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The Charles F. Berg Building, also the Dolph Building is an art-deco building in downtown Portland, Oregon. It is one of the few examples of commercial use of art-deco in Portland. [3] The structure was built in 1902, and remodeled into a women's clothing store with its signature facade in 1930.
Completed in 1906, the Fine Arts Building has long been home to studios of Portland teaching musicians, artists and artisans. During the 1970s, the popular Alpha-Centauri book store operated in the ground level of the building. The vintage clothing store Ray's Ragtime was located on the building's ground floor from 1986 to 2016.
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:
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.
Fathom (stylized as FATHOM) is an underwater-themed, immersive art installation located in Portland, Oregon. [1] Launched in February 2024, the installation is set to run until February 2025. Fathom showcases the work of approximately 100 artists and volunteers and draws inspiration from other immersive art experiences such as Meow Wolf.
Tayler–Phipps Building (now a shoe store), Medford, 1909 and 1937 Vawter–Brophy Building, Medford, 1907 and 1940s Warner, Wortman & Gore Building, Medford, 1900 and 1927
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