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Jon Gottshall at Gallery 114
April 3, 2021 @ 12:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Jon Gottshall, Floodplain
April 1-May 1, 2021
1100 NW Glisan
Portland, Oregon 97209
503-243-3356
HOURS: Currently Saturdays 12-6, Friday & Sunday 12-3.
Appointments by request: jon@jongottshall.com
Masks and social distancing are required
In April Gallery 114 presents “Floodplain,” archival inkjet photography by Jon Gottshall that focuses on the current, perhaps urgent, state of the natural and built environments of the floodplains of the Columbia and Willamette Rivers. The exhibit opens virtually on First Thursday, April 1, and closes Saturday, May 1. This exhibit represents a questioning of how we choose to build on and use environmentally sensitive land; it represents a search to find space between human utility and ecosystem health that can allow for the function of both in a sustainable manner. “We need a new paradigm for the future,” says Gottshall. “The effects of the past 100 years of development are everywhere to be seen, and the urbanized waterways of this nation will never be ‘wild’ again.” In these affecting and enlightening photographs of the two converging floodplains, Gottshall sketches a history of development–the engineering of our major waterways and industrial lands–yet at the same time he notes that he sees signs of hope for the ecosystems, “where aquatic life, damaged though it is in the Columbia Slough and the Willamette, persists and somehow endures.”
Jon Gottshall is a teacher and photographer who for more than 20 years has been photographing landscapes along the Willamette River through Portland. He has photographed the Portland Harbor as what he calls a “contested landscape,” an ecosystem and industrial corridor. In another photographic series, he documented the transition from the old Sellwood Bridge to the new one, the demolition and construction going on side by side. The project symbolized for Gottshall the transition of Portland itself from a small to a modern city. His interest is in visually investigating how Portland’s development has affected the ecological health of the river, and how recent restoration efforts must compete with current industrial uses.
Gottshall has been awarded a RACC grant and has work in private and public collections. He has been with Gallery 114 since 2007.
The floodplains along the confluence of the Willamette and Columbia Rivers were, in their pre-development state, a braided maze of tidal and seasonal streams, wetlands and marshes. As an intermediate zone between the riverbanks and the drier uplands, the floodplains supported one of the regions most diverse and complex ecosystems, home to a wide variety of aquatic and upland species.
The floodplain that now exists along the Willamette and Columbia Rivers is quite different from its pre-settlement condition. As the wetlands were drained, the drier land became ideal for economic development—railroads, warehouses and manufacturing became the main utility of the floodplains, kept behind a protective barrier of levees.
Not all of the waterways were eliminated, of course. The Willamette has been channeled, what was once a real Swan Island is now a peninsula, the upriver eastern channel filled and now spider-webbed with railroad tracks. The Columbia Slough, along with several lakes and ponds, are the surviving remnants of what once covered the Columbia’s southern shore near the outlet of the Willamette.
We like to build where it is easiest. From an economic perspective, a low floodplain makes an attractive site to develop, if you can ward off annual floods. Dams and levees were built along the Columbia to keep the high water back, and the once porous landscape is now covered with hardscape and impervious surfaces. The Slough has been relegated to a drainage, and has filled with industrial sediments for over a century.
Yet aquatic life, damaged though it is in the Slough and the Willamette, persists and somehow endures. Herons, osprey and otter still make it their home, albeit living on fish that the Oregon DEQ warns humans against consuming. For some people, it is a place of recreation and connection. Though there is a great deal of work to be done, initial steps are now underway to stabilize and perhaps restore both waterways to a more sustainable ecosystem.
The effects of the past 100 years of development are everywhere to be seen, and the urbanized waterways of this nation will never be “wild” again. Our engineering of major waterways is not likely to stop. This exhibit represents a questioning of how we choose to build on and use environmentally sensitive land, a search to find space between human utility and ecosystem health, which can allow for the function of both in a sustainable manner. We need a new paradigm for the future.