more than 15,000 children.

Art Works grants support the creation of art that meets the highest standards of excellence, public engagement with diverse and excellent art, lifelong learning in the arts, and the strengthening of communities through the arts. The 817 recommended NEA grants total $26.3 million and span 13 artistic disciplines and fields. Applications were reviewed by panels of outside experts convened by NEA staff and each project was judged on its artistic excellence and artistic merit. For a complete listing of projects recommended for Art Works grant support, please visit the NEA website at arts.gov.

This federal support leverages current local public and private funding. In the 2013 fiscal year, nearly half of The Right Brain Initiative’s funding (48%) comes from private sources, including corporations, private foundations and individuals. The remainder of the $847,000 budget comes from public sources, with support from the City of Portland, Clackamas County, Multnomah County, the Oregon Arts Commission and six partner school districts.

The Right Brain Initiative is a sustainable partnership of public schools, local government, foundations, businesses and the cultural community, which launched its programming in Portland area classrooms in January 2009. The program’s vision is to transform learning for all children through the arts, creativity, innovation and whole-brain thinking. The Right Brain Initiative is a project of the Regional Arts & Culture Council, with Young Audiences of Oregon & SW Washington serving as Implementation Partner. Read more atTheRightBrainInitiative.org.

The Regional Arts & Culture Council is the local arts agency for Clackamas, Multnomah and Washington Counties, providing grants for artists, schools and nonprofit organizations; conducting workplace giving for arts and culture (“Work for Art”) and other advocacy efforts; presenting workshops and other forms of technical assistance; providing printed and web-based resources for artists; and integrating art into public spaces. Online atracc.org.

The National Endowment for the Arts was established in Congress in 1965 an independent agency of the federal government. To date, the NEA has awarded more than $4 billion to support artistic excellence, creativity, and innovation for the benefit of individuals and communities. The NEA extends its work through partnerships with state arts agencies, local leaders, other federal agencies, and the philanthropic sector. To join the discussion on how art works, visit the NEA at arts.gov.


Jacob Sorenson’s “A Landscape” installation at the Portland Building runs from April 29 – May 24th

Project Background: “Is Bigfoot real? I hope so, but I’m pessimistic.” This quote from Jacob Sorenson might serve as a tagline for his installation which opens April 29th at the Portland Building Installation Space. Sorenson, known for his elaborately designed and elegantly constructed kinetic sculptures, will present a nature-circus landscape in the space that embodies the human tendency to ideologically and physically manipulate the environment. To the right a silhouette-like sculpture of a majestic tree-line, but augmented with Las Vegas style chase lights to better define the trees. To the left a device designed to reproduce the beautiful sunset we all hope for at the end of a day…only with a few extra colors and a repeat cycle. And finally, in the back, obscured by the tree-line, look for the occasional appearance of a certain large creature rumored to frequent in the area.

“The void between nature and culture is hazy…what is nature? And more perplexing, what is wilderness? Ideas conjured by our society in the 19th century, or concepts that came about as we found comfort, central heating and cars? Life is created in laboratories, engineers control landscapes, and “wild” space is parceled into quadrants. Cueing into our nature cliché I’ve found that certain tendencies persist, foremost a culture that is trying desperately to make nature look awesome, and I’d like to do the same. How much better would the tree-line be if it glowed? What if we could add new colors to an amazing sunset/sunrise? And what if Bigfoot made regular appearances? It would be…terrible, but let’s investigate.”

The artist fully expects the installation to ask more questions than it answers as it explores both the objection to artificial nature and the reality of our constant wilderness intervention. Sorenson’s bizarre landscape draws on an impulse buried somewhere in the depths of humanity and begins a complex, thoughtful conversation about an outdated ideology.

About the Artist: Jacob Sorenson lives in Tigard, Oregon. He received his BFA from Oregon College of Art and Craft, and his MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University. In addition to numerous exhibitions in Oregon and Virginia, he teaches classes on woodworking and electro-mechanical devices at OCAC.

Viewing Hours & Location: 7 am to 6 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.
 


Nichols Norman’s “Waiting Room” kicks off a new season of installations at the Portland Building

The Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC) is pleased to announce a line-up of nine new installations by local artists at the Portland Building Installation Space. Over the next twelve months artists representing a wide range of approaches to art making will be featured in 4 week installments. Since 1994 RACC has managed the Installation Space in the Portland Building (located downtown at 1120 SW 5th Avenue) and has presented some of Portland’s best interactive and experimental media installations. At 13’wide by 8′ deep, this modestly sized venue is devoted exclusively to installation art. The space has developed a devout following over the years and competition for a spot on the roster is always spirited.

This year, 71 artists submitted proposals in the Professional Artist category, and 26 artists applied in the Student category. An independent selection panel reviewed all of the proposals, and ultimately selected nine site-specific works that are challenging, topical and diverse.

Portland Building Installation Space—2013/2014 Season Calendar and Project Descriptions:

Nicholas Norman, March 25 – April 19, 2013
Jacob Sorenson, April 29 – May 24, 2013
Patricia Vazquez Gomez & Betty Marin, June 3 – June 28, 2013
Anthony Hudson, July 8 – Aug 2, 2013
Michael Sell, August 12 – September 6, 2013
Paula Rebsom & Grant Hottle, September 16 – October 11, 2013
Ariana Jacob, October 21 – November 15, 2013
Paul Clay and Zachary Krausnick, January 13– February 7, 2014
Joseph Kucinski, February 17 – March 14, 2014

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Nicholas Norman (Student – PSU) March 25 – April 19, 2013
Waiting Room – Nicholas Norman’s work, which explores the meanings of places and how we understand them, kicks off the new season of installations at the Portland Building. Nicholas has a particular interest in waiting rooms: “Most of us are familiar with the experience of a waiting room, the uncomfortable seats, the horrible magazines, we know what it is…but what is the difference between a waiting room in an everyday doctor’s office versus a gallery?” Norman will create an artificial waiting room in the Installation Space to explore the difference between a fabrication and a room that is intentionally functional—is a fabricated space really any different if it can serve an identical purpose? Can a waiting room be anything other than a waiting room, or is its true meaning trapped within intention? Norman’s faux waiting room promises uncomfortable seating, dull magazines, a ticking clock, a potted plant, bad (but free) coffee, mediocre landscape paintings and the ubiquitous lost toy underneath the chair. Viewers are encouraged to bring their own interpretation to the installation, in this case however, they will be completely in control of the amount of time they decide to wait.

Jacob Sorenson April 29 – May 24, 2013
A Landscape – “Is Bigfoot real? I hope so. But I’m pessimistic.” This quote from Jacob Sorenson’s proposal might serve as a tagline for his installation. He’ll construct a nature-circus landscape in the space that embodies the human tendency to both ideologically and physically manipulate the environment. To the right picture a silhouette-like sculpture of a majestic tree-line, but with Las Vegas style chase-lights there to help better define the trees. To the left notice a sculpture that sets out to improve upon the beautiful sunset image we all hope for at the end of a day…only maybe with a few extra colors and a repeat cycle so we can enjoy it longer. And finally in the back, slightly obscured by the tree-line, look for that elusive silhouette of Bigfoot rumored to make periodic appearances.

Patricia Vazquez Gomez & Betty Marin (Students – PSU) June 3 – June 28, 2013
Welcome – Welcome is intended to inform and expand the connection between a building that represents the City of Portland and the experiences of some of this city’s newer residents. Grounded in this artist team’s social-practice work serving the immigrant community, and in their own cultural roots, the project will explore the ways in which Spanish speaking immigrants feel both welcome and not welcome in Portland. The physical installation will consist of projected images of those interviewed by the team, and text from participants’ responses presented as a “wallpaper” backdrop. In honor of the exchange of hospitality, a small artesanal souvenir will be offered to visitors to take home.

Anthony Hudson (Student – PNCA) July 8 – Aug 2, 2013
Queering Portlandia – Despite her notoriety and our love for her, Portlandia is irrefutably rooted, by sculptural tradition and in concept, to Euro-centrism. The 35 foot high hammered copper statue that graces the façade of the Portland Building depicts the image of a classical female figure with European features. In that sense she represents only a portion our city’s diverse population. Artist and performer Anthony Hudson, who identifies as a “queer Portlander, a native Oregonian, and a Grand Ronde Indian,” will offer up a series of alternate Portlandias that embody the diversity that exists in Portland today. “Queering is essentially to make something queer, different, to make it anti-oppressive; queering here is to make Portlandia accessible again, giving an underprivileged audience a chance to recreate Portlandia in their own image.” The Installation Space will be transformed into a richly decorated photo booth/performance set complete with a selection of costumes and props and participants will be invited to perform on camera as their own version of Portlandia. In the artist’s words “Queering Portlandia will allow for a multitude of new Portlandias: Portlandia as a person of color, Portlandia as queer, Portlandia as a person with disabilities, Portlandia as a true, living Portlander. Queering Portlandia will demonstrate our community’s commitment to providing visibility, safety and opportunity to all its citizens.”

Michael Sell August 12 – September 6, 2013
Untitled (Photoswatch installation) – Photographer Michael Sell’s installation explores the point at which fine art intersects with décor, and investigates how the one supports and/or subverts the other. Sell will turn the Installation Space into a floor-to-ceiling grid of color, with the individual colors to be sourced from actual artwork hung inside the Portland Building. The project will function as a site-specific extension of his Photoswatch series that sampled and presented a single rectangular swatch of color from famous photographs—thus collapsing all visual elements and meaning within the photograph into one single color statement. The painted panels on the grid in the Installation Space will reference individual works of art that are hung throughout the building and each grid will be labeled with the title and location of the source work (for example: Purple Fields, 9th Floor). On the floor of the space Sell will place rows of small “sample sized” cans of paint—all mixed to match the grid colors. These will be offered to visitors to take home as souvenirs so they can ponder how much meaning travels home with them.

Paula Rebsom & Grant Hottle September 16 – October 11, 2013
Forecast – This site-specific project marks the first in a series of collaborations between Rebsom and Hottle. It combines painted and sculptural elements to suggest an impossible but thought provoking NW scene. Upon entering the building lobby the viewer will encounter a painted landscape on a stretched canvas that completely covers the front of the installation space. The scene, a typical Pacific Northwest landscape will physically screen off the entry to the space and will appear as a purpose-built covering…with the exception of an odd protrusion in the center of the painting that stretches the canvas (without puncturing it) and pokes out slightly into the lobby, creating an immediate desire to see what lies behind. As the viewer proceeds to the stairs (which offer a view behind the painting) they discover the cause of the protrusion that intrudes on the landscape and ultimately exposes its façade-like quality. The installation cleverly goads us into reconsidering our reflex definitions of “wild” or “natural” and suggests we consider those terms through a more complex lens.

Ariana Jacob October 21 – November 15, 2013
Working Title: As You Make Your Bed, So You Must Lie in It? – Social Practice artist Ariana Jacob has proposed an “artist-in-residence” installation designed to create an intimate, yet public setting where people will discuss thoughts and feelings about being both a single individual citizen as well as an element of the collective entity that is the United States. The space will be set up as a bedroom (an intimate space everyone is familiar with) with the U.S. Constitution printed on the bed spread. The Articles and Amendments to the Constitution will be screen printed on the pillowcases, the walls of the space will be transformed into chalk-boards on which different sections of the Constitution will be written. As the installation progresses the chalkboard text will be collaboratively edited as agreed upon by artist and participants. Jacob, a veteran of several successful conversation-based projects, will keep regularly scheduled hours and will focus the sessions on gaining a better sense of “American identity” by addressing the document that legally and symbolically binds us together as a people.

Paul Clay and Zachary Krausnick January 13– February 7, 2014
Leda and the Swan – This team of I.T. savvy artists will present a fully interactive video interpretation of the classic “Leda and the Swan” story. In the darkened space a real-time digital projection will produce an image on the back wall of the installation space that is responsive to, and directed by, visitors’ body movements. As participants walk up to the opening of the space a projection of a swan will appear on the wall before them—the movements of the swan will mirror the movements of the participant as the viewer widens his/her arms, feathered wings will spread on the projected image, the swan’s feet will step and its neck will crane to match how the viewer orients his/her body. Ultimately the viewer will discover that faster, more violent movements will cause the feathers to fall off to reveal the figure of a woman (Leda). If the participant then returns to slower movements Leda will once again grow new feathers and transform back into the swan. The cycle continues on as long as there are participants willing to move.

Joseph Kucinski February 17 – March 14, 2014
The Tenacity of Change – Kucinski’s project is aimed at capturing a moment of wonderment and curious expectation. The installation will be composed of a custom garage door fit precisely into the space. With the viewer positioned “inside” the garage looking towards the outside, the door itself will be set so that the bottom edge hovers approximately two feet above the floor. A flood of mysterious colored light from under the door illuminates the darkened “garage” space. The piece is designed to create a sense of expectation and wonder as the viewer ponders what might lie ahead in the future if we are bold enough to (figuratively) open the door of the garage and move into the larger world, to look beyond the trepidation the future carries with it and think of it as an opportunity with infinite possibilities
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Viewing Hours & Location: 7 am to 6 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.


Todays the day! “Feed the Arts” at all Burgerville locations

On Thursday, March 21, Burgerville and Work for Art will host their third annual “Feed the Arts” community partnership day. Burgerville will donate a portion of all sales that day—up to $15,000—to Work for Art, a workplace campaign fund that supports arts and culture programs and services throughout the Northwest region. 

Burgerville puts a strong emphasis on fostering healthy, thriving communities, and one of their favorite ways of doing so is by supporting the arts in a variety of ways, including Feed the Arts day.

Jeff Harvey, president and CEO of Burgerville, describes it like this: “Like food, the arts are where we come together most powerfully to blend cultures, express ideas, balance opposing thoughts, and create healthy, lively communities,” he said. “The arts are not just how we survive—they’re how we thrive.”

Burgerville encourages its employees to participate in the arts throughout the year. Harvey finds their exposure to and involvement with the arts results in more productivity and innovation. Burgerville also gives its employees a chance to give back through the company’s annual Work for Art employee giving campaign. Last year, Burgerville employees directly contributed more than $25,000, in addition to the Feed the Arts proceeds.

For a list of Burgerville locations, all 39 of which are participating in Feed the Arts, visithttp://www.burgerville.com/find-a-restaurant.

About Work for Art
Donations to Work for Art’s Community Fund and Arts Education Fund support more than 100 vital arts and culture organizations every year – encompassing dance, visual arts, music, literary arts, media arts, theater, cultural arts, and arts education. 100% of all donations to Work for Art are passed through to these organizations – no administrative fees are deducted – and gifts from employees and other individuals are matched dollar-for-dollar by a Matching Challenge Fund. Anyone can donate to Work for Art online at workforart.org, and those who give $60 or more will be thanked with an Arts Card, which provides 2-for-1 tickets at hundreds of arts and culture events for a full year.

About Burgerville
Established in 1961, Burgerville is an innovative and industry-leading restaurant company with 39 locations throughout Oregon and Southwest Washington. 1,500 employees strong, Burgerville provides guests fresh, great-tasting food all day every day from breakfast to late-night snacks based in its mission “serve with love.” At Burgerville, the commitment to fresh, local and sustainable values is about helping people and communities thrive. For more, please visit burgerville.com.


Artists Garrick Imatani and Kaia Sand selected for the inaugural City of Portland Archives & Record Center Artist in Residence program

This is the first in a series of residencies for the Portland Archives & Record Center (PARC). The artists will create work that engages and/or is a result of working with the collections and staff at PARC. City Archivist Diana Banning says “We hope that this artist residency will help to breakdown stereotypes of how people use the historical collections. Seeing how artists interpret materials will bring a new perspective.” Within the next couple months, Imatani and Sand will work with PARC staff to develop a specific outline of what they intend to accomplish during their residency within the $25,000. The outcome will include public presentation(s) of the project through temporary installation/s, screening/s, exhibition/s or performance/s at PARC or other public locations. As the project develops, there will be additional media advisories.

This residency is funded by the City of Portland Percent for Art requirement from the building of the PARC within the Portland State University Academic & Student Recreation Center (ASRC). The Archive Artist Residency panel, made up of artists, representative of PARC and community members, selected Imatani and Sand through an open call process. A portion of the Percent for Art funds for PARC was used during the building of the facility to commission artist Keiko Hara to create glass artworks for the Research Room.

About the Artists:
Garrick Imatani researches the performative role of public monuments, the documented vs. undocumented, social rituals and civic duty. His work takes many forms from graphite documents, cyanotypes and video to sculpture, installations and collaborative public events. He has received multiple awards, including grants from the Oregon Arts Commission, Maine Arts Commission and Ford Family Foundation. He teaches interdisciplinary courses at Lewis & Clark College where he is Assistant Professor of Art and Studio Head of Foundations.

Kaia Sand is the author of two poetry collections, Remember to Wave (Tinfish Books 2010) and interval (Edge Books 2004), a Small Press Traffic book of the year. Her poetry is investigative and documentary, frequently incorporating research. She also moves poetry outside the book and into other contexts such as art spaces, walks, and a magic show, and co-authored a book on that subject, Landscapes of Dissent: Guerrilla Poetry and Public Space (Palm Press 2008). She teaches humanities in the Portland State University Honors Program and ecopoetry at Pacific University. She is the past recipient of two RACC project grants.
 
 


Now available: RACC’s annual report for 2012

The Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC) has released its annual report for 2012. The year in review, available online at, www.racc.org/2012annualreport includes highlights of last year’s activities in service to artists and arts organizations in Clackamas, Multnomah and Washington Counties.

Among the organization’s accomplishments in 2012:

RACC expanded the public art collection through murals, portable works purchases, large-scale projects, and more
The Right Brain Initiative expanded its arts integration services to 44 schools
Work for Art, a workplace giving program for the arts, raised a record sum: $823,693
More artists and arts organizations received grants than ever before
Voters approved a new $35 income tax to support arts education and access in Portland
Electronic copies (HTML or PDF) can be accessed at www.racc.org/2012annualreport. Hardcopies are also available upon request; contact RACC at 503-823-5111 or mbauer@racc.org.
 
 


Nathan Sandberg brings his “Tally” installation to the Portland Building, 2/18 – 3/15

Project Background: Artist Nathan Sandberg has developed a fascination with the repetitive nature of modern life. This fascination began when he started thinking about ways to mark the time he spent performing life’s everyday rote mechanical tasks—putting on socks, brushing teeth, walking out the front door. To both curse and honor the extraordinary amount of time we humans spend on these mundane tasks Sandberg created an installation that pays homage to them.

“The number of times I find myself performing a task as mundane as reaching for my keys or traveling the same routes to and from work is perplexing. As I make these trips I observe others doing the exact same thing and I often wonder if they realize, as I now do, how much time they spend on these tasks. … Time can be recorded as notches on a stick, rings within a tree trunk and ticks on a circle. In Tally I attempt to document the occurrence of a repeated activity that has developed into a routine. The Portland Building is a place of nearly constant business that swells with people on a daily basis, and empties at night. This constant flow of people, goods and information makes the site a superior location for an installation examining and recording time.”

Sandberg’s installation presents the viewer with a wall of large task-marking talismans, or “counting units,” their shape and form inspired by the grade stakes used on construction sites to indicate the rise and fall of elevation. Each stake or counting unit is beautifully crafted by the artist in kiln-cast yellow glass or naturally colored concrete and hung on heat formed steel rings with wrought iron hooks. These unique and enigmatic markers offer a caution to those tempted to trivialize the mundane and allow passers-by to pause and consider the magnitude of their daily unconscious acts.

About the Artist: Nathan Sandberg lives in Portland, Oregon. As well as maintaining an active studio practice he is an Instructor and Technician at the Bullseye Glass Company in NW Portland and has worked as both a production and demonstration Glassblower. Sandberg received his BFA in Glass and Ceramics from Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Illinois.

Viewing Hours & Location: 7 am to 6 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.