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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Luke Olsen Photography
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DTSTART:20221106T090000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220805T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220805T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133603
CREATED:20220720T230500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220720T230500Z
UID:2009-1659722400-1659729600@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:v20 Year Anniversary Show at Pushdot Studio
DESCRIPTION:v20 Year Anniversary Show\nRetrospective Group Show in the Pushdot Studio Gallery\n\nAugust 5th – September 30th\, 2022\nOpening Reception: August 5th\, 2022 6-8pm \nPUSHDOT STUDIO\n2505 SE 11th Avenue\, Suite 104\nin the Ford Building\, enter on Division ¬Street\nPortland\, OR 9720\n503.224.5925\nwww.pushdotstudio.com\nGallery Hours: Mon-Fri. 8:30am to 5:00pm\, free admission \nv20 YEAR ANNIVERSARY SHOW \nAugust 2022 marks Pushdot’s 20 year anniversary! To celebrate we are excited to show works from our gallery covering all 20 years. A retrospective of artists we’ve had the honor and pleasure to show over the last two decades. It’s as well a celebration of the community that has supported us on this unbelievable journey. We wouldn’t be here without the many photographers\, artists\, and the many creatives that make up the Pushdot family. Please join us for this celebration and a walk down memory lane! \nPUSHDOT STUDIO: In addition to being an art gallery\, Pushdot Studio is a digital imaging resource for artists\, graphic designers\, and photographers and companies who require archival printing services; high quality scanning; artwork capture; exhibition mounting services; prepress retouching; color work and proofing. \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/v20-year-anniversary-show-at-pushdot-studio/
LOCATION:Pushdot Studio\, 2505 SE 11th Avenue\, Portland\, OR\, 97202\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220908T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220912T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133603
CREATED:20220530T201439Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220530T201439Z
UID:1978-1662624000-1663002000@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Stu Levy & Willie Osterman Photography Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Stu Levy & Willie Osterman Photography Workshop\nShore Acres and the Oregon Coast \nSeptember 8-12\, 2022 \nWorkshop Fee: US $850\nTo register for the workshop\, contact Stu at DrZone5@gmail.com \n  \nShore Acres and the Oregon Coast will be the focus of this workshop. On the Oregon coast west of Coos Bay\, Shore Acres is often termed the “Point Lobos of Oregon.” It is an area of convoluted rock forms and tide pools. North and south along the coast are pristine sand dunes and volcanic “seastacks” forming the rugged coastline. \nThis is the backdrop for an intensive photographic experience with Stu Levy and Willie Osterman. Early mornings and late afternoons will feature field sessions with camera side evaluation of composition and exposure. At mid-day\, the instructors will lead print viewing and critique sessions and will present their own work. \nStu and Willie are intimately familiar with the region and offer you a unique combination of technical expertise and creative insight which promises to make this workshop an unforgettable experience. We will be based at the Edgewater Inn in Coos Bay\, where a block of rooms has been reserved for the workshop participants.\nAll camera formats\, film\, digital\, and all printing approaches are welcome. \nFor everyone’s safety\, completed COVID vaccination is a requirement for attending the workshop. \nWillie Osterman is a Fulbright Scholar and a professor of Fine Art Photography at Rochester Institute of Technology. He taught and was an assistant at the Ansel Adams workshops in Yosemite Park. His first sabbatical was in Yosemite National Park spending a year documenting the workers\, visitors and the land. His publication ‘Déjà View: A Cultural Re-Photographic Survey of Bologna\, Italy’ in its second edition is now out of print.\nHe has over 80 exhibitions in the US\, Italy\, Turkey\, Austria\, China and Croatia. His work is included\, among others\, in the collections of the International Museum of Photography at the George Eastman House\, The Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago\, the University of New Mexico Museum of Art\, Portland Museum of Art\, New Orleans Museum of Art\, the Alinari Photographic Archive in Florence\, Italy and Muzej Grada Zagreba (City Art Museum of Zagreb)\, Croatia. \nStu Levy is a photographer living in Portland\, Oregon. He has led photography workshops on the Oregon Coast for over 30 years. He studied with Ansel Adams and was an assistant instructor for Ansel’s workshops in Yosemite and Carmel; he was also an instructor at the Ansel Adams Gallery Workshops.\nHis photographs are in many public and private collections including The Center for Creative Photography\, the George Eastman House\, the Portland Art Museum\, the Santa Barbara Museum of Art\, Museum of Photographic Arts\, San Francisco Civic Center\, Portland Visual Chronicle and the Wilson Centre for Photography.
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/stu-levy-willie-osterman-photography-workshop/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220910T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220910T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133603
CREATED:20220829T213231Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220829T213231Z
UID:2021-1662825600-1662836400@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Julie Moore at LightBox Photographic Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Julie Moore\, Visions\n\nSeptember 10 – October 6\, 2022\nJulie Moore Reception: September 10th\, 4 – 7 pm \nLightBox Photographic\n1045 Marine Drive\nAstoria\, OR 97103\n503.468.0238\ninfo@lightbox-photographic.com \nLightBox Photographic Gallery celebrates a month with historical photographic processes and their use in fine art photography in September. Three photographic artists who use the alternative processes in their photographic art are featured with the opening of exhibits on Saturday\, September\, 10th\, “Visions” : an exhibit of photographs by Julie Moore\, opens in the upper gallery\, featuring both Poly-Photogravure and Enhanced Lumen prints. Julie Moore will be in the gallery for an artist reception from 4 – 7pm. \n“The images in ‘visions’ share the way I see the world\, it’s soft tenderness & extravagant beauty\, it’s agonizing loss & exquisite aging. I am often shown the overlooked aspects of life and nature.  By using these alternative processes\, I am able to meld the present with the past. – julie moore \nPoly photogravure: an alternative process that creates a positive from a photographic negative on a transparent sheet. That sheet is then contact printed onto a light sensitive plate\, inked as one would in etching and put through a press. \nChine Colleé:  is a printmaking technique in which the image is transferred onto a surface that is bonded onto a heavier support in the printing process. This allows me to print on a much more delicate surface\, such as washi paper. \nÀ  La Poupée: a historic intaglio printmaking technique for making colored prints by applying different ink colors to a single plate prior to printing. \nEnhanced Lumens: lumens are camera-less prints dating back to the 1830s when William Henry Fox Talbot placed foliage on sensitized paper and exposed it to sunlight. This created a negative print or a photogram from which positive contact prints could be made. Today\, the process is exactly the same with the addition of image manipulation using digital technology.
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/julie-moore-at-lightbox-photographic-gallery/
LOCATION:LightBox Photographic Gallery\, 1045 Marine Dr.\, Astoria\, OR\, 97103\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220915T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220915T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133603
CREATED:20220906T170322Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220906T170322Z
UID:2028-1663264800-1663272000@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Don Jacobson\, Ancient Sands
DESCRIPTION:Don Jacobson\, Ancient Sands \nReception: Thursday\, September 15\, 6 – 8pm\nThe awards ceremony takes place at 7 pm.\nThe event is at The Reser\, it’s FREE and open to the public. \nThe Reser\n12625 SW Crescent St\nBeaverton OR 97005\nHours: Wed-Sat\, Noon to 6pm\n971-501-7762\ninfo@thereser.org \nDon Jacobson will have his “Pleistocene Sand” photograph from the “Ancient Sands\,” series taken on the central Oregon coast\, will be exhibited in the Beaverton Arts Mix live exhibition\, September 7th through October 15 th\, at the Reser. It won a Jurors Award! “Pleistocene Sand” along with “Bigleaf Maple” will be exhibited in the online exhibit from Oct 4\, 2022 through Oct 18\, 2022. The link\, which will be live on September 6th\, is:\nhttps://beavertonoregon.gov/490/Beaverton-Arts-Mix-Hybrid-Art-Show-Sale \nDon Jacobson Photography\nwww.donjacobsonphoto.com\ndonjphoto@gmail.com \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/don-jacobson-ancient-sands/
LOCATION:The Reser\, 12625 SW Crescent St\, Beaverton\, OR\, 97005\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220917
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220920
DTSTAMP:20260403T133603
CREATED:20220710T231353Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220710T231353Z
UID:2003-1663372800-1663631999@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:South Oregon Coast 3-day workshop on Long Exposure with Thibault Roland
DESCRIPTION:South Oregon Coast 3-day workshop on Long Exposure with Thibault Roland \nSeptember 17-19 2022 \nGroup size: 6 \nPrice:\n$1400 (returning participants and early birds before 07/15)\n$1500 (new participants and after 07/15)\n$495 non-refundable at the time of registration \nTo register for the last spot left\, email: contact@thibaultroland.com \nThibault Roland is a recognized fine art photographer who specializes in seascapes\, landscapes and architecture. He is a master of long exposure\, infrared\, tilt/shift and black and white photography. \nJoin him for a 3-day workshop September 17-19 to capture the most amazing rock formations and seastacks in the area between Bandon and Brookings\, OR. \nYou will learn long exposure\, sharpen your photographic and visualization skills as well as learn some of his best editing tricks during the classroom session planned on Sunday. \nwww.thibaultroland.com \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/south-oregon-coast-3-day-workshop-on-long-exposure-with-thibault-roland-2/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220917T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220917T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20220906T165027Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220906T165027Z
UID:2026-1663419600-1663426800@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Larry Cwik - 40 Year Retrospective\, The Visitor\, Walking 1000 Miles through Mexico
DESCRIPTION:Larry Cwik – 40 Year Retrospective\, The Visitor\, Walking 1000 Miles through Mexico \nSeptember 16 – October 22\, 2022 \nReception (with a poetry reading by Walt Curtis\, premiere of a short film\, and a book signing):\nSaturday September 17\, 2022\, 1 – 3 pm \nMultnomah Arts Center\n7688 SW Capitol Highway\nPortland\, Oregon  97219\n503 823 ARTS\nMonday – Thursday 9 AM – 930 PM\, Friday – Saturday 9 am – 5 pm\nwww.multnomahartscenter.org \nPortland artist and photographer Larry Cwik presents a 40 year retrospective of work from his project The Visitor\, Walking 1000 Miles through Mexico\, beginning on September 16\, 2022 at the Center Gallery of the Multnomah Arts Center\, Portland. \nThis will be Cwik’s first solo exhibit in six years. The works are large-scale color prints from Cwik’s longest project\, in which he has visited all regions of Mexico to photograph\, allowing his unconscious to dictate where and when he photographs in a city. Cwik has visited a different Mexican city each year to photograph\, spending a cumulative total of six months in Mexico\, walking more than 1000 miles in the process. \nThe opening reception will be on Saturday\, September 17\, 2022 from 1 – 3 pm\, with refreshments\, the premier of a new short film by Cwik\, a book signing\, and a poetry reading by Portland poet Walt Curtis. Curtis has read his work with William S. Burroughs\, Allen Ginsberg\, Ken Kesey\, Timothy Leary\, and William Stafford\, taught at Portland Community College\, and published widely\, including in Atlantic Monthly. Curtis’ novella Mala Noche was the subject of film-maker Gus Van Sant’s feature film. Curtis\, co-founder of the Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission\, has received the Stewart H. Holbrook Literary Legacy Award and hosted a poetry program for more than 45 years on KBOO FM. \nCwik’s work has been shown widely for almost 40 years and is included in the collections of the Portland Art Museum\, Regional Arts and Culture Commission\, and Bibliotheque Nationale\, Paris\, and been published in journals and magazines in Paris\, Madrid\, Barcelona\, Beijing\, New York\, Portland\, and Seattle. Cwik’s book Images from the Eighties was published by Blue Sky Books in 2016. His films are represented by the Film-Maker’s Cooperative\, New York. \nOpening reception and the exhibit are both free and open to the public. Funding for the project includes support from both the Oregon Arts Commission and the Ford Family Foundation. \nwww.larrycwik.com \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/larry-cwik-40-year-retrospective-the-visitor-walking-1000-miles-through-mexico/
LOCATION:Multnomah Arts Center\, 7688 SW Capitol Highway\, Portland\, OR\, 97219\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220918T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220918T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20220829T210351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220829T210351Z
UID:2019-1663509600-1663516800@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Jim Lommasson\, What We Carried: Our Story
DESCRIPTION:Jim Lommasson\, What We Carried: Our Story\nA collaborative photographic storytelling project by Jim Lommasson and refugees\, genocide\, and Holocaust survivors. \nSeptember 2 to September 30 \nExhibit at NewZone Gallery\nReception: September 2\,  5:30pm \nArtist Talk at Emerald Arts Center\nArtist Talk on September 18 @ 2:00pm \nNewZone Gallery\n110 East 11th\nEugene\, OR 97401\n541-683-0759\nDaily from noon to 6pm\nPhotographyatoregon@gmail.com\nFree to the public \nEmerald Arts Center\n500 Main\nSpringfield\, OR 97477 \nWe often think about war and its aftermath\, as though there were a clear demarcation between the two. My projects have been driven by a desire to illuminate the darkness and give voice to the voiceless. I asked participants to let me photograph those few items that they were able carry with them on their long and dangerous journey to America. I then asked the participants to write directly on the photograph about their object and why that particular item was so important that they chose it above everything else. Their stories speak to much more than the object. The participants’ additions give voice to the universal plight of all refugees. Ordinary objects become sacred objects. The luminous inner life of these ordinary things is a testament to the unspeakable anguish of a life left forever behind.\n-Jim Lommasson\, jim@lommassonpictures.com \nParticipants in Lommasson’s What We Carried projects are from Iraq\, Syria\, Armenia\, Bosnia\, Herzegovina\, Rwanda\, Sudan\, Burundi\, Congo\, Central African Republic\, Tanzania\, Mexico\, El Salvador\, and Guatemala. Lommasson has partnered with The Illinois Holocaust Museum and The Immigrant Story. \nJim Lommasson is a freelance photographer and author living in Portland and is a recipient of the Dorothea Lange–Paul Taylor Prize from The Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University. \nhttp://www.lommassonpictures.com/what-we-carried2 \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/jim-lommasson-what-we-carried-our-story/
LOCATION:Emerald Art Center\, 500 Main St.\, Springfield\, OR\, 97477\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220924T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220924T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20220829T213440Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220829T213440Z
UID:2023-1664024400-1664031600@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Chris Villiers at LightBox Photographic Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Chris Villiers\, They Named Our City For Him\n\nSeptember 10 – October 6\, 2022\nChris Villiers Reception: September 24th\, 1 – 3 pm \nLightBox Photographic\n1045 Marine Drive\nAstoria\, OR 97103\n503.468.0238\ninfo@lightbox-photographic.com \nAnd lastly opening on September 10th is “They Named our City for Him”\, an exhibit by Chris Villiers. This series of photographs from Chief Sealth’s gravesite behind the white clapboard church of St. Peter Catholic Mission\, is printed in the historic Kallitype process. \n“I quickly discovered that the way I painted the photosensitive chemicals on cotton paper recreated all the emotions I felt when looking in my camera’s viewfinder. “In these platinum-toned Kallitype prints\, I have tried to respect the fact that Native Americans consider their ancestors’ graves sacred while also pointing out how\, in my culture\, few think twice about wandering away from the tombs of our forefathers.” – Chris Villiers. \nAn Artist Reception will be held for Chris Villiers two weeks after the exhibit opening on Saturday\, September 24\, from 1 – 3pm. \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/chris-villiers-at-lightbox-photographic-gallery/
LOCATION:LightBox Photographic Gallery\, 1045 Marine Dr.\, Astoria\, OR\, 97103\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220930T233000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220930T233000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20220906T171439Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220906T171439Z
UID:2031-1664580600-1664580600@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Daniel Stewart Memorial Award
DESCRIPTION:Daniel Stewart Memorial Award\nof Underground Railroad Education Center \nDeadline for submissions is 11:59pm\, September 30\, 2022.\nAnnouncement of awards will be in November of 2022.\nAll applicants will be notified of the review committee’s decisions.\nThe decision of the review committee will be final. \nIf you are in the early stages of actively building a career as a professional photographer and not enrolled in an academic program leading to a degree in photography\, consider applying for a one-time grant of $500\, to be awarded after a juried application review. \nThis award is sponsored by the Daniel Stewart Memorial Fund\, created by friends to honor the memory of Daniel Stewart\, a promising photographic artist whose life ended far too early in a motorcycle accident. He was a native of Albany\, NY\, and had moved to Portland\, Oregon just weeks before his death. The Fund is operated under the auspices of Underground Railroad Education Center in Albany\, NY\, a 501(c)(3) organization to whom Daniel donated his photographic skills and talent. \nRules and other information here: Daniel Stewart Memorial Award – Underground Railroad Education Center (undergroundrailroadhistory.org) \nUnderground Railroad Education Center researches and preserves the local and national history of the Underground Railroad movement\, its international connections\, and its legacy for today’s social justice issues\, thereby empowering people of all ages to become agents of change toward an equitable and just society. More information about Underground Railroad Education Center is available at UndergroundRailroadHistory.org.
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/daniel-stewart-memorial-award/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221001T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221001T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221001T221539Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221001T221539Z
UID:2037-1664611200-1664643600@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Anchell Photography Workshops
DESCRIPTION:Anchell Photography Workshops in Cuba\n2022 Workshop Discounts \nThe Heart of Cuba\ntinyurl.com/5n8j4tex\nDecember 2 to 11\, 2022\n$3495\nOnly 2 spaces left \nHavana Nude\ntinyurl.com/3etkp2u9\nDecember 13 to 18\, 2022\n$4985\nOnly 1 space left \n  \nCuba is open and welcoming visitors. COVID is under control with a lower percentage rate than even the U.S. After two years of isolation\, our friends on the island are excited to see us again. \nI have two exciting workshops scheduled this December\, and I am discounting them both to make it easier for you to join me. \n$300 off Heart of Cuba\n$500 off Havana Nude \nI will even have you home by the Holidays. \nThe Heart of Cuba\ntinyurl.com/5n8j4tex\nDecember 2 to 11\, 2022\nOnly 2 spaces left \nThe Heart of Cuba is a unique workshop visiting towns and villages in the Cuban Heartland: Trinidad\, Cienfuegos\, Sancti Spiritus\, Santa Clara\, and Remedios. In addition\, we will have three full days in Havana. \nHavana Nude\ntinyurl.com/3etkp2u9\nDecember 13 to 18\, 2022\nOnly 1 space left \nCuban photographer Alberto “Chino” Arcos and I have led this workshop since 2017\, and it gets better each year. We’ll have six different locations and six models\, one per photographer. Many of our models will be dancers from the national theater. \nDon’t hesitate to contact me if you have questions on either workshop by phone at 503.884.3882 or by email\, info@anchellworkshops.com. \nI look forward to working with you\, reconnecting with old friends\, and making new ones!
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/anchell-photography-workshops/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221013T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221013T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221001T224555Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221001T224555Z
UID:2041-1665682200-1665689400@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Julianna Souther\, Han: The Legacy of a Divided Society
DESCRIPTION:Julianna Souther\, Han: The Legacy of a Divided Society \nSept. 26 – Oct. 28\, 2022\nReception and Gallery Talk Thursday Oct. 13 5:30pm \nThe Santiam Hall Gallery\nLinn-Benton Community College\n6500 Pacific Blvd SW\nAlbany\, Oregon 97321\nwww.linnbenton.edu\nOpen Mon-Fri 8-5pm \nIn an exhibit that combines the personal and the cultural\, Corvallis artist Julianna Souther explores her Korean heritage and what it means to be “other” in America through a collection of portraits and other artwork now on view at the South Santiam Hall Gallery on Linn-Benton Community College’s Albany campus\, 6500 Pacific Blvd. SW\, through Oct. 28\, 2022. \nA reception and gallery talk will be held Thursday\, Oct. 13 in the gallery from 5:30 to 7pm. \n“Han: the Legacy of a Divided Society” recounts her South Korean identity by examining both historical events and issues persisting today. Also featured are 14 portraits of young people\, including those in the LGBTQIA community\, who describe their experiences with discrimination. Included in the show are contemporary and historical photographs\, cyanotypes\, a video\, and a hand-made accordion-style photo book. \nSouther explained that “Han” is an complex Korean concept that reflects “the intense emotion of hatred or resentment that is part of every Korean person” because of the nation’s history. \n“The history of the people and the country of Korea includes unimaginable hardships. including the Japanese Occupation\, the Korean War\, and slavery\,” she said. “Han provides a unique channel for describing the consequent feelings\, and is perceived to be an essential part of the Korean identity.” \nBorn in 1998 in Seoul\, South Korea\, Souther was adopted into an American family at a young age. She graduated from Oregon State University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Photography in December 2021. Since “coming out of the fog\,” which is how she describes the realization of the adoptee reality\, Souther has created photographic works documenting both the adoptee and Asian American diasporas. \nShe was the recipient of OSU’s Kelsi Rae Ford Memorial Scholarship for two years\, and this year was awarded the College of Liberal Arts’ Outstanding Senior Award by Oregon State. Last fall\, she presented her thesis show\, “Breaking Misconceptions”\, at the Little Gallery at OSU. \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/julianna-souther-han-the-legacy-of-a-divided-society/
LOCATION:Linn-Benton Community College\, 6500 Pacific Blvd SW\, Albany\, OR\, 97330\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221014T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221014T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221004T231510Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221004T231510Z
UID:2047-1665763200-1665774000@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Rich Bergeman\, Tidewaters: Looking Back Along Oregon's Coast Range Rivers
DESCRIPTION:Rich Bergeman\, Tidewaters: Looking Back Along Oregon’s Coast Range Rivers \nOct. 14\, 2022 – Jan. 29\, 2023\nOpening Reception Friday\, Oct. 14\, from 4pm to 7pm \nPacific Maritime Heritage Center\n333 SE Bay Blvd\nNewport\, OR 97365\n541-265-7509 \nMaritime Center \n\nOpen Wed-Sun 10am-4pm \n“Tidewaters” is a series of platinum/palladium prints depicting scenes along Oregon’s major estuaries captured by Corvallis photographer Rich Bergeman in the 1990s and early 2000s. The exhibit includes maps and text panels recalling the history of Native American life and early Euro-American settlement along the tidewater regions. \nUsing 8×10” and 5×7” cameras\, Bergeman spent about 10 years exploring the lower reaches of the Columbia\, Yaquina\, Alsea\, Siuslaw and other navigable rivers draining the Oregon Coast Range\, looking for scenes that reflect the region’s early history. \nEach of the river systems was home to its own distinct Native American population that was eventually disrupted in the 1800s by increasing encroachment by Euro-Americans in pursuit of the region’s fishery and forestry resources. For a time\, beginning in 1855\, the entire Central Coast–over one million acres from Cape Lookout to the Oregon Dunes–was a Congressionally designated Indian Reservation\, but it was gradually chipped away until all that remained was the small present day tract at Siletz. \nDuring that time new towns slowly began to take shape near the mouths of the rivers; some flourished while others disappeared altogether. Among the so-called “lost cities” were Bayocean\, a Tillamook Bay resort once billed as the “Atlantic City of the West\,” and Yaquina City\, the ill-fated “San Francisco of the Oregon Territory.”\nIn keeping with the historical nature of the images\, Bergeman printed them in the traditional platinum process\, which dates back to the early years of photography in the 19th century and is known for its permanence and long tonal range. \nA book on the exhibit that expands upon the show will be available in the museum bookstore\, along with digital reprints from the show. \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/rich-bergeman-tidewaters-looking-back-along-oregons-coast-range-rivers/
LOCATION:Pacific Maritime Heritage Center\, 333 SE Bay Blvd\, Newport\, OR\, 97365\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221015
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221018
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20220720T225714Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220720T225714Z
UID:2007-1665792000-1666051199@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:North Oregon Coast 3-day workshop on Long Exposure with Thibault Roland
DESCRIPTION:North Oregon Coast 3-day workshop on Long Exposure with Thibault Roland \nOctober 15-17 2022 \n$1400 (returning participants and early birds before 07/15)\n$1500 (new participants and after 07/15)\n$495 non-refundable at the time of registration \nGroup size: 6 maximum \nTO REGISTER: contact@thibaultroland.com \nThibault Roland is a recognized fine art photographer who specializes in seascapes\, landscapes and architecture. He is a master of long exposure\, infrared\, tilt/shift and black and white photography. \nJoin him for a 3-day workshop October 15-17 to capture some of the most amazing landmarks in the area between Astoria and Lincoln City\, OR. Among others\, we will capture the Astoria Bridge and the breathtaking rock formations and seastacks of Cannon Beach\, Cape Kiwanda\, and Siletz Bay. \nDuring this workshop you will learn long exposure\, sharpen your photographic and visualization skills as well as learn some of his best editing tricks during the classroom session where we will also discuss how to improve your images by shooting with intent. \nwww.thibaultroland.com
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/north-oregon-coast-3-day-workshop-on-long-exposure-with-thibault-roland-2/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221015T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221015T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221001T222330Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221001T222330Z
UID:2039-1665838800-1665849600@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Infrared Photography by Linda Devenow
DESCRIPTION:Infrared Photography by Linda Devenow\, Memories from February 9\, 2020 and April 26\, 2020 \nOctober 11 through November 30\, 2022\nArtist reception on Saturday\, October 15 from 1:00 – 4:00 pm \nThe O’Brien Photo Gallery\n2833 Willamette\, Ste. B.\nEugene\, OR. 97405\n(541) 729-3572\nOpen week days from 1:00 to 5:00 pm.\nCall to be sure we are open or to arrange special viewing times.\npicmac1945@gmail.com\nhttps://www.waltobrien.net/the-o-brien-photo-gallery \nAside from the impact of Covid in 2020\, early 2020 was particularly traumatic for me\, with overwhelming feelings of loss. I took solace in taking pictures\, but most taken during that time were ignored and overlooked. I only recently started to revisit my work of that period\, and was particularly struck with those photographs from February 9th and April 26th. \nWith one exception\, this is the first time these black and white infrared photos have been exhibited. Locations from February 9th include Junction City\, Harrisburg\, Finley Reserve\, and Benton County. Images taken on April 26th are from the Middle Fork\, Willamette area. \nLinda Devenow was born in Detroit\, Michigan and moved to Eugene\, Oregon in 2002. She returned to her great passion photography in 2018\, after attending an exhibit of infrared photographs. Her portfolio covers landscape\, portraiture\, and nature images\, with emphasis on black and white and color infrared. \nHome\nhttps://www.facebook.com/linda.devenow.754/ \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/infrared-photography-by-linda-devenow/
LOCATION:The O’Brien Photo Gallery\, 2833 Willamette\, Ste. B\, Eugene\, OR\, 97405\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221027T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221027T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20220912T234731Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220912T234731Z
UID:2033-1666875600-1666882800@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Rich Bergeman\, The Land Remembers: Photographs Inspired by the Rogue River Wars
DESCRIPTION:Rich Bergeman\, The Land Remembers: Photographs Inspired by the Rogue River Wars \nSept. 26 – Oct. 27\, 2022\nClosing Reception and Gallery Talk Thursday Oct. 27\, 1-3pm \nThe Art Gallery\nUmpqua Community College\n1140 Umpqua College Road\nRoseburg\, Oregon 97470\nwww.umpqua.edu\n800-820-5161\nOpen Mon-Fri 8am-5pm \nAn exhibit of photographs that explore the landscapes of Southern Oregon’s 1850s Rogue River Indian Wars will be on display at The Art Gallery at Umpqua Community College Sept. 27 to Oct. 26. \nTitled “The Land Remembers\,” the exhibit features more than 20 black-and-white infrared prints by Corvallis photographer Rich Bergeman\, along with his research into one of the least remembered and yet bloodiest Indian conflicts in the Oregon Territory. \nBergeman said the goal of his project was “to bring the largely forgotten war back into our collective consciousness through a reflective study of the landscapes that played host to those tragic events.” \nThe various tribes who populated the southwest corner of what is now Oregon saw their homelands suddenly invaded in 1850 following passage of the Oregon Donation Land Claim Act and the nearly simultaneous discovery of gold in the region. Settlers and miners streamed in\, leading to conflict with local tribes. Skirmishes flared up multiple times between 1851 and 1854\, eventually erupting into all-out war involving the U.S. Army. It ended with the forced removal of the Rogue Valley and South Coast tribes to reservations at Siletz and Grand Ronde in 1856 in what descendants today memorialize as Oregon’s own “Trail of Tears.” \nAn Oregonian since 1976\, Bergeman is a retired instructor of journalism and photography at Linn-Benton Community College in Albany. The 73-year-old photographer has been exhibiting his work throughout the Northwest since the 1980s. Over the past two decades he has focused primarily on portraying forgotten Northwest histories through photographs of what’s been left behind. His portfolios can be seen at richbergeman.zenfolio.com\, and in book form at blurb.com \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/rich-bergeman-the-land-remembers-photographs-inspired-by-the-rogue-river-wars/
LOCATION:Umpqua Community College\, 1140 Umpqua College Road\, Roseburg\, OR\, 97470\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221112T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221112T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221108T003516Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221108T003516Z
UID:2076-1668254400-1668279600@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:The Spirit Seed and Perspectives at LightBox Photographic Gallery
DESCRIPTION:The Guild at LightBox\, The Spirit Seed\nPortland Photographers Forum\, Perspectives\n\nNovember 12th – December 7th\nOpening: November 12th\, Noon – 7pm \nLightBox Photographic Gallery\n1045 Marine Dr.\nAstoria\, OR 97103\n(503) 468-0238\nlightbox-photographic.com \nLightBox Photographic Gallery host the opening of two exhibits on Saturday\, November\, 12th\, The Spirit Seed Exhibit opens in the upper gallery with work produced by members of The Guild at LightBox. Jim Fitzgerald\, Jody Miller\, Julie Moore\, Sam Blair\, Michael Puff and Loren Nelson contribute imagery to the Spirit Seed Exhibit. Each photographer was given The Spirit Seed to experience and interpret whatever mystery they felt thrumming from within its core. \nAlso opening in the gallery on Saturday\, November 12th\, is the the annual Portland Photographers Forum Members Exhibit with work of 40 Photographers from the Portland region and beyond. This years theme was Perspectives and was juried by Astoria’s own Jody Miller. \nLightBox opens these shows on Saturday\, November 12th and they run through December 7th. Please join us on opening day from 12noon-7pm. Complete show info is on the LightBox website at http://lightbox-photographic.com/shows/. Contact LightBox at 503-468-0238 or info@lightboxphotographic.com. LightBox is located at 1045 Marine Drive in Astoria. Gallery viewing hours are Wed\, Thurs\, Fri and Sat.\, 12pm – 5pm and by appointment. \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/the-spirit-seed-and-perspectives-at-lightbox-photographic-gallery/
LOCATION:LightBox Photographic Gallery\, 1045 Marine Dr.\, Astoria\, OR\, 97103\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221120T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221120T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221108T001958Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221108T002246Z
UID:2072-1668952800-1668960000@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Anna Daedalus\, Kerry Davis and Jon Gottshall\, Open Channels
DESCRIPTION:Anna Daedalus\, Kerry Davis and Jon Gottshall\, Open Channels \nNovember 3rd – November 26th\nArtist talk: November 20th\, 2pm \nGallery 114\n1100 NW Glisan\,\nPortland\, OR 97209\nhttps://www.gallery114pdx.com/\n(503) 243-3356 \nGrounded Glass takes as its subject a Sitka spruce swamp and the muddy matter in its tidal flow. These close views of the swamp through mud-caked glass plates challenge the mythology of landscape hierarchy\, both in terms of beauty and value; and raise mud to another level. Our mark-making on the murky glass borrows from the cliché verre process to create windows through which elements of the landscape appear in varying degrees of clarity. In dialogue with Floodplain II\, which explores urban wetlands impacted by industry\, Grounded Glass focuses on a restored swamp after 150 years as rural farmland. The project is a continuation of Palūs\, a meditation on this same swamp near the mouth of the Columbia River. Through constructions\, photography\, and time-based installations\, Palūs observes the tidal wetland’s liquid respiration as the waters rise and fall each day.\n– Anna Daedalus & Kerry Davis \nFloodplain II is a continued exploration of the Columbia Slough\, an engineered remnant of the shallow streams that once braided the land along the Columbia River as it flows past Portland. Once a highly productive habitat\, it was drained and developed\, reflecting our historic belief that wetlands were places of disease and pestilence\, and that economic activity gave it actual value. Despite a century of industrial waste and runoff\, many creatures that depend on wetland habitat have somehow survived. More recently\, reflecting our shifting awareness\, the Slough has seen some efforts at restoration. Given time and space\, nature reasserts itself. \nOpen Channels\, our collaborative exhibit\, challenges historical perspectives and asks a provocative question: how do we revitalize a wetland\, or any damaged habitat\, when we are all too often still engaged in the same activities that diminished it? How do we remake our economic life into something not hostile\, but rather sympathetic to the environment\, to our mutual benefit?\n-Jon Gottshall \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/anna-daedalus-kerry-davis-and-jon-gottshall-open-channels/
LOCATION:Gallery 114\, 1100 NW Glisan\, Portland\, OR\, 97209\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221120T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221120T163000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221017T235843Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221017T235843Z
UID:2055-1668954600-1668961800@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Paul Neevel - 60 Years A Retrospective – Photographs from 1962 through 2022
DESCRIPTION:Paul Neevel\, 60 Years – A Retrospective – Photographs from 1962 through 2022 \nNovember 4 – 26\, 2022 \nOpening reception: Friday\, November 11\, 5-7 p.m.\nWalk-through tour of the show with the artist and pot-luck reception\, Sunday\, November 20th at 2:30 p.m. \nEmerald Art Center\n500 Main St.\nSpringfield\, OR 97477\n541.726.8595\nOpen Tue – Sat 11-4 p.m.\nPlus the Second Friday every month\, 4-7:30 p.m.\nwww.emeraldartcenter.org \nFree and open to the public \nA retrospective exhibit of Paul Neevel’s 60 years as a photographer\, including images from 1962 to 2022. \nPaul Neevel grew up in International Falls\, Minnesota\, the “Icebox of the Nation\,” through grade school\, then completed high school in his father’s somewhat warmer home town\, Baldwin\, Wisconsin. Paul’s grandfather\, Ed Neevel\, was the “town photographer” in Baldwin for decades after opening a studio there in 1895. \nPaul developed his own interest in photography while he was a student at the University of Wisconsin\, and visited the Madison Public Library on a regular basis to read books on photography. He bought his first camera\, along with darkroom gear\, shortly after graduating in 1962 with a degree in meteorology. While continuing to work on a master’s degree\, he began to exhibit and sell his photographs. \nHis first exhibit in Eugene was a one-person show at the Gross Gallery\, on 13th near the University campus\, in 1968. He still lived in Madison and didn’t see the show in person\, but he moved to Eugene two years later to study at the University of Oregon\, one of the few schools to offer a degree in photography at the time. While studying for degrees in journalism and fine arts\, he was a teaching fellow for Bernie Freemesser\, UO professor of photography\, who established the Photography at Oregon Gallery in the UO Museum along with his students in 1966. \nDuring his first 20 years in Eugene\, Paul had a camera repair business at home. He photographed traveling art shows distributed by the Visual Arts Resources branch of the UO Museum of Art. He has since photographed artwork for many local artists and more than 150 weddings. \nPaul joined the Photography at Oregon Gallery committee in the mid-1970s. He was in charge of installing the monthly exhibits for more than a decade before the gallery was eliminated by a new museum administration in 1992. \nIn 1989\, Paul Neevel was invited to photograph and write for the Eugene Weekly (then called What’s Happening) following his 1988 Jacobs Gallery show\, 40 Portraits of Artists. His Happening People column in the Weekly has profiled more than a thousand local personalities nominated by readers since it first appeared in 1996. \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/paul-neevel-60-years-a-retrospective-photographs-from-1962-through-2022/
LOCATION:Emerald Art Center\, 500 Main St.\, Springfield\, OR\, 97477\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221130T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221130T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221017T234556Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221017T234556Z
UID:2052-1669834800-1669838400@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Photo Cascadia - Washington Evergreen Book Signing
DESCRIPTION:Photo Cascadia\, Washington Evergreen Book Signing \nNovember 30th\, 2022 at 7:00 pm PT \nElliot Bay Book Company\n1521 Tenth Avenue\nSeattle\, WA 98122\nPhone: (206) 624-6600\nToll Free: 1-800-962-5311\n10am – 9pm Daily\nhttps://www.elliottbaybook.com/ \nFor over 13 years\, a small group of the Pacific Northwest’s nature photographers have worked together as team Photo Cascadia. These seven photographers\, all of whom have their own thriving businesses\, formed the team to promote natures beauty and encourage its conservation. After successfully publishing their first book in 2020 with Portland based Timber Press called Oregon My Oregon – Land of Natural Wonders\, Photo Cascadia is back covering the majestically diverse landscape of Washington State. \nWashington Evergreen – Land of Natural Wonders also published by Timber Press is a collection of close to 200 photographs that showcase the beauty of Washington. From the thick rain forests of the Olympic Peninsula to the soaring peaks of Mt. Rainier\, these landscapes are a testament to the diverse environments that define Washington. For Photo Cascadia’s seven photographers—Erin Babnik\, Sean Bagshaw\, David Cobb\, Adrian Klein\, Kevin McNeal\, Chip Phillips\, and Zach Schnepf—this is a culmination of over 15 years photographing across Washington with these environments providing a constant source of inspiration. \nBeyond the beautiful photographs the foreword is from renowned lepidopterist Robert Michael Pyle\, an accomplished writer\, teacher and founder of the Xerces Society. He has written many books including the best seller The National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Butterflies. In 2020 the movie The Dark Divide\, based on the book of the same title\, was released starring David Cross as Robert Michael Pyle. \nThe new book is available for order now and officially released on October 25\, 2022. To highlight some of the photos in their new book\, Photo Cascadia will be presenting at Elliot Bay Book Company in downtown Seattle on the evening of Wednesday November 30th along with signing any purchased books. Feel free to join the event to meet Photo Cascadia and hear more about the book. The book is available for purchase online wherever books are sold and available at many physical book stores in Washington. \nhttps://www.photocascadia.com/store/books/washington-evergreen/\nhttps://www.photocascadia.com/
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/photo-cascadia-washington-evergreen-book-signing/
LOCATION:Elliot Bay Book Company\, 1521 Tenth Avenue\, Seattle\, WA\, 98122\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221201T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221201T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221129T003118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221129T003118Z
UID:2091-1669917600-1669924800@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:#3034 Gloria Baker Feinstein book launch and signing for “I Hope You Find What You’re Looking For”
DESCRIPTION:Gloria Baker Feinstein\, I Hope You Find What You’re Looking For \nThursday\, December 1st 6 – 8 PM \nPLACE\n735 NW 18th Ave.\, Portland\n503-334-2080\nFollowing the opening\, by appointment only. \nThis is an exhibition of photographs\, as well as a book launch and signing for Gloria’s latest book. Kim Stafford\, Oregon’s former poet laureate contributed poems to accompany some of the images in the book and will be present at the event to read poems and sign books. Gloria will be signing books\, as well. They’ll be available for purchase that evening. \nwww.gloriabakerfeinstein.com
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/3034-gloria-baker-feinstein-book-launch-and-signing-for-i-hope-you-find-what-youre-looking-for/
LOCATION:PLACE Galleria\, 735 Northwest 18th Avenue\, Portland\, OR\, 97209\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221202T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221202T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221122T003242Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221122T003242Z
UID:2082-1670004000-1670011200@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:JJ Gonson at Pushdot Studio
DESCRIPTION:JJ Gonson\, Facing Northwest\nPhotographs of the Northwest Music Scene circa\, 1980 and 90s \nOPEN/CLOSE: Dec 2nd\, 2022 – Jan 27th\, 2023\nOpening Reception: Dec 2nd\, 2022 6-8pm \nPUSHDOT STUDIO\n2505 SE 11th Avenue\,\nSuite 104 – in the Ford Building\, enter on Division Street\nPortland\, OR 97202\n503.224.5925\nwww.pushdotstudio.com\nGallery Hours: Mon-Fri. 8:30am to 5:00pm\, free admission \nBoston based photographer Gonson has been “Obsessed with music from the time I was a small girl. In the mid 80’s I discovered that it was possible to get access to musicians and bands by signing on to shoot live and posed photos for magazines and newspapers. For the last half of that decade I shot hardcore and punk bands multiple times a week in clubs around the Boston area. In 1990 I went west\, to Portland Oregon. While much of my work is of live music\, portraits have dominated my body of work over the span of decades; from the early 80’s to present day. The result of my experiences is a collection of intimate portraits of musicians\, friends and fans\, both live on stage and candid. My archive includes little seen pictures of Kurt Cobain\, Elliott Smith\, Jane’s Addiction\, Black Flag and hundreds of other punk and independent bands. My work has been published in books including Torment Saint: a Biography of Elliott Smith\, Cobain Unseen and Cobain on Cobain as well as in fanzines such as xXx and Suburban Voice and many magazines\, including Rolling Stone\, Mojo\, Q and Spin.” This show focuses on some of her NW bands collection. \nJJ  Gonson \nCONTACT: LINCOLN MILLER\, 503-224-5925\, lincoln@pushdotstudio.com \nPUSHDOT STUDIO: In addition to being an art gallery\, Pushdot Studio is a digital imaging resource for artists\, graphic designers\, and photographers and companies who require archival printing services; high quality scanning; artwork capture; exhibition mounting services; prepress retouching; color work and proofing. \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/jj-gonson-at-pushdot-studio/
LOCATION:Pushdot Studio\, 2505 SE 11th Avenue\, Portland\, OR\, 97202\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221203T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221203T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221122T004232Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221122T004232Z
UID:2084-1670072400-1670083200@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Grady Tarbutton at The O'Brien Photo Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Grady Tarbutton\, Passages: Moment by Moment \nDecember 2 – January 13\, 2023.\nArtist reception on Saturday\, December 3 from 1-4 pm. \nThe O’Brien Photo Gallery\n2833 Willamette\, Ste. B\nEugene\, OR 97405\n(541) 729-3572\nOpen weekdays from 1-5 pm.\nCall to be sure we are open or to\nmake special arrangements for viewing.\npicmac1945@gmail.com\nhttps://www.waltobrien.net/the-o-brien-photo-gallery \nGrady Tarbutton is an amateur photography who chooses most of his work from the human influenced and natural world. This show is titled “Passages: Moment by Moment.” \n“Each experience we have is here for a moment. That moment contains the profound and joyful\, rough and painful\, effort and loss\, and then becomes a memory. What was new in a moment yesterday\, becomes history today. And what is new today\, is history tomorrow.” \n“We preserve history in what we leave behind. Buildings\, graffiti\, petroglyphs\, highways and parks. To think that there have been hundreds\, probably thousands\, of human generations before ours and there will be thousands after ours. Often knowing the present\, but thinking it is permanent. And it changes into something new\, every moment.” \nThis show will present a view of present moments\, experiences and memorials. \nContact Grady at 360-607-5543\, gradytarbutton@yahoo.com\nhttps://www.photozonegallery.com/grady-tarbutton.
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/grady-tarbutton-at-the-obrien-photo-gallery-2/
LOCATION:The O’Brien Photo Gallery\, 2833 Willamette\, Ste. B\, Eugene\, OR\, 97405\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221203T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221203T220000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221129T002001Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221129T002001Z
UID:2088-1670086800-1670104800@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Eugene Darkroom Group - Year End Fundraiser Art Market & Benefit Show
DESCRIPTION:Eugene Darkroom Group\, Year End Fundraiser Art Market & Benefit Show \nSaturday\, December 3rd\, from 5:00pm-10:00pm \nAlluvium\n810 W 3rd Ave\, Eugene OR 97402\n(541) 357-9789\neugenedarkroom@gmail.com\neugdarkroom.org \nEugene Darkroom Group is a 501(c)(3) non-profit in Eugene\, Oregon\, dedicated to preserving and promoting film photography. Our darkroom and education program are located at Maude Kerns Art Center. Each year\, we publish\, “WIDE OPEN\,” an annual\, limited edition photo book featuring work from our members in order to fundraise for our Education & Scholarship Program. \nWe’re hosting a Year End Art Market & Benefit Show at Alluvium on Saturday\, December 3rd\, with attractions such as live music\, photo-based local art vendors\, raffles and silent auction items\, and more! All proceeds from our fundraisers go towards our darkroom and education programs\, helping us continue to provide access and education in analog photo processes. \nhttps://www.eugdarkroom.org\nMore event details can be found here: https://www.eugdarkroom.org/exhibitions \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/eugene-darkroom-group-year-end-fundraiser-art-market-benefit-show/
LOCATION:Alluvium\, 810 W 3rd Ave\, Eugene\, OR\, 97402\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221215T225900
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221215T225900
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221122T005512Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221122T005512Z
UID:2086-1671145140-1671145140@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Submit to the Blue Sky Gallery 2023 Pacific Northwest Drawers
DESCRIPTION:Submit to the 2023 Pacific Northwest Drawers \nDeadline: Dec 15\, 2022\, 10:59 PM (PT) \nLess than one month left to submit to the 2023 Pacific Northwest Drawers \nDon’t forget to submit your entry to the 2023 Pacific Northwest Drawers. Submissions will be accepted until Thursday Dec 15\, 2022\, 10:59 PM (PT). We will not be accepting submissions after this deadline. \nAre you having trouble or are not sure where to begin? Click the link below to learn more about our submission guidelines and FAQ! \nhttps://www.blueskygallery.org/2023-pacific-northwest-drawers \nBlue Sky is accepting submissions for the 2023 Pacific Northwest Drawers. Photographers from Alaska\, Idaho\, Montana\, Oregon\, Washington\, and British Columbia are welcome to apply. There is no application fee to enter. \nThe Pacific Northwest Drawers were established in 2007 to showcase regional contemporary photographers through an annual juried exhibition. Selected work can be viewed in the flat files for a full year at the gallery\, or digitally on the Blue Sky website. The online exhibition will remain a part of the Blue Sky digital archive indefinitely. \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/submit-to-the-blue-sky-gallery-2023-pacific-northwest-drawers/
LOCATION:Blue Sky Gallery\, 122 NW 8th Avenue\, Portland\, OR\, 97209\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221218T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221218T163000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20221018T000638Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221018T000638Z
UID:2057-1671373800-1671381000@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Rudi Dietrich\, Close to Home
DESCRIPTION:Rudi Dietrich\, Close to Home \nNovember 4th\, 2022 through January 4th 2023 \nOpening reception is 5:00 – 6:00  p.m. on Friday\, November 4th\, 2022\nArtist’s talk and potluck December 18th\, 2022 at 2:30 p.m. at the Emerald Art Center\, 500 Main St\, Springfield\, OR 97477 \nDot Dotson’s Gallery\n1668 Willamette\, Eugene\, OR 97401\n541.485-1771\n11:30–5:30 Monday–Thursday. Opening only is on Friday November 4th\, 5:00 – 6:00  p.m.\nwww.dotdotsons.com \nFree and open to the public \nRudi Dietrich was born in Austria and spent the WWII years near Vienna. He attended the Realgymnasium in Salzburg and later studied photography the School for Applied Arts in Innsbruck. He passed the examinations for Master Photographer and was active as a teacher and photographer in Salzburg. \nHe met his wife\, Carol\, a native Montanan\, when she was studying at the Mozarteum in Salzburg. After visiting her home state\, he decided\, “this I have to try\,” and subsequently moved there in 1964. There\, he continued his education\, studying cinematography and finishing a multi-disciplinary graduate program in Art\, Philosophy and Literature with an emphasis on Aesthetics. \nHe taught at Montana State University in Bozeman from 1970 until 1998\, where he was instrumental in founding what is now the School of Film and Photography as well as introducing digital and non-silver photographic processes to the curriculum there. Since his retirement\, he has been actively photographing for his own pleasure. \nRudi Dietrich’s personal work deals with the intimate surroundings of his home and family ranch in Dixon. He works in color and specializes in the historical gum-dichromate process. For the last ten years\, his work has been largely digital. For him\, photography is a way to look more deeply into his life and life of his family. “Looking closely and with heart and eye into the world close by.” \nRudi Dietrich’s work has been shown regionally\, nationally and internationally\, garnering many awards as well as having been twice-published in the Swedish camera magazine\, “Hasselblad Forum.” \nCurrently 89 years young\, Rudi Dietrich continues to be active as a photographer. For him\, the most important value is “friendship with the processes of exploring and a constant wonder of growing.” \nRudi Dietrich has exhibited in Eugene under the sponsorship of Photography at Oregon many times. He considers his connection with Eugene “a wonderful gift.” \nCheck out the Montana State University profile of Rudi Dietrich here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlGCs4nOLus \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/rudi-dietrich-close-to-home/
LOCATION:Emerald Art Center\, 500 Main St.\, Springfield\, OR\, 97477\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230113T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230113T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20230110T013252Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230110T013252Z
UID:2096-1673629200-1673636400@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:PhotoZone Gallery member's exhibition
DESCRIPTION:PhotoZone Gallery member’s exhibition \nJan 10 through Feb 3\, 2023\nReception  Jan. 13th from 5 to 7pm. \nEmerald Art Center\n500 Main St. Springfield\, Or 97477\n541 726-8595\nTuesdays through Saturdays 11 – 4pm\nhttps://www.emeraldartcenter.org \nThe PhotoZone Gallery will present a group exhibition of photographs at the Emerald Art Center in Springfield\, Oregon January 10th through February 3rd. Come meet the artists during an opening reception on January 13th from 5 to 7PM. The Emerald Art Center is located at 500 Main St. Springfield\, OR and is open Tuesday-Saturday 11-4pm. \nThe PhotoZone Gallery\, is an artist run photographic collective of diverse photographers interested in the fine art of photography. Genres include landscape and nature photography\, documentary styles\, abstract expression as well as portraiture and pinhole photography. \nExperiencing our group exhibitions\, viewers can see many types of prints. These include traditional silver prints\, images made from digital capture\, collaged and 3-D prints\, platinum/palladium\, gum bichromate\, hand-colored and airbrushed prints.
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/photozone-gallery-members-exhibition/
LOCATION:Emerald Art Center\, 500 Main St.\, Springfield\, OR\, 97477\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230114T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230114T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20230110T012537Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230110T012537Z
UID:2094-1673712000-1673722800@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Meet The Guild at LightBox 2023
DESCRIPTION:Meet The Guild at LightBox 2023 \nSaturday\, January 14\, 4 – 7pm \nLightBox Photographic\n1045 Marine Drive\nAstoria\, OR 97103\n503.468.0238\ninfo@lightbox-photographic.com \nWe are happy and proud to announce the Guild at LightBox for 2023.\nRachel Wolf\, Jody Miller\, Julie Moore\, Angel O’Biren\, Jim Fitzgerald\, Michael Puff\, Loren Nelson\, Sam Blair \nThe Guild at LIghtBox is a group of eight Photographic Artists that are embedded in the Upper Floor of LightBox. The Guild exhibits work\, collaborates creatively\, and supports the Mission of LightBox Photographic Gallery. \nOn Saturday\, January 14th from 4 -7pm we invite you to Meet the Guild at LightBox.\nWe welcome them with new work on the walls and fresh ideas for a great year at LightBox Photographic Gallery. We wish to thank the Guild at LightBox for their endless creativity and helping make everything we do possible! \nJody Miller\nI have been a photographer for most of my life. The daughter of two fine artists\,  I grew up studying  painting and drawing. My first camera\, a Box Brownie\, was given  to me at age nine\, and the love affair with photography has never ended. In 1982  my work began in earnest after attending Ansel Adams’ workshop in Carmel\, California\, studying with some of the great fine art photographers of our time. \nFor 45 years I worked in the television industry in Hollywood as a designer and animator\, and my passion for photography melded beautifully with my profession. Now that I’m retired\, I have the freedom to practice my art and travel\, and am now able to live full time in my adopted home town of Astoria\, Oregon. \nI am primarily a landscape photographer; but any and all genres of fine art photography are represented in my work. I am eternally fascinated with the play of light against shadow no matter the subject matter. I especially love shooting at night\, when shadows and color always delight and surprise me. I am now fortunate to be a member of a superb group of photographers\, The Guild at LightBox Photographic Gallery\, since 2021. \nJim Fitzgerald\nMy love affair with the trees and the natural world began at a young age. In my youth\, family trips to Yosemite\, Sequoia and the Oregon Coast helped set me on my artistic path which I follow today. I am a camera builder\, educator\, bookbinder and publisher and most importantly an environmentalist. \nBeing a west coast photographic artist\, I specialize in intimate natural landscapes and the images I create are all produced with my hand built large and ultra large format cameras. Each fine art hand made print is a one-of-a-kind interpretation of the scene I have captured on my large sheet of film. I print my work exclusively in carbon transfer\, a process perfected in 1864\, allowing me to produce unique relief prints of exceptional depth\, tone and archival permanence. \nAt present\, my works are presented as framed prints and in 2018 I began creating and publishing my own fine press collector edition books and portfolios. These are printed entirely in carbon transfer with both images and text bound into the editions\, a first of its kind in book presentation. \nMy prints are displayed without glass because I feel that my work is alive and needs to breathe. Furthermore\, the archival qualities of my printing process means that nothing in the environment will affect the longevity of the print. Displaying the prints without glass allows the viewer to walk into my work and become one with the scene. Walk around these intimate scenes and see the subtle characteristics of a finely crafted carbon print. \nJulie Moore\nJulie Moore has been creating her evocative style of art for just shy of a decade. Though she has no formal training in photography\, Julie has felt captivated by the visual arts throughout her life. She was first inspired to pick up a camera many years ago while visiting Ireland in the company of a shaman\, and she has been photographing the beauty of her world ever since. Perhaps surprisingly\, she creates her captivating art primarily with her iPhone\, visualizing\, creating and processing her images with the camera she carries in her pocket. She also creates some of her images with her Holga\, a medium-format film camera. Julie makes many of her prints using the polymer-photogravure process. Drawn to this alternative method of printmaking\, she also employs other complimentary techniques during the intaglio printing process\, such as chine-collé and à la poupée. About her work\, Julie has said: !My images share the way I see the world\, its soft tenderness and extravagant beauty\, its agonizing loss and exquisite aging.  I see the overlooked aspects of life and nature. There is small and precious beauty in the unseen\, a part of everyday life that can go missing because it is not prominent\, yet has much to teach us.” Julie’s work has been shown in a number of juried exhibitions in various galleries across the country. \nMichael Puff\nMichael Puff is a retired software architect at Stanford University and a former theater set designer. He now concentrates his energy on Fine Art Photography using 19th century printing processes. \nAlways involved in the visual arts\, Michael began by studying painting. As a young adult\, he worked as a scenic painter. During his university years\, while pursuing a degree in Theater Arts and Egyptian Archaeology\, he designed scenery winning several San Francisco Bay Area Theater Critics awards. \nHis favorite subjects for photography encompass the natural world\, the surreal and dancers. “I’m partial to images which are like theater\, innovative\, thought-provoking\, and play with reality and illusion.” The captured movement created by performers forms a foundation for many of my images. \nMichael has actively pursued photography as an art form since 2004. Beginning the spring of 2011\, through workshops and private session\, he has studied platinum/palladium printing with master printer Mark I. Nelson\, creator of the Precision Digital Negatives system. Michael immediately fell in love with the hand made printing process. Additionally\, he has attended workshops led by Greg Gorman\, Elizabeth Opalenik\, Diana Bloomfield\, and Brian Taylor. \nPuff’s work has been exhibited at the Ryan Gallery at Art Intersection\, Gilbert\,AZ; de Young Museum\, San Francisco\, CA; and LightBox Photographic Gallery\, Astoria\, OR. His work is included in the book Digital Negatives with QuadToneRIP published in 2021 by Focal Press. Puff counts Greg Gorman\, Irving Penn\, and Kenro Izu among his greatest artistic influences. \nA current list of exhibits can be found at: http://mpuff.com/about.html \nAngel O’Brien             \nAngel O’Brien is a poet and an experimental alt-process photographic artist based in Portland\, Oregon. Her inspiration comes from the palimpsest that is life and an important part of her creative practice is wandering the streets wherever she happens to be collecting images on film of the things that catch her eye. Angel’s studio is cluttered with boxes and bags of bits and baubles that she collects on these wanderings\, everything from a bent nail or fallen shopping list to a rusted brake pad and a headless barbie doll.  She is constantly pulling into her work the fragments of place and time that simultaneously divulge and obscure. Her creative process is all about recognising how a time or a place intertwines with a person in a way that creates a moment\, and then turning these into a visual memory. \nJust after her 22nd birthday\, Angel was in a terrible car accident that left her in a coma\, and most of her twenties were spent recuperating. This experience of literally being broken and put back together again\, of finding something worthy under the rubble can be seen as a theme in her life as an artist. Because of this\, Angel has always seen potential in what others might discard. To this end\, in 2007 she completed Metro’s Master Recycler program. In 2009\, her now defunct restaurant\, The Ladybug Organic Cafe\, was chosen for the BEST Award by the City of Portland most notably for sending less garbage to the landfill in a year than the average family does in a month\, despite serving 25\,000 customers in that time. \nWorking with her hands has always come naturally to Angel\, and she spent six years renovating old houses after attending architecture school at The Cooper Union in NYC. She has never stopped with house projects and is forever reusing\, giving away and saving things that have more life left in them. \nThis passion for being creative with “waste” extends very much to her art practice. Everything from saving all the development process wastewater to be responsibly discarded by Metro to avoid its polluting our rivers to soaking paper in leftover gum emulsion to create a unique substrate upon which to make other prints. Using historical photographic processes\, such as platinum-palladium\, gum-bichromate and cyanotype printing methods\, Angel creates the surrealist montages for which she is well known. Each of her one of a kind pieces is lovingly made by hand in her basement darkroom. Though she lives in Portland with her daughter\, she has a lifelong case of wanderlust and is often found in other parts of the universe. \nRachel Wolf\nRachel Wolf is a professional photographer who specializes in camera-less photography\, alternative/antique processes\, and creates immersive environments through light-based installations. Growing up in Alaska\, the presence and absence of light has been profound in Rachel’s life and work. The aurora borealis gave her a direct experience of light as both transcendent and embodied. Since then\, light has been Rachel’s muse\, and her work is devoted to exploring and expressing its multivalent qualities in the field of photography and beyond. Rachel loves to inspire others by sharing her passion for light and photography as a professor and speaker. She also believes in the power of art as a collaborative endeavour and its raising of community. She is a founding member of FO(u)RT Collective\, a multi-disciplinary arts collective that creates/curates exhibitions and events. Rachel has exhibited both nationally and internationally including Germany\, Hungary\, New York\, San Francisco\, Los Angeles\, Cincinnati\, Seattle\, and Portland. Her work is held in both public and private collections. Rachel earned her BA from Hampshire College and her MFA from Pacific Northwest College of Art\, and can be found playing in her darkroom in Portland\, OR. \n“While my images are photographs\, the principle method I use to create is without a camera. Camera-less photography consists of the family of grams: photograms\, chemigrams\, and luminograms. As my camera-less process blurs the distinctions between these grams I call my work liminography\, which is an exploration of the essence of the photographic process that consists of standing at the threshold (a liminal space) and turning light into matter. By releasing our expectations of how a photograph is created and what emerges as the image\, we are invited to consider what a photograph is\, must or can be.” \nLoren Nelson    \nIn 1972\, Loren Nelson picked up a Deardorff 4X5 view camera and began to organize the world on a four-by-five-inch piece of frosted glass. Nelson photographed with film and used a traditional darkroom to produce silver gelatin prints for over 40 years. But recently\, he has incorporated a digital workflow\, using 35mm digital cameras and an iPhone to more spontaneously respond to his surroundings\, and printing his images with archival pigment inks on fine-art papers. Portfolios include landscapes\, seascapes\, botanicals\, driftwood details\, and “Under Wraps”\, a series of plastic-wrapped buildings. \nLoren Nelson’s photographs are in numerous public and private collections\, including the Portland Art Museum; the Hallie Ford Museum of Art\, Salem\, OR; and the Florida Museum of Photographic Arts\, Tampa\, FL. He is represented by the Portland Art Museum/Rental Sales Gallery in Portland\, OR\, and LightBox Photographic Gallery in Astoria\, OR\, and has been published in View Camera\, LensWork\, B&W\, Analog Forever\, and Shots Magazines. \n“If you want to learn what someone fears losing\, watch what they photograph.”    ~Anonymous \nThis quote resonates with my approach to photographing\, especially in recent years\, as threats to our environment are becoming more and more apparent. For many years I have been content to make carefully composed photographs that celebrate the beauty of our natural world. But lately\, I feel an urgency to photograph elements of nature that are in observable danger of disappearing. Working with digital cameras has expanded my vision and inspired me to connect more intuitively to my environment. I am currently working with Willamette Partnership providing images for The Oak Accord\, a voluntary conservation agreement with landowners in the Willamette Valley\, and focusing on their commitment to preserving and restoring Oregon oak savannas. I am also contributing photographs for the Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition\, for use in helping to protect and preserve our magnificent coastline for future generations. \nSam Blair \nSam Blair has a B.A. degree in English from the University of Denver\, and a J.D. degree from Lewis and Clark College of Law. He was a civil litigator for 35 years\, with offices in Oregon and Hawaii. When practicing\, he was named one of “Americas Best Lawyers”. He also had a weekly column in Kauai’s newspaper\, The Garden Isle. He has taught as an Adjunct Professor of Law at Willamette University College of Law in Salem\, Or. \nHe is afflicted with wanderlust\, and retired from practicing Law to pursue his passion of travel and fine art photography. As a self taught photographer\, he has explored over 90 countries\, and is the recipient of numerous photography awards. His images have been exhibited in galleries in both the U.S. and Canada. His mission is to capture “the essence of things” in other cultures\, beaches\, and the fascinating homo sapien. \nHe is also a haiku poet. His poems have been published in multiple literary anthologies and journals. He teaches haiku poetry on behalf of the Writer’s Guild of Astoria\, in Astoria\, Ore. \nSam is a longtime student of Zen Buddhism\, and trained in the Japanese martial art of Aikido\, where he earned a Black Belt. He lives in a Pine forest fronting Kyle Lake in Warrenton Or.
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/meet-the-guild-at-lightbox-2023/
LOCATION:LightBox Photographic Gallery\, 1045 Marine Dr.\, Astoria\, OR\, 97103\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230120T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230120T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20230115T204140Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230115T204140Z
UID:2098-1674230400-1674241200@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Rich Bergeman\, More Than Meets the Eye
DESCRIPTION:Rich Bergeman\, More Than Meets the Eye \nJanuary 27 – March 17\, 2023\nOpening Reception Friday\, January 20\, 4-7pm \nUmpqua Valley Arts Center\n1624 West Harvard Ave.\, Roseburg\, OR 97471\nTuesday – Friday 10am-6pm\nuvarts.com\n541-672-2532 \n  \nAn exhibit of 25 recent works by Corvallis photographer Rich Bergeman explores the transformative effects of infrared light on a variety of Northwest landscapes\, including Oregon’s High Desert\, the Cascades\, the Central Coast\, and the Willamette Valley. \nThe show gets its title\, “More Than Meets the Eye\,” from the fact that the infrared spectrum lies outside the normal human visible light range. Infrared cameras record vegetation and other organic objects as glowing highlights\, and inorganic landscape features\, like water and blue sky\, as deep dark values. \n“Over the past 30 years I’ve been learning how to see and express myself with a variety of different camera types and processes\,” Bergeman said. “Infrared\, which I took up seven years ago\, is my current addiction. It has a hauntingly beautiful quality that can transform otherwise ordinary views of the land\, sea and sky into something magical.” \nA retired instructor of photography and journalism at Linn-Benton Community College in Albany\, OR\, Bergeman has been exhibiting his photography throughout the Northwest since the 1980s. Originally a large-format film photographer and darkroom printer in silver and platinum\, he currently works primarily with digital infrared cameras and archival pigment printers.
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/rich-bergeman-more-than-meets-the-eye-2/
LOCATION:Umpqua Valley Arts Center\, 1624 W. Harvard Ave.\, Roseburg\, OR\, 97471\, United States
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230203T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230203T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20230131T002212Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T002212Z
UID:2108-1675445400-1675452600@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:The PhotoZone Gallery group exhibition of photographs
DESCRIPTION:The PhotoZone Gallery group exhibition of photographs\n\nFebruary 1st through February 24th.\nOpening reception on first Friday February 3 beginning at 5:30pm. \nNew Zone Gallery\n110 E. 11th Street\nEugene\, Oregon\n541-683-0759\n12:00 to 6:00 pm 7 days/week\nphotozonegalleryoregon@gmail.com\nhttps://www.photozonegallery.com/\nOpen to the public \nViewers can see our show at the New Zone and the Emerald Art Center on line 24/7 at; photozonegallery.com \n 
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/the-photozone-gallery-group-exhibition-of-photographs/
LOCATION:New Zone Gallery\, 110 E 11th Ave\, Eugene\, OR\, 97401\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230203T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230203T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T133604
CREATED:20230122T192357Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230122T192357Z
UID:2102-1675447200-1675454400@lukeolsenphotography.com
SUMMARY:Todd Johnson in the Pushdot Studio Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Todd Johnson\, Meditations \nFeb 3rd\, 2023 – March 31st\, 2023\nOpening Reception: Feb 3rd\, 2023 6-8pm \nPushdot Studio\n2505 SE 11th Avenue\nSuite 104 – in the Ford Building\, enter on Division Street\nPortland\, OR 97202\n503.224.5925\nwww.pushdotstudio.com\nGallery Hours: Mon-Fri. 8:30am to 5:00pm\nFree admission \nMeditations is a series of pictures about experiencing and celebrating the visual language of photography. The work is focused on abstraction and uses a traditional structure of still life. The work is inspired by artistic practices such as painting and sculpture\, design and architecture. Other influences come from the history of avant-garde art such as Futurism and Surrealism\, Modernism and Minimalism. The philosophy of Meditations is a concept of going deeper into creativity and spiritual ritual. \nTodd Johnson is a conceptual and experimental photographer living and working in Portland\, Oregon. Johnson received his MFA in photography from the San Francisco Art Institute. Todd is the founder and director of Black Box Gallery. \nwww.toddjohnson.info
URL:https://lukeolsenphotography.com/event/todd-johnson-in-the-pushdot-studio-gallery/
LOCATION:Pushdot Studio\, 2505 SE 11th Avenue\, Portland\, OR\, 97202\, United States
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