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Blue Sky Gallery, also known as The Oregon Center for the Photographic Arts, is a non-profit exhibition space for contemporary photography in Portland, Oregon.Blue Sky Gallery is dedicated to public education, began by showing local artists and then slowly expanded to national and international artists.
The Bear Deluxe — art, literature, and environmental magazine; The Oregonian — daily newspaper of record containing some arts coverage; PLAZM — art and design magazine; PORT — dedicated visual art blog with daily art news, interviews and reviews; The Portland Mercury — weekly newspaper containing some arts coverage
The Portland location, sometimes called Hopscotch Portland, [8] opened in June 2023. [9] It has been described as an "immersive art experience", [8] an "immersive gallery space", [10] and an "unconventional art venue". [9] Hopscotch operates in a 23,000-square-food space in the Goat Blocks. [5] [11] There are fourteen installations, [8] including:
The article included photos of the area and a map, and profiled individual artists with studios in several of the warehouses, including photographer Hiroshi Iwaya, glass artist Liz Mapelli, sculptor Martin Eichinger, ceramic artist Geoffrey Pagen, and silkscreen printers Elizabeth Harris and Russ Mahler.
Oregon Holocaust Memorial (2004) Oregon Irish Famine Memorial; Passage (2014), Bill Will; Peace Chant (1984), Steve Gillman; People's Bike Library of Portland (2009), Brian Borrello and Rankin Renwick; Perpetuity (1970), Alexander von Svoboda; Pioneer Woman (1956), Frederic Littman; Pod (2002), Pete Beeman; Portland Immigrant Statue (2011), Jim ...
The Studio Building, in downtown Portland, Oregon, from the south – from across the intersection of 9th & Taylor. Date: 13 October 2019: Source: Own work: Author: Steve Morgan: Permission (Reusing this file) See below; user must attribute the photographer on any reuse. Other versions
Pages in category "Paintings in Portland, Oregon" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Alberta Arts District is a commercial district in Portland, Oregon which connects the Concordia, King and Vernon neighborhoods in the Northeast quadrant of the city. [1] The district centers on NE Alberta Street, and stretches approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km), from Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard to NE 33rd Avenue.