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10 Years of knock-out independent cinema When Ali Came to Ireland West Coast Premiere Documentary

Cascade A&E October 2013

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Page 1: Cascade A&E October 2013

10 Years of knock-out in

dependent cinema

When Ali Came to IrelandWest Coast Premiere Documentary

Page 2: Cascade A&E October 2013

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Page 3: Cascade A&E October 2013

Notes From the PublisherPamela Hulse Andrews

It’s a tremendous amount of work to prepare for Burn-ing Man. The only thing you can buy to help you sur-vive in the middle of the Nevada desert is…ice (and

an ice coffee or tea at the one and only venue). You must provide your own shelter (tents, RVs, travel

trailers, trucks or vans). You definitely don’t want to sleep under the stars, as an intense windstorm can arrive with no notice. You need at least a gallon and a half of water a day to survive well along with food and clothing to fit the swelter-ing dry heat and the chilly nights on the playa.

And once there, don’t forget that you need to get home, they don’t sell gas, food or water at Burning Man. The en-tire ordeal is a lesson in survival, albeit you will be doing so with another 68,000 people who come together at the end of each August and build a city from scratch….party and reflect for eight days, and then leave no trace that they were ever there.

You must learn to survive without a shower or even wash-ing your hair, dirt rubbing into your skin and baby wipes be-coming your best friend for days.

The Burn can be a giving and spiritual experience, from shar-ing food and supplies with new friends from all over the world to honoring loved ones recently passed at the architecturally inspired Temple of Transition where chanting, chiming bells and tears are abundant.

While some photos project a circus-like party, the city is carefully laid out in an organized clock-like blue-print, and there are rules. You cannot sell, barter or trade anything. You give freely of what you have to share and you accept gifts readily (such as Burning Man jewelry, scarves to cover your face from the dust and cocktails, served openly in various funky tents, thumping art cars or double-decker contraptions).

The artistic creations of Burning Man from large wooden cutting-edge structures to intricately designed sculptures are strikingly noteworthy. At any moment you could encounter cup-cake cars, dragon-flaming vehicles, water fountains on wheels or a giant octopus with flames spewing from large propane tanks.

Off the Grid into a World of ArtInspired, Partied & Obliterated

The people you meet run the gamut of doctors, lawyers and other professionals to athletes (there is actually a mar-athon organized), college students and musicians.

My fellow Burners were particularly kind and generous (this attitude is really the center force of the event), many are talented artists and nearly everyone encountered pos-sessed a poignant free-spirit that lends itself to sweeping self expression and entrepreneurship.

It’s not an inexpensive experience with a ticket costing a minimum of $380 and all the supplies you need to survive.

Of course you could take that unapologetic $1,500 and go on a trip somewhere, but you will miss the thrill of burning restlessly inventive and awe-inspiring wood-based art to the ground. If you have any pyro in you at all,

you’ll be thrilled at the night time shenanigans of burning up the art, the man himself and the temple.

And all the while you will be completely off the grid. No cell, no email, no texting…the outside world will be wonder-ing what the hell you’re doing there…but the only way they will ever truly know is to show up as well.

You will spend leisurely time in the desolate desert on a dry

lake bed of cracked dusty earth building a temporary city, sharing everything from food and water to wine, music and trailer parts, viewing (or building) exquisite works of arts, taking part in diverse forms of celebration and then, before departing, burning most of it up and exit leaving no trace.

This is Burning Man. While rumors of drugs, sex and nudity abound, it’s not

paramount to the festival-like event. When you indulge closer you realize this is much more about a culture of art, self-expression, sharing, gifting and surviving the elements.

My simple lessons from Burning Man: interaction and generosity while promoting tolerance, compassion and kindness.

To see personal photos from Burning Man visit www.CascadeAE.com.

Pamela at Burning Man

“TheTowerTheatre”

Tickets & Info541-317-0700

TowerTheatre.org

GAELIC STORMNov. 6

LED ZEPPELIN FILMNov. 4

SHAUN OF THE DEADOct. 31

MANHATTAN TRANSFEROct. 29

ROLLING STONES FILMOct. 7

Coming to theT OW E R

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www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 1

Page 4: Cascade A&E October 2013

ProducersPamela Hulse Andrews

Renee Patrick

Jeff Martin

David Phillips

Marcee Hillman

Paige Barnes

Hayden Martin

Alec Martin

Allyson Hand

Linden Gross

High Desert Couriers

Publisher, Founder

A&E Editor, Art Director

VP Sales/Business Dev.

Advertising Executive

Production Director

Production Assistant

A&E Intern

A&E Intern

Editorial Intern

Feature Writer

Distribution

Cascade A&E is a publication of Cascade Publications Inc. It is locally owned by Pamela Hulse Andrews and Jeff Martin and published in Bend, Oregon on the last Friday of every month.

For editorial and advertising information call 541-388-5665. Send calendar and press releases to: A&E 404 NE Norton Ave., Bend OR 97701.

Cascade A&E is available for free all over Central Oregon or $25 for a year subscription. Subscriptions outside Central Oregon are $30 a year.

[email protected] • www.cascadeAE.com

Encore

Literary Word

Theatre/Film

Arts

Photo Pages Tin Pan Alley Art Caldera First Friday ArtWalk

Cover Story BendFilm

Call to Art

Editorial Advisory BoardSunriver Music Festival

Atelier 6000

Arts Central

Clearwater Gallery

2nd Street Theater

Tumalo Art Gallery

Art Consultant

B.E.A.T.

Tower Theatre

Lubbesmeyer Studio & Gallery

Lubbesmeyer Studio & Gallery

Pam Beezley

Pat Clark

Cate O’Hagan

Julia Rickards

Maralyn Thoma Dougherty

Susan Luckey Higdon

Billye Turner

Howard Schor

Ray Solley

Lori Lubbesmeyer

Lisa Lubbesmeyer

First Friday/Exhibits

Sunriver

Sisters

Warm Springs to Redmond

Dining

Music Reviews

Music, Dance & Festivals

Calendar

Workshops/Classes/New Perspectives

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P & W Railroad by Donald Yatomi

www.CascadeAE.com| October 20132

Page 5: Cascade A&E October 2013

Renee Patrick Cascade A&E Editor

Cultural Trust Celebrates Tax CreditOctober 1-8, the Oregon Cultural Trust will celebrate

another six years of the innovative cultural tax credit with the eight day week called Oregon Days of Cul-ture. This year’s celebration will be all about engagement. The Oregon Culture Field Guide, created last October as a way to highlight year-round cultural activities pro-vides the perfect opportunity to get out and experience Oregon culture. The Field Guide activities, which will showcase over 100 of the Trust’s 1,300+ cultural non-profit partners, were nominated by Oregonians last fall. www.culturaltrust.org.

Oregon Arts Commission Arts Summit The fifth annual Oregon Arts Summit, sponsored by

the Oregon Arts Commission, will convene Monday, October 7 at the Oregon Convention Center in Port-land. Over 400 attendees from across the state are ex-pected to gather for dialogues, discussions, networking and professional development. This year, the Arts Sum-mit occurs on the opening day of Design Week Portland.

With an agenda framed by the insights of local, re-gional and national thought leaders, the Arts Summit has established itself as the state’s premier annual Les-sons Learned gathering for the nonprofit arts and cultural community. The 2013 Summit will focus on Re-Thinking Engagement, looking at the ways arts organizations are engaging with new and diverse stakeholders through cre-ative placemaking, learning in and through the arts, and cultivating a new generation of leaders. www.regonline.com/orarts2013.

Janeanne A. Upp to Retire from High Desert Museum

Museum President Jane-anne A. Upp, who oversaw the High Desert Museum through a period of growth and financial stability, will leave the organization in De-cember 2013. Upp will retire after over 20 years in the mu-seum industry.

For the last six years, Upp has managed the programs and finances of the museum, balancing the budget and driving attendance growth to record levels in part through a dynamically changing ex-hibit schedule. She oversaw the retirement of the mu-seum’s long-term debt in 2013 and its recent strategic planning process that will direct the Museum through the next five years. A national search will be undertaken to find Upp’s replacement.

Local Artists in Watercolor ShowThe Watercolor Society of Oregon announced its

Autumn Events Heat Up

I love Central Oregon in the fall. Not only does the dusting of snow on the mountains hint at adventures

to come on the slopes of the Cascades, the deepening hues of the foliage intro-duce a richer palette to our landscape and the sharp bite in the air propel us towards steaming cups of tea and hearty porters, but Central Oregon’s cultural scene prac-tically hums with activity.

Enjoy movies? One of my favorite events of October has to be BendFilm. Between pouring over the schedule of films, rubbing elbows with filmmakers in line for coffee and running between the seven theatres over the four days, Bend-Film brings shocking, heart-breaking, inspiring and hilarious films to town and never fails to leave a lasting impression.

Fall is the start of the musical seasons for many organizations including High Desert Chamber Music (The Thies Con-sort at the Tower Theatre on October 3), Jazz at the Oxford ( Javon Jackson Band with special guest Les McCann on Oc-tober 25 and 26), Redmond Community Concert Association (Diane Lines on October 20 at Ridgeview High School) and the Central Oregon Symphony (2013 Young Artist Competition at Bend High School from October 19 – 21).

Do you like to escape to the stage dur-ing the turning of the seasons? Cascades Theatrical Company will finish their run of Dixie Swim Club on October 5, 2nd Street Theater hosts their inaugural Play-wrights Platform on October 5–6 and finishes the month with their dinner theatre production of Murder at the Mon-ster Bash October 25 – 26 and the Tower Theatre begins their Center Stage Series with Manhattan Transfer on October 29.

For a full listing of events this month, fire up the new CascadeAE App on your mobile device. Fall events are covered

from music to festivals, theatre to literature. Any event, every night.

e n c o r e

exhibition for Fall 2013 in Ban-don. Nationally-recognized water-color artist Linda Doll juried sev-en local watercolor artists into the Watercolor Society of Oregon’s Transparent Watercolor Exhibition. Cindy Briggs, Helen Brown, Sue Gomen-Honnell, Sandra Neary, Jacqueline Newbold, Linda Shel-ton and Chris Keylock-Williams will show their work in October. Eighty paintings were chosen for this show and will be published in a 28 page, color exhibition catalog. Of those, 20 are selected by the juror to receive awards and travel throughout the state.

Tower Celebrates 400,000th PatronSeptember 21

the nonprofit Tower Theatre Foundation surprised and re-warded its 400,000th attendee since the renovated movie house re-opened as a performing arts ven-ue in January 2004.

Katy and Tom Griffin of Bend entered the Tower as patrons number 399,999 and 400,000. Before the curtain raised on the sold-out Spa-malot performance, the Tower’s executive director, Ray Sol-ley, awarded the Griffins a mixed bag of prizes as the ushers set-off confetti poppers and blew noisemakers. Along with a Spamalot poster signed by the entire cast and crew of Stage Right Productions (pictured), the Griffins received gift certif-icates from ICE Fine Jewelry, 5 Fusion, 900 Wall, 2nd Street Theater and lifetime free beverages at the Tower’s concession stand. The Tower expects to cross the half-million patron threshold in late 2015.

Touch of Sun by Linda Shelton

Santorini Blues by Cindy Briggs

Sunday Afternoon by Jacqueline Newbold

Curb Appeal by Helen Brown

Beach Reflections by Sue Gomen Honnell

Ray Solley with Katy and Tom GriffinJaneanne A. Upp

3

Page 6: Cascade A&E October 2013

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Page 7: Cascade A&E October 2013

Literary Word

Erik Dolson of Sisters has published a novel about love, deception and the desire to be “known.” 

Chalice chronicles a year in the lives of Peter and Debra, who live in Port Cedar on Vincente Island in Puget Sound. Through a series of emails, the two help each other through small ups and downs, share pasts as they disagree about intimacy and love, then create fantasy worlds where it is easier to “be themselves” than it is in real life. 

Eventually their worlds collide, and each learns self-deception can be the most insidious lie of all.

“These two characters share many characteristics, even when they disagree, and may even mirror each other,” said Dolson. “I wanted to show how difficult it can be to separate ‘what’s real’ from what we want the most, or fear the most. And how we define the world that also defines us.”

While the book could be thought of as a story about love, Dolson cautions that it is not a romance. He sees the primary market for Chalice, classified as literary fiction, as “people who read books that invite them to think, maybe join book clubs to share what they’ve read.”

Dolson has lived in Central Oregon for more than 30 years where he helped raise his two daughters. He

Local Author Erik Dolson Publishes Novelpublished and edited the Nugget Newspaper in Sisters from 1982 until 2007, owns commercial real estate in downtown Bend, served on the Deschutes County Planning Commission, the Sisters School Board and the Oregon Board of Medical Examiners. After the girls were fledged and his ex-wife took over responsibility for the newspaper, he returned to writing fiction.

Many will recognize elements of Dolson’s life in the character of Peter, who also drives race cars and is, at times, a writer. But he says the book is not an autobiography.

“Though I included elements of my own life in both central characters, I did so because I could describe these events accurately and with passion. I paint scenes I see outside my window, but that does not mean anything is a self-portrait. The book grew out of my imagination, with chapters written to drive the story or carry the theme.”

Dolson graduated from Stanford University in 1973 with a degree in philosophy. He drifted around Europe and Asia for a couple of years, drove a forklift in Israel during one of their frequent wars, hid from soldiers on Cypress while trying to get to Turkey, was treated well in Afghanistan by those who eventually became the Tali-ban and looked for God in India.

Dolson returned home to San Fran-cisco then waited tables in Portland, Oregon for six years while trying with little success to get published.

Dolson currently splits his time be-tween Oregon and the San Juan Islands. In addition to Chalice, he is working on the fourth draft of All But Forgotten, a mystery set in the San Juans and Seat-tle, and a small book on Adult Attach-ment Disorder, It’s Nobody’s Fault.

www.erikdolson.com.

Erik Dolson

Dolson is reading from Chalice at Paulina Springs Books in Sisters at 6pm on Friday, October 4 and at Dudley’s

Bookshop Cafe in downtown Bend at 2pm on Sunday, Octo-ber 6. Chalice will be available at both bookstores, and online at popular outlets.

Chalice features Peter and Debra who meet on a ferry from Seattle to their respective homes on Vincente Island. Debra is a non-practicing lawyer who climbs mountains, runs mara-thons and raises her two children, mostly by herself, while her pilot husband is away. Peter is a real estate developer who writes an occasional opinion piece for the state-wide newspa-per, races cars and has two children of his own.

They begin to correspond via email. From their computers, they share their daily lives, learn of each other’s risky hobbies, then the riskier secrets. Finally they truly confide, but weave truth and fantasy in made-up worlds where there is only the illusion of safety in the quest to be “known.” 

A romantic battles a cynic over the meaning of love, and rights to “what’s real.” They discover that honesty and vulner-ability are two different things, and self-deception is the most insidious lie of all.

It’s time to reserve your tickets for The Nature of Words (NOW) 2013 literary festival. Visit the NOW website to buy tickets for the author readings, workshops, lectures and the author reception. In addition,

tickets can be reserved for free events, including the Rising Star Creative Writing Competition Awards Ceremony and the Sunday Author Reading and Open Mic. Tickets for the guest author readings (Friday, November 8) are available only at the Tower Theatre in Bend.

Guest Authors in Three Genres The roster of guest authors includes Lawson Inada, poet and former Oregon

Poet Laureate, who will receive the 2013 Caldera Award in recognition of his body of work; James Prosek, creative nonfiction; Karen Finneyfrock, slam poet and young adult fiction; Jim Lynch, fiction; Ellen Waterston, poet; and Emily Carr, poet and director of the MFA program in creative writing at OSU-Cascades.

Nature of Words Festival Tickets Available A New Saturday Author Reception FormatThe 2013 festival includes a fireside author reception

on Saturday, November 9, a more informal event than the gala author dinner of previous years. This format will give attendees more access to the guest authors in a mix-and-mingle setting at Aspen Hall in Bend. The guest authors will also present flash readings throughout the evening.

The four-day November festival features five authors in one night of readings in the Tower Theatre, one day of workshops and lectures on the OSU-Cas-cades and Central Oregon Community College campuses, an author reception with flash readings by guest authors at Aspen Hall in Bend and a Sunday guest author reading by Emily Carr and open mic for workshop participants and the community at the Bend Public Library. A multicultural lecture by Lawson Inada and the Rising Star Creative Writing Competition Awards Ceremony on Thursday, November 7 are the opening events of the festival.

www.thenatureofwords.org, 541-647-2233, Tower: 541-317-0700 or towertheatre.org. 

www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 5

Page 8: Cascade A&E October 2013

All classes are at SageBrushers,117 SW Roosevelt, Bend, OR

Don Zylius Watercolor WorkshopOctober 8 and October 9

10:00- 4:00pm Class is limited to ten studentsCost: $125 for two full days.

Don Zylius is an award-winning, renowned watercolor artist.Contact him at: 541-508-1055, [email protected]

Drop in Studio Classes with David KinkerMonday, October 7, 9:00am-Noon

Cost: $25 per sessionDavid has a background in various art mediums and

with working with artists at different levels of experience. You’re sure to learn something new.

For more information, contact David at [email protected]

Life Drawing and Painting Studio TimeA great opportunity to practice drawing and painting

using a live model. The artists who attend each session share the cost of the model, and while there is no class or

instructor, much is learned from each other. Dates: October 15, 29; November 12, 26 1:00-4:00pm

For more information, contact Nora Kolberg Miller, [email protected], 541-460-9053

Watercolor Wednesdays with Jennifer Ware-Kempcke

Watercolor artists will love this informal, informative group.

Cost is free to SageBrushers members, $5.00 non-member. Have fun trying new techniques in a relaxed atmosphere.

Every Wednesday, Sept. 18-Nov. 2010:00-2:00.

For more info, contact Jenniferat [email protected]

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LAWSON INADA POETRY; RECIPIENT, 2013 CALDERA AWARD; OREGON POET LAUREATE 2006-2010

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JAMES PROSEKCREATIVE NONFICTION

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www.CascadeAE.com| October 20136

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High DesertArt League

An AssociAtion ofProfessionAl Artists

Exhibiting atBroken Top Club

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Page 9: Cascade A&E October 2013

Literary Word

Red White Black, recently released by Prineville Au-thor Rick Steber, tells the

true story of the 1911 Pendleton Round-Up. Three men of different skin colors – Jackson Sundown, John Spain and George Fletcher – are brought together during the finals of the North-west Saddle Bronc Championship. What happened that Sep-tember day, the judges’ decision and the reac-tion of the crowd in the aftermath, forever changed the sport of rodeo, and the way the emerging West was to look at itself.

Jackson Sundown

Red White Black by Rick SteberA True Story of Race & Rodeo

was on the Nez Perce retreat, but rather than surrender at Bear Paw with his uncle, Chief Joseph, he escaped to Canada and lived with Sitting Bull. He returned to the United States as a fugitive, and even-tually, at age 53, Sundown whipped the cowboy at his own game and became the first man of color to win the All-Around title at the Pend-leton Round-Up.

John Spain was from white pioneering stock. When Buffalo Bill brought his Wild West show to Oregon in 1902, John and his brother were inspired to form a show of their own. They traveled the Northwest with a string of bucking horses and put on riding exhibitions. After a roping accident cost John his right hand, he had to learn to ride with his off-hand and made a comeback at the Pendleton Round-Up.

At the outbreak of World War One, the cowboys of Eastern Oregon formed their own cavalry unit, Troop D. George Fletcher, an African American, tried to join, but Jim Crow, the strict segregation of the races, was the law of the land and George was not allowed to join his peers. He was drafted into the segregated Army, served in France, was wounded and never again was able to compete in the sport of Rodeo.

Rick Steber

Rick Steber, who spent nearly four decades researching this story, has more than 30 titles under his belt and sales of over a million books. Rick is the only Oregon author to have won the prestigious Western Writers of America Spur Award – Best Western Novel. He is a keen observer of the challenging Ameri-can West and he articulates these changes in prose that are boldly de-scriptive, invigorating and creative. His writing has been compared to Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Steinbeck, McMurtry and Stegner.

[email protected].

SMART Art: Show, Sale & Social

Learning to read is one of the most important steps in a child’s life, laying the vital foundation for future knowl-edge and education. Each year, SMART reaches thou-

sands of Central Oregon children with vital one-on-one reading support and books for those who need them most.

At the SMART Art: Show, Sale and Social, more than $13,000 was raised from a live auction of works donated by local artists, raffle tickets and other activities adding excitement and fun to the evening.

SMART students entered their own pieces of art to be judged by volunteers Cindy Daubert, Marcee Hillman of Cascade A&E magazine and eight-year-old Emma Carpenter, with age categories ranging from zero to 18, plus a volunteer adult category. The Best in Show award was present to 11-year-old Victoria Tompkins from Cascade Middle School for her piece, Rockin’ My New School Shoes.

SMART volunteers read one-on-one with students weekly during the school year, modeling a love of reading and building children’s reading skills and self-confidence in a positive, child-driven environment.

www.getsmartoregon.org.Emma Carpenter awards Matthew for winning the art contest, 16-18 age-group.

Photo by Cindy D

aubert

www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 7

Page 10: Cascade A&E October 2013

BDF X_CAE.pdf 1 7/19/13 3:48 PM

Billye Turner, Art Consultant • 541 382 9398 • [email protected]

ART WALK FRANKLIN CROSSING October 4, 5-8PM

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Music by Cascade Chorale of COCCBillye TurnerFine Art ConsultantBillye TurnerFine Art Consultant

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SUNRIVER LODGE BETTY GRAY GALLERY

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20142014201420142014201420142014

2014201420142014201420142014201420142014201420142014

Casc

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www.CascadeAE.com| October 20138 PA I D FO R BY: T h e B e n d TA P S PAC - w w w. b e n d t a p s. co m

Bill Smith Old Mill District

Mike Hollern Brooks Resources

Amy Tykeson BendBroadband

Pamela Hulse Andrews Cascade Publications

Dave Rathbun Mt. Bachelor

Matt Williams Pine Ridge Inn

Erick Trachsel Phoenix Inn

Annie Goldner Hillside Inn Bed & Breakfast

Ben Perle Oxford Hotel Group

Brent McLean Brasada Ranch and Eagle Crest

Julio Ongpin Towneplace Suites

Scott Woods Greystone Hotels

Doug La Placa Visit Bend

Les Stiles Desch. County Sheriff (ret.)

Bruce Abernethy Former Bend Mayor

Kathie Eckman Former Bend Mayor

Jim Clinton Mayor of Bend

Jodie Barram Bend Mayor Pro Tem

Doug Knight Bend City Councilor

Sally Russell Bend City Councilor

Mark Capell Bend City Councilor

Oran Teater Former Bend Mayor Arts & Culture Alliance Cristy Lanfri

Art in Public PlacesJody Ward

Art in Public Places

Sue Hollern Art in Public Places

Ray Solley Tower Theatre

Arts, Beautification & Culture Commission

Frank Groundwater BendFilm

Kelly Cannon-Miller Deschutes Historical Society

Cate O’Hagan Arts Central

Amy Mentuck The Nature of Words

Rene Mitchell Scalehouse

Jade Mayer Brooks Resources

Chuck Arnold Downtown Bend Business Assoc.

Noelle Fredland Old Mill District

Teague Hatfield Footzone

Alan Dietrich Bendistillery

Dennis Oliphant Sun Country Tours

Dave Nissen Wanderlust Tours

Please Join us in Voting YES on M easure 9-94

*THE RATE INCREASES IN MEASURE 9-94 AND 9-96 ARE NOT ADDITIVE TO ONE ANOTHER. The 1.4% increase in Measure 9-94 applies only to hotels within the city limits of Bend. The 1% increase in Measure 9-96 applies only to hotels in the unincorporated areas of Deschutes County.

Measure 9-94 will boost Bend’s economy and vital public services with a 1.4% increase in the room tax guests pay to stay in Bend hotels, motels, and vacation rentals. These funds will supercharge Bend’s economy by supporting local businesses, the arts, police, firefighters, and tourism promotion. Bend’s current lodging tax rate is below many similar cities. Measure 9-94 will bring us up to par and will benefit every segment of our community.

TOURISM, ARTS & PUBLIC SAFETY B E N D T A P S . C O M

o n M E A S U R E 9 - 9 4 YES V O T E

Go to www.BendTAPS.com to learn more, make a donation, and see more supporters.

Page 11: Cascade A&E October 2013

Theatre & Flim

Rehearsals are now under way for Arsenic and Old Lace, which runs the weekend of October 26-28.

The show stars Nancy Foote as Aunt Martha and Rickie Gunn as Aunt Abby, the sweet aunts who use homemade elderberry wine to help lonely old men find their eternal reward ahead of schedule.

Sunriver Stars Presents Arsenic & Old LaceThe play is directed by Victoria Kristy-

Zalewski MMT.Kevin McVey plays Mortimer, Lauren

Kristy-Thompson plays Elaine and David Schmerber plays the ever-charging Teddy. The cast is rounded out by favorites Susan-Evans Inman as Rev. Harper, Jerry Inman as Mr. Gibbs, Ray Abanto as Einstein,

Janice Dost as Lt. Rooney and Lauren Dovolis Rix as O’Hara. Two new stars join the cast as well. Ron Pugh plays the evil Jonathan and Susan Flowerrer assists as stage manager.

A catered dinner will be served at the Sat-urday show October 26 ($25). Opening night, 7pm General tickets are $5. sunriverstars.org.

The rugged beauty of Central Oregon’s landscape will serve as a backdrop for the aptly titled Still Moon, an indepen-dent short film by director Kevin Huang who plans to cast

local talent. Inspired by science fiction author Ray Bradbury’s 1948 novel The

Martian Chronicles – and the Moon Be Still as Bright, the film will showcase the grandeur of Oregon’s panoramic vistas, lush wilderness, and crystalline lakes. Patricia West-Del Ruth, local oregon media and production government rep and creative consultant for indepen-dent filmmakers, will be facilitating the casting.

Still Moon is set in the mid 1800s and begins with the arrival of a railroad survey team to Central Oregon. Upon discovering a ravaged Native American campsite, one of the crew members is torn between continuing to chart the map for the railroads and fighting for what he believes in. Sparks Lake, Shevlin Park, Camp Sherman and the caves of Old China Hat Road will be extensively featured. The four-day production begins October 14.

Bend native Daniel Rink is the director of photography for Still Moon. A 2005 graduate of Bend Senior High School, Dan-iel interned at BendBroadband and Cascade Publications Inc. and earned his bachelors in film from Brooks Institute in Ventura, Cali-fornia. When the opportunity to work on Still Moon was offered, Rink suggested that the Central Oregon area was well suited for the movie’s setting.

Huang, who studied at the University of Kansas and is also a grad-uate of Brooks Institute, has worked on a number of short films, commercial specs and a music video as both a cinematographer and

Still Moon Film Shot Locally

camera operator. He wrote and directed Ai, a short film about ven-geance and honor set in Japan, and Sunset on Cabrillo Blvd, a tongue-in-cheek mockumentary that chronicles the exploits and subsequent downfall of a Hollywood child star.

This particular group of filmmakers has successfully collaborated on several short films: Huang’s Ai, which was nominated this year for the American Society of Cin-ematographers (ASC) student award, Sunset on Cabrillo Blvd, the 2013 winner of the 10-10-10 competition at the Santa Bar-bara International Film Festival in California, and For the Birds, a film by Tara Atashgah based on the true story of a 16-year-old Iranian girl executed after being convicted of adultery.

For the Birds will be screened at this year’s Bend Film Festival in October. Huang will submit Still Moon for screening at the 2014 Bend Film Festival and other film festivals around the country.

www.kevinhuangf ilms.com/still-moon, Patricia West-Del Ruth, 541-312-3098 or [email protected].

Inspired by science

fiction author Ray

Bradbury’s 1948 novel

The Martian Chronicles

– and the Moon Be

Still as Bright, the film

will showcase the

grandeur of Oregon’s

panoramic vistas,

lush wilderness,and

crystalline lakes.

Photo from w

ww

.kevinhuangfilms.com

9

Page 12: Cascade A&E October 2013

Redpoint Climbers Supply will host the Reel Rock Tour 8, a fundrais-ing event for nonprofit organizations, with screenings of four climb-ing and adventure films at Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century

Drive, next to GoodLife Brewing, Thursday, October 3 at 7pm (doors at 6pm). Reel Rock shows are spirited events where climbers and outdoor lov-

ers come together to celebrate the ultimate adventure in filmmaking. The films include The Sense about 43 year-old Yuji Hirayama’s quest to climb the spectacular Mount Kinabalu as a swan song to his career; Spice Girl involves Hazel Findlay, a young female climber, and climber Emily Har-rington tackling the massive untamed bigwalls of Taghia Gorge, Morroco. The third film is entitled High Tension: Ueli Steckand the Clash on Everest. It tells the story of Ueli Steck and Simone Moro, the strongest duo in alpin-ism, when they were attacked by a crowd of angry sherpas at Camp 2 while

Climbing & Adventure Films at Volcanic Theatre Pubattempting a cutting edge new route on the highest and most crowded mountain in the world.

The Stone Masters is the final screening of the evening and is a teaser clip of the upcoming documentary entitled Valley Uprising  that  focuses on the sex-drugs-n-rock era of Jim Bridwell and the Stonemasters and the counterculture climbing scene in Yosemite over the last 50 years. Reel Rock running time, not including intermission, is 95 minutes.

In addition to the screenings there will be raffles and prize give-aways in-cluding climbing and adventure gear like climbing ropes, alpine backpacks,and many other items.

www.reelrocktour.com. Advanced tickets are available at Redpoint Climbing at 8283 11th St., Terrebonne, VTP at 70 SW Century Drive, Bend or www.bendtick-et.com for $10. $15 at the door.    

Zombie Halloween at the TowerShaun of the Dead Comes to Life October 31

Celebrate Halloween in almost-drop-dead style when the Tower Theatre Foundation sinks its teeth into the side-splitting, head-smashing

zombie comedy Shaun of the Dead, Thursday, Octo-ber 31 at 7pm.

The 2004 cult classic (rated R) stars Nicholas Pegg (Mission Impossible, Star Trek) as Shaun, an aimless electronics salesman dealing with his roommate, girlfriend, parents – and an apocalyptic uprising of zombies. Simon Pegg (Hot Fuzz) plays Ed, Shaun’s

unemployed best friend.The BBC called Shaun of the Dead a “gloriously

gory horror comedy.” And novelist Stephen King declared it “a 10 on the fun meter!”

“We figured it’s about time to turn over the Tower to the walking dead,” said Ray Solley, ex-ecutive director of the theatre. “So come properly dressed and dripping in fake blood. Prizes will be awarded!”

541-317-0700 or TowerTheatre.org.Celebrate Halloween with Shaun of the Dead

Photo courtesy of the Tower

On October 5 at 7:30 pm and October 6 at 2pm, Stage Right Productions will present scenes from four new plays in the First Annual Playwrights Platform at

2nd Street Theater. Judges will vote to determine which play will be fully produced in May 2014.

In 2013, Stage Right and 2nd Street worked closely with three Central Oregon playwrights to produce and promote their works on the 2nd Street Theater stage. Two playwrights had no experience producing plays but all three had a good level of suc-cess, selling over 55 percent of capacity or more on average.

Stage Right established The Playwrights Platform, a compe-tition for amateur new works to be submitted and eventually produced. A panel consisting of five judges from Central Or-egon with professional writing or theatre production experience was chosen to read the submissions. A total of 12 quality works were submitted then four were chosen by the panel.

The four finalists are Home Cooking by Bob Woodward, Turn the Hourglass, Quickly by Kathleen Tomko, Blemished the Musical by Katelyn Alexander and Mark of Cain by Gary Earl Ross.

Tickets $5 www.2ndstreettheater.com, 220 NE Lafayette in Bend.

Four Finalists in Playwrights Platform

Bob Woodward hard at work

www.CascadeAE.com| October 201310

On Friday and Saturday Night, October 25-26 at 7pm Stage Right Productions/2nd Street Theater presents Murder at the Monster Bash. The evening will feature a

three course dinner and a show with a cost of $42. Seating for the dinner is limited to 30, but regular seats will be available which will include appetizers and show for $24. Both options include one complimentary beverage and prizes for the best costume.

It’s Halloween and Ivana Crump is holding her biggest fundraiser yet – a costume party to raise funds for HOWSA. What’s HOWSA? You’ll have to ask Ivana. And while it seemed like a pretty good idea at first, she’s having second-thoughts now that she’s found out what’s buried underneath the restaurant.

Her half-sisters, Iona and Isabella Crump, her ex-husband Conner and her husband Clark, all agree and wish this spooky night would end. But before the night is over, the coffin in the corner might turn out to be more than just a creepy decoration.

[email protected], 541-312-9626.

Stage Right Productions Halloween Dinner Theatre

Photo courtesy of 2nd Street

Page 13: Cascade A&E October 2013

Theatre & FlimLes Miserables, the award winning musical based

on the novel by Victor Hugo and seen by over 65 million people in 42 countries, will have its

Central Oregon premiere when it opens at the Tower Theatre, as part of its Marquee Series, on September 12, 2014 for a limited run of six performances. Les Miserables is being produced by Shore Thing Productions, the com-pany that staged 1776 in Concert with an all female cast at the Tower in 2012.

Les Miserables is an epic tale of passion and destruc-tion that presents a powerful affirmation of redemption and the human spirit. The story is set in 19th century France, a nation in the grip of revolution, and focuses on convict Jean Valjean, who is on the run while being hunted relentlessly for break-ing his parole by his adversary, police inspector Javert. Valjean has no choice but to fight for his life and sacrifice everything to honor the

Open Auditions Set for Les Miserables at The Tower Theatre

promises he has made and protect the people he loves.The production’s singers will be guided throughout re-

hearsals by Jason Stein and Nancy Engebretson, founders of Opera Bend, and accompanied at performances by a full orchestra conducted by Central Oregon Symphony Maestro, Michael Gesme. The performers will be di-rected, in an all new staging, by Mike Nowak, who will be assisted by Brad Ruder. Mike and Brad most recently directed The Bend Follies.

Michelle Mejaski, owner of the award winning Got-ta Dance Studio and Company, will oversee the pro-duction’s choreographed stage movement.

Appointments must be made for auditions on either November 4 or 5 and can be scheduled by calling 541-526-0233. All roles are open! Call backs for actors selected for final auditions will be held on November 12 from 6-10pm. www.shorethingproductions.com. 541-526-0233.

The Wild & Scenic Film Festival – one of the nation’s premiere environmental and adventure film fests – is coming to Bend on Oc-tober 3. A benefit for the Oregon Natural Desert Association and presented by E2 Solar, this year’s festival lineup takes the audience to Alaskan mountain peaks, through Japanese snowstorms and over coastal Californian raptor nesting grounds. It’s sure to rivet with

storytelling about the natural world that both educates and inspires. For the first time, two screenings will take place. The event also features refreshments and raffle prizes from local, environmentally minded businesses.

Thursday, October 3 at The Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Avenue. Matinee doors: 3:30pm, show: 4–6pm. Tickets: $6 presale online, $9 at door. Evening show doors: 7pm, show: 7:30–9:30pm. Tickets: $7 presale online, $10 at door. Tickets are on sale now at ONDA.org/wild&scenic. Contact: www.ONDA.org or 541-330-2638. Presenting sponsor: E2 Solar, national sponsors: Patagonia, Clif Bar, Sierra Nevada and Mother Jones. Local sponsors: Patagonia @ Bend, Stanley, Hydro Flask, Columbia Distributing, Nashelle and Pine Mountain Sports

THE FILMSThe Denali Experiment by Jimmy Chin, Renan Ozturk. www.camp4collective.comReturn Flight: Restoring the Bald Eagle to the Channel Islands by Kevin WhiteThe Gimp Monkeys by Fitz Cahall. www.ducttapethenbeer.comOne Beach by Jason Baffa, Farm League. www.barefootwine.comPublic Lands, Private Profits: Too Special To Drill by Pierre Kattar, Tom Kenworthy, Christy GoldfussSeasons: Winter by Brian WardThe Story of Change by Free Range Studios. www.storyofchange.orgUnicorn Sashimi by Ben Knight, Travis Rummel and Nick Waggoner. www.feltsoulmedia.comSong of the Spindle by Drew Christie. www.drewchristie.com

Wild & Scenic Film Festival: A Climate of Change

The Denali Experiment

Photos courtesy of ON

DA

Dixie Swim Club opened September 20 to begin CTC’s 35th year in Central Oregon. It is a milestone for CTC, for Bend, for our patrons and for the sustainability of community theatre everywhere said Gloria Anderson. Dixie Swim Club runs through October 5.

Coming up on the CTC calendar is the production of The Games Afoot or Holmes for the Holidays, a holiday comedy by Ken Ludwig. Liam O’Sruithean will be directing.

“As our season progresses, you may see some minor changes to our schedule, as we listen to our patrons, our actors, our directors and our volunteers,” reports Anderson. “So many people have come forth with terrific suggestions for the season and the theatre. Whenever we can implement an idea with the minimum amount of disruption...we will do so. We will constantly be fine tuning to make things better.”

Tickets: 541-389-0803 or [email protected], www.cascadestheatrical.org.

Cascades Theatrical Company Begins 35th Year

11

Page 14: Cascade A&E October 2013

Held at the home of event organizer Susan Harkness-Williams

1 Beech Lane, SunriverInfo: 541.788.2486

Saturday, Nov. 2, 10am to 6pm

One-of-a-kind finds including: Designer Jackets ~ Pottery ~ Fused Glass Gourd Art ~ Photography ~ JewelryAlpaca Finery ~ Handbags ~ PaintingMixed Media & more!

Meet more than a dozen local artists while enjoying light spirits, appetizers & shopping for holiday gift giving!

Free & open

to the public

A Benefit for Sara’s Project

Art Party

Directions: From Highway 97 take the 152/Cottonwood Road exit. Follow to Circle 10. Take second exit from circle - continuing on Cottonwood. Turn left on Mugho and an immediate left on Beech Lane. It’s the first house on the left.

Parking will be limited so please try to carpool.

Our 4th Year!

Held at the home of the event organizer Susan Harkness Williams1 Beech Lane, Sunriver. Info: 541.788.2486 ~ parking will be limited so please try and carpool ~

541-593-4151Sunriver Village - Building #25

Artist’s ReceptionSaturday Night • Dec. 21

with wine & hors d’oeuvres

Meet The ArtistSunday • Dec. 22

10am-4pm

Sarah GrahamThru December

Organic Textural Unique

www.CascadeAE.com| October 201312

Page 15: Cascade A&E October 2013

Artistic wizard Ken Scott brings his dreamy sculpted creations in steel to a new Imagination Gallery in downtown Sisters.

Like something out of Harry Potter’s wonderful world, Scott’s fanciful conjurings evoke metallic fixtures and home decor from another, more ro-mantic age, steeped in Victorian gothic flair and injected with one frighten-ingly wild imagination.

“It’s Captain Nemo meets Luke Skywalker,” Scott joyously exclaimed, wel-coming visitors to his extraordinary exhibition. “It’s where the past meets the future. My art is very difficult to label and pinpoint. Preserving and recognizing originality is something more people need to understand.”

Setting up his downtown gallery in the Hood Avenue spot vacated by Don-Terra Artworks, Scott hustles around his new building with boundless energy. Imagination Gallery is a captivating showcase of towering outdoor pavilions, ornate chandeliers, lyrical lamps and gleaming steel-cut wall landscapes.

“I’m a self-taught artist, never took a class in my life. Anytime I sell something I reinvest it right back into the art. My whole picture is about inspiration and motivation. I’ve found something that held my interest long enough to get good at it.”

Baptized into the beauty of Scott’s realm, observation becomes the prerequisite for graduating beyond his basic Art 101 curriculum.

“To observe is to grow,” he mused. “Inspiration gets you started but deadlines make you finish. No project is ever truly done.”

Scott has lived over in the Willamette Valley for 30 years, where he raised a family and managed a suc-cessful gallery.

“I’ve always wanted to be over here in Sisters. I love this country and decided I’d do anything to be here.”

During the recent Sis-ters Folk Festival, Scott entertained wary evening music lovers by lighting his rusted metal garden arch’s miniature blackened rhino, erected on the gal-lery’s side lawn.

But Scott’s metal me-nagerie is not restricted to lamps and garden art. Sprinkled on the green grass outside is a 12-foot-tall steepled gazebo, vintage tractor seat chairs, scrap metal firepits and an Amer-ican Eagle chariot crafted in his exuberant signature style.

Scott still resides in Leaburg, where his workshop and home are, presently commuting back and forth to the gallery in Sisters.

“I’ll transition my studio to Sisters, eventually having two workshops. I’ll have an outdoor workshop behind the gallery where people can observe the work and

Ken Scott’s Distinct Imaginationby JEFF SPRY Cascade A&E Feature Writer

Ken Scott

not disturb the artist.”Scott started out in tough circumstances, insurmountable for some

people, but when fate fortuitously tossed him into metal work it became the perfect therapy.

“I haven’t designed my life very well, but in this pursuit of art I’ve found the doors to many things I could have done, but keep returning to my metal work and art. These lamps are not just lamps, they’re jewelry for your home.”

In a sublime marriage made in Heaven, the difficult medium of metal perfectly meets Scott’s gruff, malleable personality.

“It’s aggressive and it’s hot and it’s brutal. I feel the metal has produced mettle in my life, bringing enlightenment and discipline.”

That precious elixir of discipline is front and center in Scott’s life, re-vealed in every glint and glimmer of his fiercely original work.

One of the premier pieces in his collection is a fairytale Cinderella char-iot made from hammered steel and further adorned with vintage farm implements and old scavenged auto parts.

This trailblazing artist plans to bring the impressive carriage to Sisters for his grand opening next Spring where it will be a prime feature and majestic fixture of Ken Scott’s Imagination Gallery.

The convoluted formula for what keeps the infernos of creative fire burning for Scott is a complicated one, best left to its own mystery.

“Creativity is all about showing up,” he said. “Inspiration is easy but sweat comes hard. Art is such an intensely personal endeavor, to do it my way and to have a communication with an audience. It’s about the love of my work and the love of life.”

222 West Hood Ave., Sisters, ww.kenscottsculptures.com, 541-912-0732.

Photos by Jeff Spry

Scott’s creations are Captain Nemo meets Luke Skywalker

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Arts

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1. The Day We All Looked Up by Kaycee Anseth in the Tin Pan Alley..2. The Peacock by Megan McGuiness. 3. Installation of Taylor Rose’s artwork. 4. MOsley WOtta at Caldera, 5. Kristen & Kyle Frick. 6. Joanne Sunnarborg & Molly Foerster. 7. Frank Groundwater & Rebecca Warner. 8. Willie Tykeson & Romy Mortenson. 9. Frank Deggendorpher & Becky Johnson. 10. Cara Weber.

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Tin Pan Ally Art Collection is Growing

Stories of Change at Caldera

Photos by Visit Bend

Photos by A&E Staff

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1. Featured Quilters at Quiltworks. 2. Esther Gray at Cowgirl Cash. 3. Billye Turner, Mary Josephson, Gregory Grenon & Cristina Acosta at Franklin Crossing. 4. Paint-a-thon at Crows Feet Com-mons. 5. Rebecca Charlton at Cowgirl Cash. 6. Jim Foster, Orit Schwartz, BendFilm supporter & Frank Groundwater at Cowgirl Cash. 7. Joanie Callen, Linda Swindle, Kim McClain & Sue Manley at Red Chair Gallery.

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First Friday ArtWalk Submitted photos

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a much smaller budget than a studio production and will be distributed by an independent company as well. Independent films can often be a way for filmmakers to explore their artistic vision and less main-stream subject matter.

Traditionally to screen the films, BendFilm would collect hundreds of DVDs, but just like the submission process which has been streamlined through the power of the in-ternet, in the past few years more and more filmmakers have been moving to digital uploads, which can save a lot of time and money. “It’s much easier to just send a link now,” Schwartz said.

Links and DVDs all add up to thousands of hours of view-ing, and thanks to the 35 se-lections committee members, all the films can be vetted and scored in a timely manner. The viewers are assigned to a cat-egory (narratives, documentaries, shorts, student shorts), and as they watch, will score the films on a 1-100 scale.

“The instructions I give them include: if you were to go see a movie, would you recommend it to your friend? Do you like it? Do you think it is good quality?” The viewers act as a segment of the BendFilm audience, with many returning year after year. “We try to get a good demographic [of screeners]. You may be watching a ton of films in a row, some will be great, but you will see some movies that aren’t very good.”

“The true reward in the process itself was watching all those films,” said Rachel Miller, a first time screener of documentaries. “There was so much talent, and I was one of the few people who got to see all those films, includ-ing some that might not have made it into the festival.”

Over three months, she screened 55 films. “I love watching documentaries and even when the process was over I was having withdraws not being able to go home and have cool films to watch.”

Once Miller and the screeners turned in their scores, Schwartz kept the

Deciding which movies will make a splash during the BendFilm each year can be a daunting task, if only for the sheer numbers of films which apply. For the 82 official selections in this year’s

line-up, the BendFilm selection committee members watched, evaluated and rated 450 films.

“We use Withoutabox.com, an industry-wide submission program for filmmakers,” explained Festival Director Orit Schwartz. “We get the ma-

jority of submissions for BendFilm through that base, but I also look for films, know filmmakers or go to other film festivals.

“Withoutabox is an amaz-ing system that started about a decade ago. It’s become al-most too easy to submit your film to a festival,” she said. Interested filmmakers fill out one form online and then can choose to submit among the thousands of festivals With-outabox manages.”

To keep the films current and exciting, BendFilm has specific submission guide-lines. A film needs to be a Central Oregon premier, meaning it can’t have been theatrically released before in the area. In addition it needs to have been produced and released within the last year. “We try not to program anything that you could stream online,” Schwartz explained. “Now a days it’s such a different [business] model, films go on video-on-demand before they show up in movie theaters.”

To be an independent film, the production must have been produced outside the big movie studios; many have

by RENEE PATRICK Cascade A&E Editor

BendFilm Selection Process Choosing the Best Among 450 Films

When Ali Came to Ireland captures the madcap week when legendary boxer Muhammad Ali went to fight in Ireland at the height of his career. Self proclaimed ‘World’s Strongest Publi-can’ Michael ‘Butty’ Sugrue pulled off a massive sporting coup in 1972 when he convinced Ali’s promoter that he was good for the $300k down-payment re-quired to bring Ali to Ireland and then largely paid for proceedings in beer-stained bank notes. The trip had a huge impact on those Ali met and, some say, on the man himself. It is claimed that his view of white people softened after experiencing the adulation of the Irish.

The film will show on Friday at the Tower Theatre, 12:30pm and Saturday at Regal Cinemas in the Old Mill Dis-trict, 8:30pm

For the Birds is inspired by a true story. The film follows a young Ira-nian girl as she is taken to the gal-lows to be wrongfully executed. It is in her last moments that she realizes her fate lies in the hands of the sur-rounding townspeople.

Local cinematographer Daniel Rink will be present along with Writer and Director Tara Atashgah during the festival. The film will be shown at the Tower Theatre on Friday at 3pm and on Saturday at Cascades Theatircal Company at 10am.

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tallies in a spreadsheet until it was time to decide which films to invite to the festival. “The number of films chosen for an official slot each year has ebbed and flowed, but the 82 official selec-tions this year is just about right,” she said.

The downside to receiving so many submissions are the hun-dreds of rejections Schwartz and her team send out. “The movie may be awesome but sometimes we just don’t have room…We want the programming to reach a wide audience, and one of the pieces of feedback I give is that we only have so many slots. [First] it has to be a great film, but we can’t run 17 snowboard-ing movies, we have to pick the ones that we think would work the best.”

Once the movies are chosen, the puzzle of scheduling them into four-day festival begins. “I try to rotate each movie in twice through so people have a couple of opportunities to catch the films,” Schwartz said. “Scheduling is like a Sudoku puzzle.”

BendFilm will have seven venues this year, some which hold hundreds of seats like the Tower Theatre, and some very intimate locations like the Tin Pan Theater with 28 seats. “We have some pretty rad films at the smaller venues,” Schwartz said. “It’s really about rotating each film as fairly as possible to get fair showings.”

The program will begin Thursday evening, October 10, and continue the next three days with films showing from mid -morning until late-night. “With a film festival, there is never a day time, you are just here to watch movies,” she said. Satur-day evening will be the awards ceremony, and Sunday’s pro-gramming will include the “Best Of ” films that won awards the night before.

Over half the films will be represented by filmmakers, writ-ers, directors and actors coming from all over the United States. Many come to the festival to take part in question and answer sessions and special film panels.

“I am wowed about everything this year…honestly we are re-ally excited about our selections of films and excited that these filmmakers are making such great films and attending the festival,” Schwartz finished.

www.bendfilm.org, [email protected], 541-388-3378.

Cowgirl Cash featuring artist Sara Carson from Blue DaffodilFeather’s Edge featuring artist Esther Gray

Foot Zone featuring artist Nathan GrayHot Box Betty TBA

John Paul Design featuring artists John & Amy Castaño

Life of the Party follows Jared Ran-dell through a whirlwind of emotional challenges. It’s an examination of the human condition and all of its flawed glory. A very personal, gritty look at what it takes to forgive the one person that may be the hardest...yourself. 

Writer and director Gordon James Asti is a Bend filmmaker along with Bend actor Caleb Neet. The two met performing at Cascades Theatrical Company. Asti has filmed four more movies in Hollywood including his first feature Sunday. Asti, producer J. Adam Moreno and actors Caleb Neet and Sarah McDermott will be present for the festival; Life of the Party will show Friday at Tin Pan Theater, 3:30pm and Saturday at McMenamins at 12:30pm.

Running Blind is the story of EJ Scott, who last year set out to run 12 marathons in 12 states for charity, all blindfolded! EJ suffers from a rare de-generative eye disease called Choroi-deremia, and several years ago, he was diagnosed as legally blind. EJ’s journey while running these marathons is an inspiring tale of strength overcoming adversity, and it’s ultimately a remind-er that one person can indeed make a difference, no matter the cause.

Director Ryan Suffern will be trav-eling from LA to attend the festival and will be present for a Q & A after each showing of his film. Thursday at Regal Cinemas in the Old Mill Dis-trict at 6pm, and Friday at McMe-namins, 5:30pm.

Local Artists in BendFilm's ArtWalk 10 Year Celebration

T he Downtown Bend Business Association, in collaboration with BendFilm, is sponsoring a window display competition highlighting the successful 10 years of the festival. The displays will be unveiled during the October 4 ArtWalk and will be on display throughout the festival weekend.

Check out the following storefronts and vote for your favorite display. Ballots available at all the participating locations. The ballots will be collected at the Liberty Theater during the ArtWalk. Those that participate in voting will be entered into a raffle for two BendFilm tickets.

Lulu’s featuring artist Leah CassidyNorth Soles featuring artist Lisa SipeRed Chair Gallery by their own artists

Rescue Consignment featuring Rescue staffTower Theatre TBA

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Career Opportunity Grant Oregon Arts Commission deadlines for online applica-tions for its Career Opportunity Grants for Oregon pro-fessional artists: December 2, April 7, 2014. Career Op-portunity Grants enable artists working in all disciplines to take advantage of unique opportunities to advance their careers. The grants, ranging up to $1,500, can fund artists’ participation in opportunities such as national and interna-tional exhibits, travel to trade fairs and film festivals, and attendance at conferences or workshops to expand artists’ professional knowledge base. Applications are accepted only online: www.oregonartscommission.org/grants/grants-for-individual-artists.  Vista Bonita Glass Art Studio and Gallery 222 W Hood St., Ste. B, Sisters. Looking for artists to con-sign in our approximately 800 square foot gallery, a work-ing glass art studio collocated with the gallery. Looking for: unique art, functional pottery, artistic pottery, metal art, glass art, fiber art. No paintings or photography at this time. We will jury your work to see if it fits into our vision. 55/45 split. Jerry 541-549-4527. Send pictures of your work to [email protected].

Arts in the Hospital Accepting submission for the St. Charles Cancer Center and Infusion Room walls. They are  in need of soothing, peaceful art. Linda F. Strunk, Coordinator Arts in the Hospital - [email protected].

Artists’ Gallery SunriverOur gallery is one of the most successful and popular co-op style galleries in Oregon. Our year-round customer base is excellent, sales have been fantastic and the member artists enjoy meeting their collectors and customers in addition to rubbing elbows with a great group of Central Oregon Artists. If you are a seasoned or emerging artist and would like to join our Gallery, and you can answer yes to all of the following: Are you a local or part time resident of Central Oregon, are you willing to work two days a month in the gallery, and can you commit to a six month contract and be willing to serve on one of several committees? If yes then we want you! We have two openings each for 2D and 3D artists. If you are interested in learning more please contact membership chair Vern Bartley, 541-771-9111 or [email protected], www.artistsgallerysunriver.com.

Volcanic Theatre Pub (VTP) Auditions/interviews, by appointment only, in search of local theatre, film  and music  talent to  help execute  the project with the highest artistic standard. VTP will be scheduling appointments for all actors, directors, writ-ers, designers, artists, lighting and sound operators, musi-cians and anyone else interested in getting involved with Bend’s newest unique theatrical venue located in the west-side Century Center. For-profit organization and all those involved will be compensated for their efforts. [email protected], 541-215-0516 or [email protected].

call to artists

If you’ve been trying to follow the debate over the future of Mirror Pond – and who hasn’t? – and have had trouble visualizing the various options, it might

help you to pay a visit to City Hall in the near future. The City of Bend’s Arts, Beautification and Culture

(ABC) Commission put out a call to Bend artists to tackle the theme Reflections on Mirror Pond - Past, Present, Future. Nine artists were selected for display in City Hall’s first floor corridor for six months starting October 4 at Bend City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street will be open from 5-8pm.

That evening, which is First Friday Art Walk, the art-ists will talk about their work from 6-7pm. The works are for sale, with all proceeds going to the artists. The October 4 gathering represents a change in policy for the ABC Commission. In the past, it had observed First Friday every month. Now, it will observe the custom twice yearly, on the occasion of the opening of a new show. Unlike commercial galleries, all of which exist to cre-ate profits, the ABC Commission is interested only in supporting the work of local artists for the benefit of the community.

One First Friday tradition will remain the same: refreshments will be served. If you miss the First Friday gathering, you can view the exhibit by visiting City Hall weekdays from 8am-5pm.

City Walls at City Hall is an arts initiative of the City of Bend Arts, Beautification & Culture Commis-sion continuing to make a difference by inspiring the community through art. www.bendoregon.gov/abc.

City Walls at City Hall Unveils New Exhibitby LEONARD GROSS for Cascade A&E

Painting by Sue Gomen Honnell

A program of the Oregon Arts Com-mission, Art in the Governor’s Office Program, has featured exhibitions of

the work of professional Oregon artists in the Governor’s historic ceremonial office in Salem since 1975. The commission invites knowl-edgeable curators from across the state of Or-egon to nominate up to five exceptional artists. The exhibits give participating artists the op-portunity to present their work in the stately atmosphere of the State Capitol. Considered a lifetime honor, a limited number of artists receive an invitation to exhibit in this special exhibition.

A nationally respected artist, master printmaker and arts educator with 40 years of experience, Pat Clark discovered Central Oregon and the unusual landscape over 25 year ago and chronicled her visits from the immensity of the Steen Mountains to the openness of the High Desert in her sketchbooks. Clark’s artwork, informed by her sketchbooks and experiences in the High Desert reflect and creatively express the essence of the terrain with secrets hidden in desert, stream, forest or rock strata.

Intermixing the appreciation of nature and landscape to create her artwork, Clark’s exhibition, Ledges and Edges transforms the powerful and often chaotic forces of nature into an ordered, functional design – it is a graphic interpretation of the extreme contrast in the High Desert region.

Clark has served as a vital member of the Central Oregon arts community since 2005 serving and promoting the arts. Founder of Atelier 6000 (A6), a nonprofit printmaking and book arts studio, Clark is committed to the advancement of printmaking and book arts as dynamic contemporary art forms. Since the doors opened in 2007, A6 has become a creative center for art education where diverse artists and learners are inspired through workshops and share in the interpretive experience of A6’s contem-porary presentation gallery.

Nominated in 2011, Patricia (Pat) Clark received an invitation to exhibit her work at the Governor’s office through December 5.

Pat Clark to Exhibit in the Governor’s Office

Pat ClarkOregon Elements by Pat Clark

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October 4 ArtWalk | Downtown Bend | Old Mill District

MAP KEY1. Atelier 6000 541-330-87592. Azillion Beads 541-617-88543. BendFilm Headquarters 541-388-33784. Desperado 541-749-99805. Franklin Crossing 541-382-93986. Karen Bandy Studio 541-388-01557. Lubbesmeyer Studio 541-330-08408. Red Chair Gallery 541-306-31769. Sage Custom Framing 541-382-588410. Tower Theatre 541-317-070011. Tumalo Art Co. 541-385-9144

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First FridayAll of the galleries/businesses listed in this section will be open for First Friday Art Walk from 5-8pm

Interested in getting on the map? Ask us how [email protected]

Featuring Works by

834 NW BROOKS STREET • BEND541-382-5884 • www.sageframing-gallery.com

Local Artists and Quality Framing

A Fine Art GAllery

ca r l i e l e a g j e l d t ra cy l e a g j e l dOpens during First Friday Gallery Walk October 45-9pm

In the heart of theOld Mill District Open Everyday541 385-9144 tumaloartco.com

103 NW Oregon Avenue Bend, OR 97701541.306.3176Open Every Daywww.redchairgallerybend.com

“Nature as Art”

Red Chair was voted My Favorite art walk destination on CascadeAE App in August

Bowl by Annie Dyer

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Alleda Real Estate25 NW Minnesota Ave., Ste. 1, 541-633-7590, www.alledarealestate.com.Local Bend artist Margi Legowik has created a suite of work she calls Tuscan Spring which is the result of a month in Italy and Spain this year.

Art in the Atrium at Franklin Crossing 550 NW Franklin Ave. Franklin Crossing celebrates First Friday with the COCC Fine Arts Faculty. Bill Hoppe, professor of drawing and painting and director of the Pinckney Gallery at COCC arranged the exhibition. Participating faculty members include Natasha Bacca, instructor of digital photography; Paul Alan Bennett, instructor of watercolor and design; Paula Bullwinkel, instructor of design and darkroom photography; Moe Carolin-Anderson, instructor of ceramics; Patricia Clark, instructor of printmaking and drawing; Bill Cra-vis, assistant professor of 3D design and sculpture; Karen Ellis, adjunct instructor of design, drawing and art 101; Dawn Emerson, instructor of drawing; Avlis Lumas, in-structor of massage therapy, guest faculty artist; Peter Meyer, adjunct instructor of ceramic and Margaret Rattle, instructor of ceramics. Cravis will exhibit an 11-foot high installation of Escalator Man, specially constructed in segments to occupy the Franklin Crossing escalator. Noi Thai serves wine and appetizers and the Cascade Chorale of COCC performs do-wop jazz sounds. C3 Events also presents fashion shows at 5:45, 6:30 and 7:15pm of designers of recycled clothing and fabric as featured in the downtown Fall Fest of Art Hop weekend. Billye Turner, art consultant, 541.382.9398, organizes Franklin Crossing exhibitions.

Atelier 6000 389 SW Scalehouse Ct., Ste. 120, 541-330-8759, www.atelier6000.com. Help us build Atelier 6000 one 2X4 at a time. Join us at the close of the October exhibi-tion and silent auction for a costume/halloween party on October 27. Dress in costume, or come as you are! Prizes for the best costumes and masks. Wine, beer tasting and a lot of auction fun!

Azillion Beads 910 Harriman St., Ste. 100, 541-617-8854.Larissa Stafford, featured bead artist.

Bend Premier Real Estate 550 NW Franklin Ave., Ste. 108, 541-323-2779.Featuring Bend traveling photographer Sandra Steele Kunz. With brilliant colors, mov-ing work and grace, every photograph is an experience in realism; none of Sandy’s pic-tures are posed. Spontaneous, they reveal beauty from around the world.

Bluebird Coffee CompanyOn Bond in Franklin Crossing Building (corner of Franklin and Bond), 541-330-2100.Featuring Birds & Bees, a display of avian and apian mixed media art by Bend artists Tara Doherty and Lloyd McMullen. Tara, (the bug woman), obsessively explores things of metamorphosis thru her painting of colorful and precocious insects. Lloyd uses recycled and found objects to create two and three dimensional narrative paintings.

City Walls at City Hall 710 NW Wall St., 541-388-5505, www.bendoregon.gov/abc.City Hall new exhibit Reflections on Mirror Pond - Past, Present, Future. Nine artists were selected for display in City Hall’s first floor corridor for six months.

Cowgirl Cash 924 NW Brooks St., 541-678-5162. BendFilm window display contest, featuring artist Sara Carson from Blue Daffodil.

Crow’s Feet Commons 875 NW Brooks St., 541-728-0066, www.facebook.com/CrowsFeetCommons. A not-so-forgotten but recently rejuvenated part of “old town” Bend’s rich history.

Desperado Contemporary & Nostalgic Western Store 330 SW Powerhouse, Old Mill District. 541-749-9980. Featuring Bend artist Barbara Slater who  is inspired by the “out west” way of life and cowboy culture with a touch of city glitz. Painting oils with energy and spirit, this artist’s pigmentation is rich and succulent, while her brushwork is bold and responsive. Barbara continues her studies with different genres, painting still-lifes, florals, landscapes and animals. Animals are her present focus with images of vibrant roosters, horses, cows and other barnyard residents. Painting these ru-ral inhabitants with love and respect, Barbara gives each animal an attitude and personality. Slater is a member of Oil Painters of America, California Art Club, American Women Artists (AWA) and The High Desert Art League. www.bar-baraslater.com.

Dry Canyon Forge37 NW Greenwood, 541-382-2725, www.drycanyonforge.com.Open First Friday, 6-10pm. Studio features contemporary iron work using traditional forged and joined metals. There will be blacksmith demonstrations and live music. Guest artist is clay sculptor Aissaree Seemann (Gam) from Gomalamadingdong.

Feather’s Edge Finery113 NW Minnesota Ave., 541-306-3162, www.thefeathersedge.com.Featuring Bend artist Caroline Cornell showing her dreamy paintings of local landscapes and bird images. Local artist Euijin Esther Gray has designed a window installation in celebration BendFilm and First Friday.

Foot Zone845 NW Wall St., 541-317-3568.Artist Nathan Gray window display for BendFilm 10 year anniversary.

Hot Box Betty903 NW Wall St., 541-383-0050.Featuring a local artist window display for BendFilm 10 year anniversary.

Jeffrey Murray Photography118 NW Minnesota Ave. 925-389-0610, www.jeffreymurrayphotography.com. Landscape photography by Bend photographer Jeffrey Murray, from local and national locations.

John Paul Designs Custom Jewelry + Signature Series1006 NW Bond St., www.johnpauldesigns.com. Specializing in unique, one of a kind wedding and engagement rings in a variety of metals and window display for BendFilm 10 year anniversary with John & Amy Castaño.

Karen Bandy Design Jeweler 25 NW Minnesota Ave., Ste. 5, 541-388-0155, www.karenbandy.com. Tucked between Thump coffee and Alleda Real Estate, Karen Bandy is not easy to find, but well worth the effort. This month featuring Field Guide and Cocktail Earrings. Karen is Central Oregon’s only national/international award-winning jewelry designer and has been specializing in custom design in downtown Bend since 1987. Her designs are bold, fun and always very wearable. Karen Bandy is also an abstract acrylic painter whose work can best be described as colorful and textural contemporary fine art. When there is an actual subject, horses and wild animals are often depicted. Open Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, 11:30-5pm and by appointment, and First Fridays 5-9pm.

Lubbesmeyer Studio & Gallery Old Mill District, second story loft, 541-330-0840, www.lubbesmeyer.com. The Lubbesmeyer twins offer a range of work created in fiber and paint. Through the twins’ collaborative process, they distill literal imagery into vivid blocks of color and texture, creating an abstracted view of their surroundings. The working studio and gal-lery is open Tuesday thru Saturday, and the Lubbesmeyers welcome your visit. Upcycled Fashion Popup at Lubbesmeyer Studio & Gallery. The one-day found art and fashion event, featuring the latest Castaways clothing and jewelry by Myrna Massey Brooks, will be Saturday, October 26, 2–6pm. Her work is inspired by her sense of place and nature. She searches for the materials for her mixed media art pieces in the desert, scavenging weathered materials that embody the essence of time passed. These materials are crafted into sculptural totemic pieces that suggest the history of those materials. Castaways handcrafted one-of-a-kind fashions are made from knit castoffs that have been meticulously deconstructed then revamped into completely original, affordably priced wearable art.

LuLu’s Boutique150 Minnesota Ave. in downtown Bend.Featuring local artists Linda Lee Miller and Su Skjersaa Lukinbeal thru December. Art representing women’s lives, fashions and their inner and outer experiences will be represented in abstract and impressionistic mixed media im-ages. This art exhibit will change monthly with thematic variations. Miller and Skjersaa Lukinbeal showcase several paintings focusing on water, the mythological symbol of woman and the recognition of its elemental, vital nature. Artist Leah Cassidy window display for BendFilm 10 year anniversary.

Mary Medrano Gallery 25 NW Minnesota Ave., Ste. 12 (above Thump Coffee), 408-250-2732, www.marymedrano.com.Mary Medrano is a full-time artist living and working in Bend with a studio downtown overlooking Tin Pan Alley. She makes pet portraits and expressive animal paintings.

Mockingbird Gallery 869 NW Wall St., 541-388-2107, www.mockingbird-gallery.com. Listen to the jazz stylings of Rich Hurdle and Friends and enjoy an evening of sensational art. Dan Chen and Wil-liam Pickerd will be collaborating once again for their show titled Shapes. These two Eugene area artists are joining a turned alabaster vessel with a cast bronze Calla Lily finial. William will unveil one of his latest creative endeavors which will include a vessel trimmed with a miniature Pueblo village made from semi-precious stones of many colors. When Chinese artist Chen immigrated to the United States in 1984, he brought years of artistic skills from his men-

All of the galleries/businesses listed in this section will be open for First Friday Art Walk from 5-8pm

Elevator Man InstallationConstruction by Bill Cravis

Circle is One by Kim Kimmerling

I’m Special by Barbara Slater

Earrings by Karen Bandy

Trunk show October 26

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torships with master artists. His solid foundation in many art forms has allowed him to perfect his own particular methods. His art is a marriage of the finest qualities of eastern and western artistic approaches. Pickerd is a sculptor who uses a lathe to transform chunks of alabaster and wood into vessel shapes. The translucent stone responds well to tools and yields a form that can be both earthy and elegant. The material offers an infinite range of colors and patterns. William orders hundreds of pounds of alabaster from Volterra, Italy, and from digs in Colorado and Southern Utah. The vessels are turned very thin to expose the wonderful translucency of the natural material. The bowls are rimmed in exotic woods such as African Blackwood, Bloodwood and Purple Heart.

North Soles 800 NW Wall St., 541-312-8566.Artist Lisa Sipe window display for BendFilm 10 year anniversary.

Art at the Oxford The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota.First Friday with Visions Of Hope, paintings sold to benefit orphans in the Otino-Waa Children’s Village, Uganda. Unique among Otina-Waa’s benefactors are inmates of the Snake River Correctional Institution of Northeastern Oregon. The artwork is from the Snake River inmates, many of whom will never be released. Retired Bend school-teachers Bob and Carol Higgins, founders of the village, will be present. In addition, Ugandan guests, Patricia Anyango, an orphan and former prisoner of the LRA rebels, now a school graduate and student leader, and Pastor Dickens Anyati, administrator of Otino-Waa, will also attend. 260 children live at Otino-Waa supported entirely from private donations. [email protected]. Billye Turner, art consultant, curates the Oxford dis-plays with info at 503-780-2828 (cell) or [email protected].

Patagonia @ Bend 1000 NW Wall St., Ste. 101, 541-382-6694, http://patagoniabend.com. Photography by Mike Putnam. www.mikeputnamphoto.com.

Paul Scott Gallery869 NW Wall St., Ste. 104, 541-330-6000, www.paulscottfineart.com.New works by local artist Donald Yatomi thru October 29. Donald is an oil painter whose paintings know no boundaries in their sub-ject matters or the hints of commentary they subtlety suggest about modern life in our cities.

QuiltWorks 926 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-728-0527. The featured quilter will be Jan Tetzlaff and the group exhibit will be the Undercover Quilters with quilts from the novel The Language of Flowers. Thru October.

Red Chair Gallery 103 NW Oregon Ave., 541-306-3176, www.red-chairgallerybend.com. Nature as Art features Annie Dyer, Ian Herdell, Laura Childers and Lise Hoffman-McCabe. Dyer’s pottery must be looked at twice to be sure if it is rock or is it wood? That is Dyer’s intention as she gracefully blends texture and rich color to create elaborate pieces from amor-phous white clay.  Upon closer inspection the material becomes more evident but continues to invite further confirmation through touch. Ian Herdell and Laura Childers are the husband and wife team that comprise the custom woodshop know as Sierra Woodcraft, which brings you sustainably made, one of a kind wood-work. For each project, they strive to use as much reclaimed and sustainably sourced wood as possible. Each piece of wood is carefully selected for beauti-ful grain or unique features, hand milled and naturally cured outdoors. Lise Hoffman-McCabe is an award winning plein air pastel artist. Her paintings show the viewer her vision of the beauty that is Central Oregon and the Pacific Northwest. Red Chair artists will be constructing a window display for BendFilm’s 10 year anniverasary.

Rescue Consignment910 NW Harriman St., 541-312-2279.Featuring a local artist window display for BendFilm 10 year anniversary.

Sage Custom Framing 834 NW Brooks St., 541-382-5884, www.sagefram-ing-gallery.com. A selection of paintings done by the Plein Air Painters of Oregon. This group also known as PAPO for short, was established here in Central Oregon in 2002, by local artists wishing to share their love of painting out-of-doors. Plein air, the art of representing observed effects of outdoor light and atmosphere on the spot can be quite challenging. The magical light and mood one finds compelling to paint, may only last a few moments. In addition, sun, wind, rain, snow and a host of insects can add to the challenge.Landscapes from many familiar local spots will be displayed as well as scenes from all over the state. Members use a wide variety of mediums and styles of painting. PAPO meets for frequent paint-outs during the warmer months of the year.

Silverado 1001 Wall St., 541-322-8792, www.silveradogallery.com.Joseph Christensen of JC Lapidary. Oregon artist handcrafting beautiful jewelry featuring many stones from the Northwest.

The Silver Otter 706 SW Industrial Way, Ste. 100, Bend. 541-241-7818. www.thesilverotter.com. Exhibiting a collection of locally made art and handmade crafts from all over the world.

Strictly Organic Coffee 6 SW Bond St. Landscape photographer Stuart L. Gordon will be exhibiting prints of his recent images taken in British Columbia, Oregon and the Eastern Sierra Nevada thru November. Gordon, who has participated in many exhibits and First Friday ArtWalks in Central Oregon, travels extensively through-out the western United States in search of stunning landscape subjects for his camera. All the matted and framed prints in the Strictly Organic exhibit are made with archival inks and will be on sale thru November. The prints are available in a variety of sizes, both framed and unframed at his website: www.chasingthelight.zenfolio.com. Included in the exhibit are two award-winning images, First Snow and Sunset Light on McWay Falls. The first image, taken on a November morning at Sparks Lake, Oregon, was selected one of a dozen photographs singled out for praise in a worldwide competition judged by celebrated nature pho tographer Art Wolfe in 2013. The second image, taken along the Big Sur coast, was a winner in a 2012 photography contest sponsored by the PhotoShelter web-hosting site. A dozen of Gordon’s work images were selected in 2013 as part of a digital gallery exhibit celebrat ing Oregon spon-sored by Photolucida, a non-profit national organization that promotes the art of pho tography. In November, Gordon’s work will be part of a collective exhibit at Agora Gallery in New York City’s Chelsea District. Gordon also produces an annual calendar of Central Oregon images, sales of which benefits the Environmental Center. tbd advertising1000 NW Wall St.Caldera exhibit 2011-13 AiR Alumni who were The Ford Family Foundation Golden Spot Awardees. Thru October. A diversity of mediums, creativity and thinking will be on display by artists from Oregon. They include: Ryan LaBar, sculpture, Enterprise; Crystal Schenk, sculpture, Portland; Craig Goodworth, mixed media, Portland; Jeff Leake, painting, Portland; Roger Peet, printmaking, Portland; Terry Gloeckler, mixed media, Bend; Andy Myers, drawing, Corvallis; Cynthia Lahti, sculpture, drawing and painting, Portland; Christine Bourdette, drawing, Port-land; Whitney Nye, mixed media, Portland and Shelby Davis, sculpture, Portland.The opening will celebrate the artists along with Caldera’s recent award of its second Golden Spot grant from The Ford Family Foundation including $40,000 for 2013–15. $20,000 of the grant will be awarded to Oregon visual artists who are accepted as residents to Caldera.

Tower Theatre835 NW Wall St., 541-317-0700.Featuring a local artist window display for BendFilm 10 year anniversary.

Townshend’s Bend Teahouse835 NW Bond St., Bend, 541-312-2001.Featuring Aleshia Lynnelle whose artwork is purposefully untitled. “The art flows from space to canvas through me - but skips the conscious mind and all thought process until the final fine-tuning.”

Tumalo Art Company Old Mill District, 450 SW Powerhouse Dr. Ste. 407, 541-385-9144, www.tumaloartco.com. Mother daughter artists, Carlie Leagjeld and Tracy Leagjeld, present their views of the world in dif-ferent mediums and sensibilities. A lifetime Bend resident recently relocated to Portland, Tracy is a printmaker working in monotype. Using rollers and oil-based inks she creates layered, subtly tex-tured landscapes as well as architectural forms and seascapes with surfers. “I am not as much concerned with capturing correct shape and color, as striving to create images that allow the viewer to put themselves into the painting and feel the spirit of the place,” says Tracy. Carlie, who grew up in Bend, developed the idea of brushing paint on glass then peeling off the paint and transferring the pieces to waxed paper in graduate school at American University in Washington DC. Arranging the paint pieces on board or paper, layers some for a three-dimensional effect and places others into patterns that suggest leaves, vines or other organic materials. Some arrangements seem to be variegated planets or moons.

Velvet 805 NW Wall St. 541-728-0303 Artist KP uses ink- mainly sharpie- to create portraits of iconic artists in American culture. She draws abstract im-ages, mostly of trees. Her main source of canvas is drywall. Dj JBryan Barisone of Portland will provide music at First Friday. Kevin Prather, Random Presents, 541-228-2568.

Submit your First Friday info by October 18 for the November issue. All exhibits will be on the CascadeAE Mobile App.

CASCADE

P & W Railroad by Donald Yatomi

Bowl by Annie Dyer

Painting by Lise Hoffman-McCabe

Stool by Sierra Woodcraft

Light House by Ron RaaschCline Falls by Nancy Misek

Sparks Lake Dawn by Stuart Gordon

Windy Ridge by Tracy Leagjeld Untitled lll by Carlie Leagjeld

Artwork from the Caldera exhibit

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Centra l Oregon October Exh ib i t sRodes-Smithey Studio19007 Innes Market Rd., 541-280-5635, www.rodes-smithey.com.Showing mixed media, paintings, metalwork and sculpture from Randy and Holly Smithey. An Open Studio will be held October 5-6, 11am-5pm. Visits also welcome with appointment.

St. Charles Medical Center-Bend 2500 NE Neff Rd., 541-382-4321, www.scmc.org.The High Desert Art League thru December. Interpretations: Working in a Series featuring works by the 12 members of HDAL. These works include paintings in watercolor, oil, acrylic and encaustic, solvent transfer mixed media and photography. The exhibit is located on the second floor of the hos-pital near the cafeteria.

The Great Frame Up 541-383-2676, [email protected] international artist Jennifer Lake. A staple in the Pacific Northwest art scene for 30 years, Central Oregon resident Lake is a local treasure. A wide selection of Jennifer Lake prints, limited edi-tions, giclees and greeting cards as well as originals and canvas transfers will be availbale. The Great Frame Up will be the exclusive dealer for future special projects Jennifer is currently developing for the Northwest.

Wine Shop and Beer Tasting Bar 55 NW Minnesota Ave., 541-389-2884, www.thewineshopbend.com.Featuring Brenda Reid Irwin thru October. [email protected].

La PineLa Pine Public Library 16425 First St., La Pine, 541-312-1090, www.dpls.lib.or.us. Kris Moore, watercolorist, enjoys the use of rich colors and the fluidity of the paint as “I try to capture the beauty around me. I use photographs as inspiration.”

Madras / Warm SpringsArt Adventure Gallery 185 SE Fifth St. 541- 475-7701. www.artadventuregallery.com. Color the World, Two Artists One Show. Jeanie Smith and Jenny Johnpoll. Open-ing reception first Thursday, October 3, 5:30-7pm. Music provided by John Cur-nutt. Artists will be present to talk about their work.  

The Museum at Warm Springs 2189 U.S. 26, 541-553-3331, www.museumatwarmsprings.org. Artifacts from The Museum’s collections. Museum is open seven days a week, 9am-5pm. Selection of one-of-a-kind art, bead work and baskets hand crafted by talented and creative local artists are also available in the gift shop.

PrinevilleA.R. Bowman Memorial Museum 246 N Main St., Prineville. 541-447-3715, bowmanmuseum.org. Open Tuesday thru Friday, 10am-5pm, Saturdays 11am-4pm. Ponderosa Pine Capital of the World ex-hibit anchors the new exhibit space in the expanded museum. It includes The Woods and The Mill, two full size areas that highlight the workers, tools and history of the trade. Native American exhibit brings history of the people and land of Crook County. The 1910 bank building is always filled with historical artifacts for viewing.

RedmondBritz Beads 249 NW Sixth St., 541-548-4649. Sandi’s bead jewelry and ongoing display of Gilbert Shepherd’s large format acrylic paintings.

BendArt by Knight 1665 SE Ramsay Rd., 541-633-7488, www.artbyknight.com. Featuring oil paintings by Laurel Knight and bronze sculptures by Steven L. Knight.

Bend Library 601 NW Wall St., 541-389-9846.  Presenting Community, thru November 4, on display upstairs. Images in any wall hanging medium of what “community” means to you: the buildings, the setting, regional activities, landscape, people, etc.”

Broken Top Club 62000 Broken Top Dr., 541-383-0868, www.brokentop.com. Barbara Slater, who has been creating oil paintings for the past four decades, is well known for her portraits of horses, pets, chickens and cows that come to life on canvas, like her paint-ing Wool on Wool. Her life-like images portray warmth, and her landscapes and floral still life portraits are refreshing and dramatic. She says, “I paint what I love. I try to paint passion-ate paintings…. not just workable paintings, I feel a heart-felt connection to my work. Finding out what skills I have and what skills I need to improve is a big part of my journey. Taking classes from some of the best artists out there has become an ongoing part of this goal.”Barbara, who is a member of Bend’s High Desert Art League, will be displaying her artwork with the 12 member group in October at the Broken Top Clubhouse, and also in a solo show at Des-perado in the Old Mill to benefit the Equine Center. For the past five years she has been juried into Richard Schmids’ annual September Art Show in Colorado and recently exhibited her art at the prestigious Scottsdale Art School juried students’ Best and the Brightest art show. Her work is frequently featured on the cover of Ranch and Country magazine. She is also a member of the Oil Painters of America, California Art Club, and American Women Artists. www.barbaraslater.com and www.highdesertartleague.com. 

Christian Heeb Gallery at the Cascade Center of Photography 390 SW Columbia St., Ste. 110, 541-241-2266, [email protected], www.ccophoto.com.

Circle of Friends Art & Academy (formerly TAW Gallery)19889 Eight St., 541-706-9025, www.tawgallery.com.Representing over 70 unique artists from silk and felt to crystal and stone, oils and watercolors to glass and wood. New owner Jae Yost is creating a whole new experience.

COCC Library’s Rotunda Gallery 541-383-7564, www.cocc.edu/library.Thru December 6. The 12 members of the High Desert Art League present Through Artist’s Eyes. The exhibit is a collaborative effort of these talented artists to express their artistic vision on canvas, paper as well as 3D. All members are professional artists, most with considerable experience and awards in their field. Their work can be found in galleries throughout the West and in private col-lections.  These artists each bring their unique and diverse talents to the group making their shows well rounded and exciting.

Des Chutes Historical Museum 129 NW Idaho Ave., www.deschuteshistory.org, 541-389-1813. From sandlots to Genna stadium, a love of baseball is a recurring theme throughout Bend’s history. The display highlights new gifts to the museum’s collection as well as special items on loan from the Bend Elks and members of the Deschutes County Historical Society. Discover why Vince Genna was known as “Mr. Baseball,” who were the Bend Rainbows, Ty Cobb’s visits to Bend and other major league connections. Diamonds in the Desert will run through the end of 2013 in the changing exhibit gallery.

DeWilde Art & Glass 321 SW Powerhouse, Old Mill District, 541-419-3337. Mon-Fri 10am-5pm. Handmade stained glass windows, doors and individual hanging works of art. 

High Desert Museum 59800 S Hwy. 97, www.highdesertmuseum.org, 541-382-4754. Frontier Firearms: Stories of Survival and Defense reveals the stories of these diverse people and shows how guns were integrated into the fabric of their society. Thru February 2014

All month-long exhibits will be on the CascadeAE Mobile App. CASCADE

Wool on Wool by Barbara Slater

Green Man by Jeanie Smith

Camp Sherman by Jenny Johnpoll

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Centra l Oregon October Exh ib i t sJudi’s Art Gallery 336 NE Hemlock, Ste. 13, 360-325-6230, [email protected]. Featuring works by Judi Meusborn Williamson.

Redmond Downtown Merchants Third Friday StrollOctober 18 from 4-8pm. Moonlight Madness. Enjoy artists, live music, food and beverages during the Stroll.

Redmond Airport 2522 SE Jesse Butler Circle, 541-548-0646, www.flyrdm.com.Echo’s of the Past thru January 15, 2014. Art pieces produced by Central Oregon artists will be on display throughout the terminal facility and are available for viewing by the public and traveling pas-sengers. These works are available for purchase.

Redmond Library 827 SW Deschutes Ave., 541-526-5073, [email protected], [email protected]. www.redmondfol.org. The Deer Ridge Correctional Institution Welding Program students featured artists in October. The Falling Leaves exhibit by Central Oregon artists will supplement the metal sculptures from Deer Ridge.

SistersAspen Lakes Lodge and Brand 33 Restaurant 16900 Aspen Lakes Dr., 541-549-4653, www.aspenlakes.com.A Sense of Place on exhibit thru October. Twelve amazing artists, all unique and successful, have each come to ‘sense their places’ in the realm of art. They have achieved a level of artistic expertise which enables them to share with others their timeless pieces of art. All are members of the High Desert Art League (HDAL) and are exhibiting their art at Aspen Lakes. HDAL artists who do paintings in oils or acrylics are Vivian Olsen, Barbara Slater, Joren Traveller, David Kinker and Pam Jersey Bird. www.highdesertartleague.com.

Buffalo Horn Gallery 167 West Sister Park Dr., 541-549-9378. Featuring the work of Ted Lettkeman, metal sculpter, Alix; mixed media portraiture of Native Ameri-cans and Gary Lynn-Roberts, western oil painter.

Canyon Creek Pottery 310 North Cedar St., 541-390-2449, www.canyoncreelpotteryllc.com. Ongoing exhibit, fine handmade pottery by Kenneth G. Merrill made in Sisters.

Cha For The Finest Gallery183 East Hood Ave. www.chaforthefinest.com, 541-549-1140.Second Saturday October 12 featuring interesting new work by Jacques and Mary Regat who have been working on six panels that will be 93 feet long explaining the Legend of the Eagle Spirit in petroglyphs. The beautiful forms will also be available for sale in framable proofs.  The prints of Bruce Shingledecker and John Svenson will be offered with a special bonus. Voice of the An-cients will have the third book available in the series, Dawn. Clearwater Art Gallery 303 West Hood, 541-549-4994, www.theclearwatergallery.com.  Monday night music starts at 7pm, Wine Down on Wednes-days, and Friday Night Flights. Eleventh annual print giveaway October 12. Artist and gallery owner Dan Rickards is especially excited about this year’s edition, available to the first lucky 150 persons, as it marks the beginning of an inspired series of Na-tional Park paintings. 

Desert Charm 161 S Elm St., Sisters, 541-549-8479. Ongoing exhibits by Central Oregon artists. Featuring Nancy Bushaw, Deborah Dallinga, Tamari Gress and Margaret Meritt, pottery by Laurie Johansson and fiber arts by Jeannette Bobst, Tami Meritt and Cathy Paxton.

Don Terra Artworks 103 E Hood Ave., Ste. A, 541-549-1299, www.donterra.com. Michael Gwinup’s raku wall art and large vases. His wall pieces are made using both a slab roller and a potter’s wheel and are fired in the Raku process. His large vases are handmade using two potter’s wheels. The base of the pot is made on one wheel, and then a second section is thrown on another wheel. When the second cylinder has set up, it is attached to the original base. 

Once the vase has been made, it is left to dry for a day, then Michael carves in the designs, and textures with lava rock and other natural materials. The glazes are individually applied and the vases are then fired in the Raku or stoneware process. Michael will on hand to meet and discuss his art work during the Sister’s Harvest Festival Saturday, October 12.  

The Jewel 221 West Cascade Ave., 541-549-9388. Ongoing exhibit, jewelry by Mary Jo Weiss.

Jill’s Wild (tasteful!) Women Showroom 601 Larch St., Ste. B, 541-617-6078.Artwork, cards, giftware and ceramics. 

Kate Aspen Studios 160 SW Oak St., 541-549-6950. Ongoing exhibit, beads, buttons, vintage jewelry and art.

Sisters Gallery & Frame 252 West Hood Ave., 541-549-9552, www.sistersgallery.com. Ongoing exhibit: fine art landscape photos by Gary Albertson, Dennis Schmidling, Curtiss Abbott and Roger Dorband. Original guache, archival prints and note cards by Paul Alan Bennett. Original oil and pencil works by Dyrk Godby, 2013 Sisters Rodeo poster artist. Signed posters available. Wa-tercolor and scratchboard by Ashley Dean. Acrylics by Pat Siegner.

Sisters Public Library110 N Cedar, 541-382-1209, closed Friday and Saturday. [email protected] and drawings by artist Lynn Miller in community room and Rufus Day’s celestial photog-raphy in computer room. Thru October.

Vista Bonita222 West Hood Ave., Ste. B, 541-549-4527. www.vistabonitaglass.com. Bright collection of whimsical, functional glass art, designer ceramics, fine art photography and unique landscape paintings.

SunriverArtists’ Gallery Sunriver 57100 Beaver Dr., 541-593-2127 or 541-593-8274, www.artistsgallerysunriver.com. October 12 Second Saturday Artists’ Reception, 4pm with wine and beer tastings and a meet and greet with the featured artists.

Sunriver Area Public Library 56855 Venture Lane, 541-312-1080. Artists of 97707 until October 26. This wide-ranging show features works by individuals who reside in or own property within the 97707 zip code, and typically includes a wide variety of media: oils, watercolors, photog-raphy, pastels, quilts and other fabric art, collage, handmade art cards and journals. Opening October 29 will be the work of photographer Michael Jensen and jewelry artist Teresa Bowerman. Thru January 2014. Reception for the artists Saturday, November 2, 1:30-4pm.

Sunriver Lodge Betty Gray Gallery 17600 Center Dr.Original oil landscapes by Ann Bullwinkel. Thru November 17. Billye Turner, art consultant, organizes exhibitions for Sunriver Resort, 541-382-9398.

The Wooden Jewel57100 Beaver Dr., 541-593-4151, [email protected] rustic, elegant designs by Sarah Graham showing this ring from her shadows collection created in cobalt chrome steel with 18k gold and diamonds. Thru December.  Village Bar & Grill 57100 Mall Dr., 541-593-1100, www.sunrivervbag.com. Featuring the artwork of Charles Cockburn through 2013. Charles enjoys ven-turing to remote and unique locations, and photographing scenic landscapes from a fresh perspective. www.charlescockburn.com.

Submit your Exhibit info by October 18 for the November issue.

Fluid Motion by Vern Bartley

Shadows Band by Sarah Graham

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Focusing on the needs of her students, Cascade Fine Art Workshops Founder

and Owner Sue Manley has hit upon a successful formula for offer-ing artists a unique workshop op-portunity. An artist herself, Manley approaches the series with the goal of inviting instructors who are not only wonderful artists, but also ex-cellent teachers.

As with many entrepreneurial endeavors, Cascade Fine Art Work-shops formed out of recognizing an untapped opportunity. Seven years ago Manley and a few friends in-vited watercolorist Stella Canfield from Whidbey Island, Washington to visit Bend and share her watercolor expertise.

At the success of the first workshop she started thinking bigger than a few friends in a small studio, and decided to take up the duties of beginning a workshop series. “I re-ally enjoyed running the workshop and wanted to make it more serious, to make it a business instead of a hobby,” she explained. “I had been laid of my job and I needed to find another source of income.

“I wanted to approach the workshops through the eyes of the students; most are pretty serious painters and they invest a lot of money and emotion into the workshops,” Manley said. “I wanted to make sure I got instructors they thought would be wonderful artists and wonderful teach-ers, they don’t always go hand in hand.”

To find the right instructors for her workshops, Manley began by sending out an email to all the artists in the area she was in contact with asking for suggestions of instruc-tors/artists they would like to study under. “I asked them who would be more of a mentor type of instructor, and once I had a list of names, I approached them and asked for their participation.

“All the instructors over the years have been wonderful. I haven’t had a bad experience; they love to come to Bend,” she continued.

Manley strives to keep variety in the types of workshops she offers and instructors she in-vites, as well as keeps the class size to 15 to maximize the stu-dent/instructor time. About half

Unique Opportunities with Cascade Fine Art Workshops by RENEE PATRICK Cascade A&E Editor

of her students are from out of the area, but she also likes to provide unique opportunities for local art-ists to study by not duplicating classes that other workshop pro-viders offer.

October’s class will feature local artist/instructor Judy Hoiness in Create and Embellish with Water Soluble Mixed Media. “Judy hasn’t been teaching for quite a few years here…I’ve had trouble filling work-shops with local artists [in the past], but she is doing different work than she used to do. I think I may have one spot left, it filled rapidly, and the people that are filling it are well

known artists in the area.”Finding the right space for the small workshops has

been an ongoing issue, and while Manley would love to have a permanent space, until that is financially possi-ble, she has had great success in holding her workshops at Atelier 6000 (A6). When the studio space in A6 is occupied, she began holding classes at Cascade School of Music (CSM).

“A6 is a wonderful place to hold the workshops, but when they started getting busier, it got harder. Pat Clark has been very helpful in mentoring me along in this busi-ness as well…Cascade School of Music allows me to rent a large, fairly empty room right on the river. People can walk downtown and students really enjoy that space where they can work and then go sit outside by the river,” she explained.

“I would love to have a permanent space…I have been working with Pat over the years, and our dream is to get an art center here in Bend [where I could hold

the workshops].”Manley plans to start offering

more workshops, and a new job as CSM’s program assistant will free up more time to devote to the series. “I [will continue] to focus on the needs of the stu-dents and make sure that they are happy and these workshops will give them tools to advance their careers.”

info@cascadef ineartworkshops.com, 541-408-5524, www.cas-cadefineartworkshops.com.

Instructor Ted Nuttall works with a student on her watercolor portrait

Photos by A&

E Staff

Sue Manley & Kim McClain, both artists at Red Chair Gallery

Nuttall demonstrates technique

Page 27: Cascade A&E October 2013

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Arts

Linda Heisserman Spotlight

Linda works in porcelain clay because she says it reminds her of a canvas. The piece starts to come alive for her when she starts carving; sometimes straight and precise lines, sometimes curving and soft lines. Sometimes she creates openings/holes, so she can look through and around the pieces.

Linda uses a light green celadon or blue celadon glaze for her carved pieces because the glaze pools in the deeper grooves and pulls off from the higher parts which quietly accentuates the carvings. She strives for her pieces to be both functional and special enough to bring a smile to a person’s face and eyes.

linheiss@msn, 541-419-1500.

Wildfire Pottery Showcase 9th Annual Show & Sale

November 2-3 the Wildfire Pottery Showcases will feature more than 25 premier ceramic artists with clay demonstrations throughout each day.The show includes a children’s area with clay activities and raffle winners will get $25 towards a pottery purchase, held every other hour on both

Saturday and Sunday.The Gallery Showcase features artwork from each artist. Winners in the 2012 Best in Show were Linda Heisserman for the functional category and Michael

Gwinup in the sculptural category. Wildfire Pottery Showcase donates to the Arts in Central Oregon through Arts Central.Wildfire is sponsored by The Clay Guild of the Cascades, which is a nonprofit organization, supporting local artists and education.

Michael Gwinup SpotlightMichael Gwinup’s journey with

clay started while attending Western Oregon University in 1974. Michael was an art major focusing mainly on painting and drawing, until one day when he was invited to visit a profes-sional potter. Seeing the kiln at full temperature, with flames and black smoke pouring out the portholes, he was hooked and began taking pottery classes. Upon graduation in 1976, He and his wife, Michele, moved to Bend and opened their pottery busi-ness, Blue Spruce Pottery.

Michael is well known for his Raku fired vases, lamps and wall plates. The pottery is hand-formed using a potter’s wheel or slab roller. It is glazed and decorated by hand and then fired in the Raku process.

Each piece is fired to a tempera-ture of 1800 degrees. It is then pulled out of the kiln and placed in a bed of sawdust, and after a few minutes, cooled rapidly with water. The sawdust brings out beautiful metallic lusters in the glaze, while the rapid colling creates the crackle patterns typical of Raku.

Throughout the years Michael has giv-en workshops and taught the process of Raku. His work has been been displayed in invitational shows, northwest art galleries and is in many private collections.

www.bluesprucepottery.com

Wildfire Pottery Showcase 9th Annual Show & SaleSaturday November 2, 10am-5pm

Sunday November 3, 10am-4pmFree admission and parking

Highland Elementary School (Old Kenwood School)701 NW Newport Ave., Bend 

John Kinder - 541-279-0343 or [email protected]

Bowl by Linda Heisserman

Vase by Michael Gwinup

Photos courtesy of Wildfire

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Sunriver Resort Lodge Betty Gray Gallery presents a fine art ex-hibit in the upper gallery with original oil landscapes by Ann Bullwinkel. The lower gallery presents Bullwinkel’s fine art prints

of her original paintings. The exhibition continues through November 17. In the upper gallery are Ann Bullwinkel’s colorful, expressionistic oils

depicting the many moods of Central Oregon’s water - wild water in stream beds, calm water colorful in sunsets, and, flat, gray water by docks.

To Bullwinkel, water strongly influences our lives. Our bodies are ap-proximately 75 percent water with life bound to it. Metaphorically, its repetitious cycle resembles life’s journey of change yet continuity. Such thoughts sparked her tribute to water.

After 20 successful years in the San Francisco Bay area creating, marketing and handling her heavy, 30+ pound expressionistic ce-ramics, the artist returned to an interest in painting. Her paintings became more successful than the ceramics with work chosen by major collections: Adobe Systems, McGraw Hill, Kaiser, and PGE. Over 35 publications featured her art.

Twenty years later, Bull-

winkel moved to Bend in 2002. Here she traveled Central Oregon photographing the Deschutes, Benham Falls, area creeks and other waterways. From these photographs came expressionistic paintings with loose, integrated brushwork, and a palette shifting to that of the high desert.

Many of these richly colored oils now appear in the collections of Home Federal Bank, Cushman Realty, Pronghorn Golf Resort, and many private businesses and residences, some as commissions

The current exhibition presents a more limited palette and imagery, more about mood with simplified design, seen in her favorite images Shoreline, Green Grasses and The Dock. She notes, “Rather than telling the whole story, I strive to capture the essence of these images.”

The lower gallery pres-ents her fine art prints of other water images, many in private collec-tions. The artworks all flow back to her long-esteemed emphasis on color, form and design.

Sunriver Resort invites the public to visit the gallery open all hours. Billye Turner orga-nizes the exhibitions for Sun-river Resort. Additional in-formation at 541-382-9398.

The Friends of the Sunriver Area Pub-lic Library announce the opening of a new exhibit featuring the work of

photographer Michael Jensen and jewelry art-ist Teresa Bowerman. The exhibit will open on October 29 and continue through January, 2014. Join the Friends at a reception for the art-ists November 2, 1:30-4pm.

Photography has been Jensen’s passion for over 40 years. He is one of the best known pho-tographers in the Central Oregon area. His work is at the expert and award-winning level. He loves to photograph everything from landscapes and architectural images to weddings, portraits, family reunions and senior class pictures.

He teaches photography and Photoshop through Central Oregon Community College and the La Pine Parks and Recreation District, and also volunteers at LaPine High School and teaches a variety of photography workshops. Jensen describes Central Oregon as a “photog-rapher’s wonderland, and it is invigorating to be able to do what you love doing, and get a fair wage for it. Not only am I extremely blessed to

Sunriver Library Presents Jewels of Nature

live in a beautiful area of the world to photograph, but I am surrounded by a group of peers, friends, mentors and students who continually challenge me to learn more and to become a better photographer.”

Bowerman came to America at the age of 20, on a scholar-ship to study linguistics at the University of Texas at Aus-tin. She stayed on there to do graduate work in international communications. In order to help pay for a younger brother’s education, she moved to San Francisco to work as a lab tech at the University of California Medical Center and teach English as a Second Language courses in the evenings. She

moved to the Bend/Sunriver area after marrying Jay Bowerman and has been a resident and fre-quent community volunteer for the past 40 years.

Bowerman thinks of herself as a professional volunteer. She and Jay founded the Second Tern thrift shop in Sunriver 25 years ago. As a result, recycling is now in her blood – don’t be sur-prised to see some “refurbished and refreshed” components in her jewelry collection, where she may combine existing pieces with new materials and ideas. In addition to her jewelry work, Te-resa has taught Chinese and Japanese cooking classes and demonstrations for over 15 years.

Although she is an accomplished jeweler and has shown her work at several galleries in Bend and Sunriver, Teresa describes her beading and jewelry-making as “a fun hobby.” She loves working with pearls and semi-precious stones in most of her pieces, and her style tends to be simple and understated.

Teresa is donating all of the proceeds from sales of her work exhibited at the Library to the Friends of the Sunriver Area Library.

541-312-1080.

Paintbrush Sunset by Michael Jensen

Shoreline, Green Grasses by Ann Bullwinkel

Bullwinkel at Sunriver Resort Betty Gray Gallery

Deschutes at Benham Falls

Page 29: Cascade A&E October 2013

www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 27

Even though the beauty of summer is in the rearview mirror, there are still interesting and beautiful pieces of art to be admired at the Artists ‘Gallery in Sunriver. Selected artists are honoring breast cancer survivors by donat-

ing 10 percent of sales to local support organizations for that cause. The Second Saturday Artists Reception is October 12.

Fine art oil painter, Marietta Bajer is a new art-ist at the gallery. As a child, the Polish born art-ist spent countless hours with her art historian grandfather learning about European art. Young Marietta sketched and colored her own rendi-tions of the classic paintings that she studied in her grandfather’s books.

Bajer brought her love of art to the United States when her father defected from Poland to accept a professorship at the University of Ore-gon. It is amazing that Marietta is completely self taught, and it is easy to see the old world Euro-pean painting influence in her work. Several of her pieces are atmospheric landscapes, others are exotically colored flowers. Her images of animals are so lifelike that it is as if the viewer is drawn into the painting.

Long time gallery artist, Jeff Thomp-son, continues to amaze collectors with his unbelievable glass pieces. New pieces at the gallery reflect an artistic point of view inspired by biology and geology. Thompson created a series of glass panels entitled Stratascape.

The artist uses the repetition of sim-ple shapes, which vary in a subtle and random way, to evoke patterns found in the natural world. The designs sug-

gest layers of sedimentary earth; the smooth, rounded surface of a bed of river rocks or the cellular structure of living organisms.

The sculptures are created with traditionally pulled murrini and cane that is then formed and squeezed in a custom hot-glass sculpting method developed by the artist. His color palette is soft but lively and the surface of the glass is sand carved to create a appealing satin-matte finish.

Artists’ Gallery Sunriver Village Fine art image creator, Vern Bart-

ley, has been photographing presidents, judges, bugs, funerals, weddings, kids and families, rocks and weeds and everyday regular kinds of people and things for five decades. As a photojournalist, kidnapper (you know......shooting screaming kids for the old family record plan), owner of a couple of portrait and commercial studios, manager of a camera store, magazine photo editor, founder of two or three camera clubs and owner of an aerial photography business, Vern has definitely earned his artistic chops, but nothing could predict the beautiful and fantastical images that the artist produces today.

About 10 years ago, Vern felt the tug to take all those experiences and apply them to images that he wanted to create, not what the customer wanted him to record. That journey led the artist to real-ize that more and more of his fine art images were often a compilation of multiple images or parts of multiple images that, when brought together in a creative way often ended up as stunning, desirable, collectable and sellable fine art images. And, for the first time in a long time the old “creative juices” were alive again.

Gene Thomas, stained glass artist, pro-vides the gallery with a window full of colorful, jewel toned creations that delight gallery visitors. Some pieces are geometric with multiple textures and complementary colors. Other pieces depict scenes from na-ture. One such piece captures the delicacy of hummingbirds in mid flight. Thomas’ pieces are a favorite of Sunriver visitors that want to take a piece of their Sunriver ex-perience home with them. They also make beautiful gifts for deserving friends.

www.artistsgallerysunriver.com.

Sunriver Art Party to Benefit Sara’s ProjectThe Fourth Annual Art Party is scheduled for Saturday, Novem-

ber 2, 10am - 6pm. It is held in the home of Susan Harkness Williams, #1 Beech Lane, Sunriver. It is free and open to the

public. A portion of the proceeds will benefit Sara’s Project, which raises funds to provide education, early detection and support services to ease the challenges of breast cancer for people in Central and Eastern Oregon.

Guests will enjoy the wonderful locally created fine art and craft. These fine artists not only provide their talent and donate proceeds to Sara’s Proj-ect, but also provide gourmet food and beverage to make shopping just a little sweeter. Each room of Susan’s home has some new treasure to un-

cover. Shoppers will be provided with a “map” of the house and where to find unique treasures.

Attendees will discover wonderful jewelry, pottery, fine gourd art, wild-flower photography, paintings, designer clothing, linens, artful wooden vessels, mixed media, fine knits and delightful personalities behind the art and still more art besides. There will be lots of laughter and opportunities to complete your gift giving season in style.

This is a one day event. Car pooling is greatly encouraged as parking is limited. [email protected], 541-788-2486, Many artists take credit cards, all take cash and check.

Tropical by Marietta Bajer

Stratesphere by Jeff Thompson

Fluid Motion by Vern Bartley

Hummingbird by Gene Thomas

Page 30: Cascade A&E October 2013

www.CascadeAE.com| October 201328

h Professional Pharmacy servicesh Large selection of giftsh Department 56

h Handmade Chocolate trufflesh Vera Bradley

h Home Decor & Candles

h Full Service pharmacyincluding: Medicare

billing, Medical supplies and Professional staff

h Long term care services available

h Gift and home decor

Also featuring The Cook's Nook, Gourmet Kitchen Shop. Everything you need in one incredible location!

211 East Cascade Avenue, Sisters, OR 97759541-549-6221

311 W. Cascade St. • Sisters, Oregon (541) 549-6061 • www.stitchinpost.com

Beautiful hand dyed yarns!

303 West Hood Ave. Sisters • www.theclearwatergallery.com • 541-549-4994

Fine Art • Brilliant Wines • Exceptional Dining

The first 150 people will receive a complimentary fine art print.

Doors open 10amSaturday • October 12

C L E A R W A T E RG A L L E R Y

presents Dan Rickards

11th ANNUALPRINT GIVE AWAY

“Unfolding Light” Yosemite National Park (painting in progress)

Page 31: Cascade A&E October 2013

www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 29

Welcome to The Sisters Country

by JEFF SPRY Cascade A&E Feature Writer

artworks for a future exhibit. One of his highest hopes is to generate renewed interest in our National Parks with the younger generations through the magic of art.

Going forward, each painting will be unique in size, shape and composition to reflect the individual na-ture of each National Park.

“I want to paint something that people recognize as that specific park without dupli-

cation of those same familiar land-marks and look for more intriguing perspectives, like the moment you get out of the car and experience your first breathtaking glimpses of the park.”

This incredible giveaway of a limit-ed-edition, signed and numbered lith-ograph started back in 2002 and has art fans and friends driving from all points in Central Oregon, some clad in pajamas, others in scarves or rain-coats, for the chance to get of one of Rickard’s stunning prints. For many, it’s an annual tradition to be fortu-nate enough to be awarded one of the artworks and a fun occasion to meet the artist and celebrate creativity and nature with one of Central Oregon’s most talented artists.

“Although we’ve moved locations it’s so nice to have the support,” he said. “It’s very humbling to see the people come out and wait in line. There’s some people we only see during the print giveaway, so it’s been a really fun tradi-tion. Yosemite commands great respect and attention and it’s very exciting to be moving in this new direction.”

Clearwater Gallery and Framing, 303 West Hood Avenue, Sisters. The free poster event will be held during the first morning of the Sisters Harvest Faire on Saturday, October 12 at 10am. www.theclearwater-gallery.com, 541-549-4994.

Rise and shine as dawn breaks for a choice spot in line during

the 11th annual Clearwater Gallery and Framing print giveaway on Saturday, October 12. Artist and gallery owner Dan Rickards is especially ex-cited about this year’s edition, available to the first lucky 150 persons, as it marks the begin-ning of an inspired series of National Park paintings.

“The first painting for the free print giveaway will be of Yosemite National Park and is the debut work in this new series,” he said from his home studio, surrounded by a fantastic col-lection of vintage toys and games. “I grew up in Lake Tahoe and it was the most kindred force forming my first interests in the backcountry and feel-ing what the outdoors was truly like, with the desolation wilderness and its surrounding streams and rivers. That’s why Yosemite was my first choice. I love the granite rock and the vegeta-tion diversity. We went and visited the park in the beginning part of May and spent our time on the valley floor and the mariposa grove.”

After 10 years, Rickards has now re-tired the Central Oregon paintings for his annual print giveaway, moving on to a new artistic chapter.

“As a career goal I’m going to try and paint all the National Parks, aim-ing at two or three a year. I’ll be cre-ating some editions that will actually give back to the parks themselves, and another edition to reward the unsung volunteers who donate their time and efforts to help build trails and improve the parks, from guest rangers to gar-bage collectors.”

This marks the only time where the original source painting won’t be for sale, allowing Rickards to retain the

Yosemite National Park is the first painting in the National Park series

Photo courtesy of Clearw

ater Gallery

Julia & Dan Rickards

The 11th annual Clearwater Gallery and Fram-ing print giveaway on Saturday, October 12.

Artist and gallery owner Dan Rickards is espe-cially excited about this year’s edition, avail-

able to the first lucky 150 persons, as it marks the beginning of an inspired series of National

Park paintings.

Page 32: Cascade A&E October 2013

www.CascadeAE.com| October 201330

GATEWAY TO CENTRAL OREGON

Madras - Warm Springs - Redmond - Prinevill e - La Pine

Geothermally Heated CabinsHot Mineral Baths

541-943-3931

2 Hours SE of Bend • www.summerlakehotsprings.com

closer The stories, wildlife and spirit of the West...

than you think.

highdesertmuseum.org

59800 s. hwy 97 | 541-382-4754

open daily, 10am-5pm

five minutessouth of bend

Photo courtesy of RC

AA

The Redmond Community Concert Association (RCAA) an-nounces its line-up of five performances for the 2013-14 sea-son which begins October 20. The season kicks off with a high-

energy performance by Diane Lines, vocalist and pianist. Tickets are sold by season subscription only and are available until sold out. Loie Boero, RCCA president, advises, “Tickets have sold quickly, but there are still some remaining seats so it’s best to secure your spot soon.”

RCCA is an all volunteer, nonprofit organization. Most of the artists provide an outreach performance to Redmond schools on the Monday af-ter their Sunday concert. RCCA is proud to provide quality concerts to the community and increased arts awareness to our local students.

RCCA’s next season includes:

Diane Lines October 20: A superb vocalist and pianist backed by a five-piece band. Diane’s Jump show will keep you smiling and your feet tapping.

Mark Masri November 17: This soulful tenor is one of the finest

voices of his generation. His repertoire includes a virtuosic array of songs in six languages.

Trio Voronezh February 9: A string ensemble that produces a variety of

exciting sounds and compelling arrangements on Russian folk instruments.

Redmond Community Concert Kicks Off with Diane LinesTwo on Tap March 16: Blending classical training and Broadway

experience, Melissa and Ron bring creative collaboration of song and dance.

Vivace April 13: Four incredibly talented and classically trained

vocalists present a variety of songs in the genre “popera.” Back by popular demand.

Season subscriptions for five performances are $60 for adults, $25 for students or $125 for a family with children under 18. Performances are held at Ridgeview High’s Performing Arts Theater in Redmond at 2 and 6:30pm.

541-350-7222. www.redmondcca.org.

Diane Lines

Page 33: Cascade A&E October 2013

Bowman Museum Saunders Celebration

Lecture Series

A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum in Prineville is open Tuesday thru Friday, 10am-5pm, Saturdays 11am-4pm.

The current exhibit is Ponderosa Pine Capital of the World which anchors the new exhibit space in the expanded museum. It includes The Woods and The Mill, two full size areas that highlight the workers, tools and history of the trade.

Native American exhibit brings history of the people and land of Crook County. The 1910 bank building is always filled with historical artifacts for viewing.

During October the museum presents the Saunders Celebration Lecture Series:

October 3 - Sing & Tell: A program of songs related to history and literature by Jeni Foster music teacher and scholar.

October 10 - What if Heroes Were not Welcome Home? By Linda Tamura professor emeritus of education, Willamette University Author of Nisei Soldiers Break Their Silence: Coming Home to Hood River.

October 17 - Stitching Through History An Evening with Harriet Langmas designer/creator original handmade vintage clothing.

October 24 - Buffalo Bill and the Origins of Pop Culture by Terry Krueger, professor of literature Central Oregon Community College.

246 N Main St., Prineville. 541-447-3715, bowmanmuseum.org.

Jeni Foster

Harriet Langmas

www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 31

GATEWAY TO CENTRAL OREGON

Madras - Warm Springs - Redmond - Prinevill e - La Pine

How can you help our local children in need and get a head start on your holiday shopping? Attend the Snowflake Boutique! What began as a few friends selling their crafts from their home 37 years

ago (1975) has evolved into a major Central Oregon event looked forward to by thousands of people.

This year, for its 38th anniversary, the Snowflake Boutique is looking to be as big as ever. The event, which annually kicks off the holiday season, is set for No-vember 1-2 at the Deschutes County Fairgrounds & Expo Center in Redmond in the North Sister building. Door prize opportunities abound for a chance to win hand-made treasures donated by Snowflake members and local crafters as well as gift certificates generously donated by local restaurants and businesses.

The Snowflake Boutique is unique in many ways. It is a club, not a business. Club members donate their time to organize, set up and run this arts and crafts show. Consigners are “juried” to assure that their handcrafted items are of the highest quality and are not duplicates of another consigner’s craft. They usually have around 80 consigners that take part in the show, each one with their own unique style that almost guarantees the perfect gift for you or someone special.

The Snowflake Boutique differs from a bazaar in that items are intermingled for maximum ambience rather than segregated in booths. Common themes include fishing, sports, floral arrangements, tree decorations, autumn, holiday, kitchen, garden, western and everything in between.  

You can expect to find wood carvings, bird houses, quilts, furniture, clothing and accessories for kids and adults, doll clothes, metal work, ceramics, soaps, candles, jewelry, one-of-a-kind decorations and lots of Santas, snowmen and angels. And there’s no need to pull out your wallet out every time you find some-thing you want – just pay one time as you exit (debit and credit cards accepted).

The nonprofit organization that presents the Snowflake Boutique each year donates the post-expense proceeds to the Family Access Network (FAN) in Redmond. FAN is a collaborative network of agencies and school districts that provide services to children and families in need of basic resources, such as food, shelter, education and clothing.

Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center, Redmond. North Sisters Building. No-vember 1, 1-8pm. November 2, 9am-4pm. $30 door charge part of which goes to the Family Access Network (FAN) of Central Oregon.

Snowflake Boutique

Photo courtesy of Snow

flake Boutique

The Snowflake Boutique features many hand-made holiday treasures

Page 34: Cascade A&E October 2013

Book your Holiday Employee Appreciation Party at Bend’s finest and save!

Free Weekend Getaway door prize, includes two nights in a deluxe room with a river view, $50 credit toward Crossings restaurant, welcome beverage in the lounge, breakfast for two each morning

Event décor at no additional charge

Special lodging rates at The Riverhouse available exclusively for your guests

The Riverhouse will sponsor the room rental with a food and beverage event. Food and beverage minimums applies

Conveniently located along the Deschutes River, in the heart of Bend for less travel in the winter weather.

Call Esther 541-617-7277 Book now to secure your preferred dates!

www.riverhouse.com

Now is the best time to book your winter celebration or employee appreciation party at The Riverhouse. Located in the heart of Bend, The Riverhouse offers many options that can accommodate groups of 10 to 1000 attendees, all within your budget.

Added value benefits include:

Book your Holiday Employee Appreciation Party at Bend’s finest and save!

Free Weekend Getaway door prize, includes two nights in a deluxe room with a river view, $50 credit toward Crossings restaurant, welcome beverage in the lounge, breakfast for two each morning

Event décor at no additional charge

Special lodging rates at The Riverhouse available exclusively for your guests

The Riverhouse will sponsor the room rental with a food and beverage event. Food and beverage minimums applies

Conveniently located along the Deschutes River, in the heart of Bend for less travel in the winter weather.

Call Esther 541-617-7277 Book now to secure your preferred dates!

www.riverhouse.com

Now is the best time to book your winter celebration or employee appreciation party at The Riverhouse. Located in the heart of Bend, The Riverhouse offers many options that can accommodate groups of 10 to 1000 attendees, all within your budget.

Added value benefits include:

Book your Holiday Employee Appreciation Party at Bend’s finest and save!

Free Weekend Getaway door prize, includes two nights in a deluxe room with a river view, $50 credit toward Crossings restaurant, welcome beverage in the lounge, breakfast for two each morning

Event décor at no additional charge

Special lodging rates at The Riverhouse available exclusively for your guests

The Riverhouse will sponsor the room rental with a food and beverage event. Food and beverage minimums applies

Conveniently located along the Deschutes River, in the heart of Bend for less travel in the winter weather.

Call Esther 541-617-7277 Book now to secure your preferred dates!

www.riverhouse.com

Now is the best time to book your winter celebration or employee appreciation party at The Riverhouse. Located in the heart of Bend, The Riverhouse offers many options that can accommodate groups of 10 to 1000 attendees, all within your budget.

Added value benefits include:

Book your Holiday Employee Appreciation Party at Bend’s finest and save!

Free Weekend Getaway door prize, includes two nights in a deluxe room with a river view, $50 credit toward Crossings restaurant, welcome beverage in the lounge, breakfast for two each morning

Event décor at no additional charge

Special lodging rates at The Riverhouse available exclusively for your guests

The Riverhouse will sponsor the room rental with a food and beverage event. Food and beverage minimums applies

Conveniently located along the Deschutes River, in the heart of Bend for less travel in the winter weather.

Call Esther 541-617-7277 Book now to secure your preferred dates!

www.riverhouse.com

Now is the best time to book your winter celebration or employee appreciation party at The Riverhouse. Located in the heart of Bend, The Riverhouse offers many options that can accommodate groups of 10 to 1000 attendees, all within your budget.

Added value benefits include:

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2014201420142014201420142014201420142014201420142014

32 www.CascadeAE.com| October 2013

Healthy Wholesome Goodness. Call Ahead for Prompt Pick-up ServiceHours: 7am to 5ish Monday thru Friday

8am to 5ish Saturday and Sunday.

541.318.0989

Now with 2 Locations!1255 Northwest Galveston Ave.

541.318.098962090 Dean Swift Rd. #101

541.647.6880

Ask About Catering!

Page 35: Cascade A&E October 2013

Dining

www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 33

The name Deschutes Roadhouse doesn’t conjure up haute cuisine that’s as lovely to look at as it is to eat. At least not yet. But give this new Sunriver bistro a try and it will.

“The chef is just going to send things out,” assistant manager Joe told me when we confirmed that I’d be bringing along three friends for the restaurant review. Little did I know that a four-course dinner awaited us.

Our first course—dubbed Impressions instead of Appetizers or Starters—consisted of a seafood trio that was almost too pretty to eat. Thankfully, we got over that initial and short-lived reaction.

A deconstructed crab salad served with micro greens was topped with walnut butter that tasted like a nutty and slightly sweet deconstructed crouton. Next to that lovely lumps of crab had been drizzled with lemon aioli. Fresh as fresh can be meets buttery decadence. Clearly this restaurant speaks my language.

The second element of the trio featured a diver scallop—golden brown and pan-seared to the perfect tenderness—served with carrot oil and topped with a fine dice of celery and red pepper.

Finally, a pan-seared prawn, which was simply and beautifully cooked, proved the perfect vehicle for the accompanying avocado mango relish spiked with just a soupcon of Serrano heat. “Fantastic!” exclaimed one of my tablemates.

Since we hadn’t expected a four-course dinner, I hadn’t warned the res-taurant about any food issues. We just figured that whoever couldn’t eat a particular dish simply wouldn’t participate. But missing out on an entire course due to a shellfish allergy didn’t seem fair. The chef was wonderfully accommodating, whipping up a salad of micro greens, walnuts, red and yellow to-mato and goat cheese served atop puff pastry and tossed with a balsamic vinaigrette.

We moved on somewhat re-gretfully to our next course—called Creations. Any nostal-

Unexpectedly Artistic Food at Deschutes Roadhouse

by LINDEN GROSS, One Stop Writing Shop

gia about the first course was quickly wiped away by our dueling entrees. A medallion of filet mignon served on a rosetta of roasted garlic mashed

potatoes was topped with a veal reduction gravy and long crispy parsnip chips. The dish had everything a meat lover like myself could want—a super tender, tasty steak, a rich, scrumptious sauce, potatoes that we would have ordered a bucket of to take home if we could haveand crunchy parsnip goodness. Who knew those last two words even went together. Not me.

Chef John M. Lipkowitz—who became an executive chef at just 22 before taking his culinary innovations to the Rio and the M Resort in Las Vegas and now Sunriver—also served us duck breast that had initially been seared on the grill and then wrapped in collard green leaves and roasted in the oven. The sushi roll effect was not only stunning, the earthy collard green wrap provided an unexpected and most successful contrast in texture as well as taste.

Since one of our table members doesn’t eat meat, the chef sent out one of the evening’s fish specials—roasted fresh, meaty halibut served in a light cit-rus butter sauce with tiny blanched cherry tomatoes atop turmeric rice with a hint of lemongrass. The plating of the rest of our dishes had reminded us of flowers. This one actually featured an orange marigold. “The colors look like a sunset,” exclaimed my meat-free friend. She was right.

Our third course was a Peach Tarte Tatin. My moth-er made the best Tarte Tatin I’ve ever tasted, and I use hers as the standard. Most restaurants don’t measure up. This one does. The rustic pie crust was perfect and the peaches, which weren’t over-sugared, tasted like summer.

We ended the meal with glasses of 10-year-old Taylor Fladgate tawny port and slices of smoky aged cheddar and nutty par-mesan, melon draped with prosciutto, and figs—the dried ones coated in honey, the fresh ones drizzled with a balsamic reduc-tion. Downright civilized!

The Deschutes Roadhouse Bar & Bis-tro, located a block west of the river where Boondocks used to be (about ¼ mile west of the Sunriver Village Mall), describes itself as a modern American bistro. That doesn’t just reflect the food. The dining may be up-scale, but it’s the kind of place you can arrive

dressed to the nines or in your shorts and T-shirt straight off the trail. You’ll feel comfortable either way, whether inside the attractive establishment or outside on the vast new deck.

A single caveat: Like most restaurants, this one has a generous hand when it comes to salt. So if you’re not a salt fan like me, you’ll want to mention that when you order.

Deschutes Roadhouse Bar & Bistro17363 Spring River Road; Sunriver

541-593-3333http://deschutesroadhouse.com/

Chef-Owner: John LipkowizHours: Open daily 4pm-close

Photos courtesy of Deschutes RoadhouseDouble Cut Pork Chop

Micro Greens: A mix of four greens with green apple, Avocado, red onion, candied walnuts, Goat cheese, tear drop tomato, and champagne vinaigrette

Page 36: Cascade A&E October 2013

www.CascadeAE.com| October 201334

Long-rumored and shrouded in mys-tery, this collaborative album be-tween Elvis Costello and The Roots

may be one of the most unexpected and sur-prising releases of 2013. Definitely a situation where the whole is greater than the sum of the amazing parts, and this album lives up to all of the intrigue and expectations.

For one long-t ime fan, Costel-lo’s aim has been more h a p h a z -ard than true since he ditched The Attrac-tions, “He

seems as inconsistent, overwrought, self-conscious as he’s been intermittently bril-liant. Sometimes, all you need is a right hook and a punch line you can feel. As for his collaborations, from Bacharach to Otter to Toussaint---they’ve all been eye rollers in my book.”

However, Ghost just may be Costello’s most straightforward, grounded production albeit moody and dark.

Critic Philip R. Heath comments on the funk and soul-filled offering, “I am far from an expert on Elvis Costello’s album catalog, but I have enjoyed the variety in style from what I have sampled. He tackles jazz (North), eclectic rock (Momofuku), and roots/folk (Secret, Profane and Sugarcane) with aplomb.

“That is exactly what I found when I start-ed listening to Wise Up Ghost. The opening track Walk Us Uptown begins over 55 min-utes of Costello’s biting social commentary backed by grooves from The Roots. I found Come The Meantimes to be one of the best displays of the unusual chemistry that this artist pairing produced.

“The opening bass line on Refuse to Be Saved is funky with filthy distortion. Longtime Costello fans should check out Sugar Won’t Work for some of his vo-cal harmonies and hooks on the chorus.” If you are an adventurous Elvis Costello fan (is there any other kind?), you must give this a try. Wise Up Ghost works as party music or concentrated solo listening equally well.

By Cascade A&E staff

Elvis Costello & The Roots - Wise Up Ghost

This past year has been a groundbreak-

ing period for John Full-bright, and the Grammy nomination for From The Ground Up was just one of many highlights. Since its release in May 2012, Fullbright’s first studio album has garnered high praise from peers and pundits alike, making the young Oklahoman one of the most talked about young singer/songwriter in music today.

In December, he received the prestigious ASCAP Har-old Adamson Lyric Writing Award, calling Fullbright “one of the best writers in a long, long time.” Earlier in the year, he was invited to sing for the Chuck Berry Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Tribute. While the rest of the cast strapped on Fender guitars, he played Downbound Train on piano as Chuck sat 20 feet away.

Singer, songwriter, incredible musician, Fullbright de-livers a fabulous performance with his great voice, capti-vating lyrics with a wide range of emotions accompanied by a combination of harmonica, piano and guitar.

I first saw him at the Sisters Folk Festival and now I play this album, From the Ground Up, regularly…espe-cially the first track, Gawd Above. For a young soulful artist with a first studio release, this is an amazing album.

‘I made the heaven and earthI made the stars aboveIs it too much to ask for a little love’-Gawd AboveThe portrayal of big business in America (Fat Man)

and synopsis of Christianity (Gawd Above) are just some of the songs that make this album, with a wide range of genre from blues and folk to gospel and country, so great and appealing.

Fullbright explains on NPR his Oklahoma back-ground and thus the lyics on his album. “[My family] had a little farm, about 80 acres -- that’s where I live now. The little farmhouse that I was raised in until I was about nine, that’s where the title for the CD came from. Every song on this record was written in that house, and I was kind of written in that house.”

According to a post on his website, Fullbright travers-es an emotional and musical terrain that is extremely broad, showing equal acuity with tender ballads and songs that make you want to drive faster with the win-dows rolled down according to post. Firmly rooted in a variety of musical styles, he draws on what has come before, but without imitation. Forget labels when you listen to John Fullbright. He is not folk, not Americana and not pop, but possibly the best fusion of them all.

By Pamela Hulse Andrews

John FullbrightFrom the Ground Up

Baskery is a high energy, viva-cious all girl Swedish blues/southern rock band, com-

prising the three sisters Greta, Stella and Sunniva Bondesson. Their first al-bum, Fall Among Thieves, was released in Europe in 2008, and in the UK in January 2009.

The band formed in 2006 as an off-shoot of The Slaptones, who featured their father Janåke Bondesson on drums, released two albums (Simplify, 2003 and Amplify, 2004) and toured the U.S. with The Brian Setzer Orchestra.

Fall Among Thieves was recorded with producer Lasse Mårtén using no over-dubs and mainly first or second takes, with the aim of capturing as much en-ergy as possible.

The group have described their musical style in such terms as killbilly and mud-country, and they have been compared with The Dixie Chicks, The Roches and Black Rebel Motorcycle Club.

I saw them in their full on energy blasting performance at the Sisters Folk Festival. Their performance surprising and attention grabbing, boot stomping rock and blues. They pushed their inno-vative performance into a new and re-freshing mode. Some of their numbers are in the delta blues vein but most falls into what we now call Americana.

The vocally endowed, singer/song-writing sisters, all in their thirties, are all incredibly talented musicians play-ing rock music on traditional bluegrass instruments from Greta on the ampli-fied slide banjo, tambourine, drums and harmonica, Stella on the double string bass and Sunniva playing a mean acous-tic guitar.

By Pamela Hulse Andrews

Fall Among Thieves by Baskery

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www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 35

The Central Oregon Mastersingers directed by Clyde Thompson will launch its ninth season by joining the Eugene Vocal Arts Ensemble in a concert of American and British music on Sunday, October 27,

3pm, at Church of the Nazarene in Bend, 1270 NE 27th Street.  The Eugene Vocal Arts Ensemble, a 30-voice select choir directed by

Diane Retallack, will present a set of contemporary American music fea-turing the song cycle Les Chansons des Roses by Morten Lauridsen. 

The Mastersingers will counter with music from across the Big Pond,

Across the Great DivideThe Central Oregon Mastersingers meet the Eugene Vocal Arts Ensemble

drawing on the rich choral tradition of the British Isles. Their featured work will be Benjamin Britten’s Choral Dances from Gloriana, in commem-oration of the composer’s 100th birthday.

The two choirs will join together for a grand finale in a harmonious, sometimes contentious, always entertaining medley of popular British and American songs from the Revolutionary era.

Tickets $15 general admission. www.co-mastersingers.com, 541-385-7229. Tickets also at Visit Bend, 750 Lava Rd, Suite #160, downtown; 541-382-8048.

The Central Oregon Symphony welcomes the talented winners of the 2013 Young Artist Competition to the stage. They will perform Morning, Noon and Night in Vienna by Franz von Suppes; Batti, Batti from Don Giovanni by Wolf-gang Mozart and Symphonie Espagnole (Mvt I) by Édouard Lalo. In addition, the Central Oregon Symphony will play

two lively symphonic works by Handel and Dvorák that will have you tapping your toes.

Concerts are held at Bend High School on Saturday, October 19 at 7:30pm, Sunday, October 20 at 2pm and Monday, October 21 at 7:30pm. 

To become a member or for complimentary tickets (available online approximately two weeks prior to the concerts) visit www.cosymphony.com. 541-317-3941, [email protected]

T he Tower Theatre Foundation has negotiated exclusive rights to a series of concerts and behind-

the-scenes documentaries of renowned rock music performers by the world’s top filmmakers. The new Rockumentary Film Club kicks-off Monday, October 7 at 7pm with The Rolling Stones: Charlie is My Darling, a film diary of the young band touring Ireland in 1965. The movie includes an introduction by Kurt Loder, an interview with Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl, and early versions of the endur-ing hits Satisfaction, The Last Time and Time is on My Side.

The series continues into early 2014 with: Led Zeppelin: Live from London 2007, November 4Hendrix 70: Live at Woodstock, November 25Peter Gabriel: Live from London 2011, December 30Paul McCartney & Wings: Live from Seattle 1976, January 13All films are rated PG. A Club Pass includes a ticket to each of the

movies, reserved seating, and free popcorn. 541-317-0700 or TowerTheatre.org.

Rolling Stones Launch Tower’s Rockumentary Film Club

Five Documentaries of Legendary Rock ActsMichael Allen Harrison, who

will perform at the House on the Metolius, delivers music

to the heart. His classical contemporary style carves a distinct niche of timeless music that has connected with so many during his two and a half decade career.

Harrison is known for his piano solo performances and recordings, his upbeat sound with his band, his work with inspiring vocalist Julianne Johnson, his skills producing and creating music for ballet, theater and film, his love for teaching and perhaps mostly known for his giving spirit. He was honored with a star on the walk of fame in front of the Portland Performing Arts Center for his artistic and community contributions to his beloved city of Portland.

Harrison is the founder and president of The Snow-man Foundation which has raised over $2 million for music education supporting school programs, many community  centers and has given hundreds of instru-ments and scholarships to kids who cannot afford them.

He created Ten Grands as the main platform and fundrais-er where he and nine other pianists perform together on 10 pianos to benefit the mission of The Snowman Foundation.

Harrison has several upcoming performances at the House on Metolius in Camp Sherman.

Solo performance on October 26 and two Christmas shows with Julianne Johnson on December 11-12. Tickets at 541-595-6620.

Music on the Majestic Metolius

Michael Allen Harrison

Photo courtesy of HO

M

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Jazz at The Oxford Announces 2013-14 Series Lineup

The Oxford Hotel and G2 Stra-tegic announced the most di-verse lineup in the brief history

of BendBroadband’s Jazz at The Oxford, as the popular series enters its fourth year.

BendBroadband’s Jazz at The Oxford is a monthly jazz series, presented in the intimacy of Bend’s The Oxford Hotel, fea-turing three performances on one week-end each month, beginning October 25 and running through March 15, 2014.

“We open with a jazz legend, with the great Les McCann as a special guest with the Javon Jackson Band,” said Executive Producer Marshall Glickman. “McCann’s Swiss Movement, recorded live with Eddie Harris at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1969, represents a seminal moment in the history of jazz. Javon is one of the great tenor players in the world. I can’t wait to hear Compared to What.”

“The Oxford Hotel and the Baney family are thrilled to continue to bring world-class music to downtown Bend,” said Ben Perle, Regional Vice-President of Oxford Hotel Group, the parent company of The Ox-ford Hotel and the Oxford Suites hotel chain. “This year, we purchased a beautiful Yamaha Avant Grand hybrid piano, which not only solidifies our long-term commitment to the series, but also gives us the opportu-nity to bring in some of our wonderful local musicians.”

The Cosmopolitans, led by Bend-based pianist and drummer Georges

Bouhey, will appear every month on First Fridays, and Bouhey will play solo piano on alternating Mondays. Bouhey’s performances will feature several other local pros, as well as student musicians, including Glickman’s son Laz, who is an avid young pianist.

2013-14 BendBroadband’s Jazz at The Oxford LineupJavon Jackson Band with special guest Les McCann

Soul/Jazz icon teams with tenor greatOctober 25, 8pm, October 26, 5pm and 8:15pm

King Louie’s Portland Blues Review featuring Lisa Mann and Andy StokesRiveting blues night, celebrating the soul of jazz

November 22, 8pm, November 23, 5pm and 8:15pmOregon Piano Summit: two pianos and four pianists

Gordon Lee, Randy Porter, Ben Darwish and Darrell GrantPiano virtuosos come together for exclusive showcase–a performance

December 27, 8pm, December 28, 5pm and 8:15pmArturo O’Farrill Afro-Latin Septet, Grammy winner, multiple-nominee and

acclaimed pianist brings his entire NYC-based Latin group to BendJanuary 17, 8pm, January 18, 5pm and 8:15pm

Mary Stallings with Mel Brown, Ed Bennett and Tony PaciniPerhaps the best jazz singer alive today

February 21, 8pm, February 22, 5pm and 8:15pmBruce Forman and Cow Bop Internationally-

celebrated jazz guitarist’s “western bebop” show will bring you to your feetMarch 14, 8pm, March 15, 5pm and 8:15pm

www.jazzattheoxford.com.

Les McCann

Photo from m

usicbloodline.info

Terpsichorean Dance StudioSINCE 1975

Carolyn Brant-DirectorTODDLER THRU ADULT

BEGINNER THRU ADVANCED

1601 NW Newport Ave. Bend, Or. 97701541-389-5351

www.terpsichoreanbendoregon.com

BALLET-TAP-JAZZ-MODERN-HIP HOP

Terpsichore’s ClosetDancewear Boutique

Boutique Hours: 3-6pm Monday – ThursdayWe stock Capezio, Body Wrappers leotards,

shoes, tights, gifts and accessories!

HALLOWEEN COSTUME SALEOCTOBER 21-31

proceeds to benefit Scholarship Fund

PA I D FO R BY: T h e B e n d TA P S PAC - w w w. b e n d t a p s. co m

Bill Smith Old Mill District

Mike Hollern Brooks Resources

Amy Tykeson BendBroadband

Pamela Hulse Andrews Cascade Publications

Dave Rathbun Mt. Bachelor

Matt Williams Pine Ridge Inn

Erick Trachsel Phoenix Inn

Annie Goldner Hillside Inn Bed & Breakfast

Ben Perle Oxford Hotel Group

Brent McLean Brasada Ranch and Eagle Crest

Julio Ongpin Towneplace Suites

Scott Woods Greystone Hotels

Doug La Placa Visit Bend

Les Stiles Desch. County Sheriff (ret.)

Bruce Abernethy Former Bend Mayor

Kathie Eckman Former Bend Mayor

Jim Clinton Mayor of Bend

Jodie Barram Bend Mayor Pro Tem

Doug Knight Bend City Councilor

Sally Russell Bend City Councilor

Mark Capell Bend City Councilor

Oran Teater Former Bend Mayor Arts & Culture Alliance Cristy Lanfri

Art in Public PlacesJody Ward

Art in Public Places

Sue Hollern Art in Public Places

Ray Solley Tower Theatre

Arts, Beautification & Culture Commission

Frank Groundwater BendFilm

Kelly Cannon-Miller Deschutes Historical Society

Cate O’Hagan Arts Central

Amy Mentuck The Nature of Words

Rene Mitchell Scalehouse

Jade Mayer Brooks Resources

Chuck Arnold Downtown Bend Business Assoc.

Noelle Fredland Old Mill District

Teague Hatfield Footzone

Alan Dietrich Bendistillery

Dennis Oliphant Sun Country Tours

Dave Nissen Wanderlust Tours

Please Join us in Voting YES on M easure 9-94

*THE RATE INCREASES IN MEASURE 9-94 AND 9-96 ARE NOT ADDITIVE TO ONE ANOTHER. The 1.4% increase in Measure 9-94 applies only to hotels within the city limits of Bend. The 1% increase in Measure 9-96 applies only to hotels in the unincorporated areas of Deschutes County.

Measure 9-94 will boost Bend’s economy and vital public services with a 1.4% increase in the room tax guests pay to stay in Bend hotels, motels, and vacation rentals. These funds will supercharge Bend’s economy by supporting local businesses, the arts, police, firefighters, and tourism promotion. Bend’s current lodging tax rate is below many similar cities. Measure 9-94 will bring us up to par and will benefit every segment of our community.

TOURISM, ARTS & PUBLIC SAFETY B E N D T A P S . C O M

o n M E A S U R E 9 - 9 4 YES V O T E

Go to www.BendTAPS.com to learn more, make a donation, and see more supporters.

Page 39: Cascade A&E October 2013

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Like many of us, I’d always been curi-ous about the old abandoned church on the corner near

Ski Inn. In years past it was a quiet neighbor, with a few students mid-week, and a gentle swelling of com-munity for Sunday Worship.

In September 2012 I was offered a peek inside the 100-year-old church. The moment I walked into the main hall, the building ceased to be the “old church” and in my imagination became The Belfry. Through the generosity and flexibility of the owner we made arrange-ments for it to rest in my grateful hands.

The Belfry was designed to bring people together. The vaulted sanctuary, fabulous hardwood floors and colorful stained glass windows immediately capture your attention. An abundance of wood paneling and acres of orange carpet lend a retro feel that couldn’t be recreated if you tried. Add a cozy new bar, a classic basement, classrooms, a big-ass bell and you have a truly memo-rable multi-purpose venue.

February 2013 saw financial setbacks for The Belfry. Faced with basic infrastructure needs and unexpected overhead costs,

The Bell Rings Again at The Belfry in Sisters

by ANGELINE RHETT, Owner of The BelfryI opted for a Kickstarter campaign to raise money. The day I was set

to launch, it was brought to my attention I needed to update the historic building to meet fire, life and safety requirements.

In April 2013 my Kickstarter was generously funded, pro-viding a springboard to finish the necessary projects. I will for-ever be grateful to all my family, friends and community who

propped me up, donated and lent a hand.Now my focus is to continue offering diverse entertainment and

event space for the community of Sisters and beyond. This fall we look forward to The Mayors Ball Fundraiser,

Science Club Lectures, free movie nights, Hallow-een Costume Party, An Evening With Edgar Allan Poe, New Years Eve Bash and amazing music by Greg Brown, Birds of Chicago, Pigs on The Wing and much more.

We’re also excited about P.K. Thompson Guitars moving into The Belfry Annex to manufacture beautiful handcrafted guitars. Into the new year, we hope to create relationships fostering more amazing opportunities for the arts in Central Oregon. You’re cordially invited to attend one of our fun events or let your imagination run wild and plan your own!

We’re hoping to launch the Belfry Brew Club for aspiring home brewing opportunities. The Belfry is a fully functional venue equipped with event hall, lounge, kids place, kitchen and upstairs seating and viewing for any event.

302 E Main Street, Sisters, 541-815-9122, www.belfryevents.com.

Highlighted EventsOctober 4  Sassparilla w/ Strangled DarlingsOctober 9  Greg Brown w/ Love Over Gold

October 12 Pigs on the Wing a Pink Floyd TributeOctober 19 Birds of Chicago

with Dave McGraw & Mandy FerTBA Edgar Allan Poe Night

October 26 Belfry Costume PartyOctober 31 HooDoo Sponsored Haunted House

Angeline Rhett with the namesake bell

The Belfry is a transformed 100-year-old-church

Photos courtesy of The Belfry

www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 37

HDCM Sixth Season Opens with the Thies Consort

High Desert Chamber Music (HDCM) opens their sixth sea-son on Thursday, October 3, 7:30pm at the Tower Theatre, fea-turing the return of award winning pianist Robert Thies and

the Thies Consort. Under his guidance and direction, the Thies Consort performs a wide range of works of varying instrumentation and size, thus allowing for innovative and uique programming with musical continuity based on a style, composer or other concept.  

This special program will feature  the great chamber sonatas of Rus-sian composer Sergei Prokofiev. “Each of these pieces is regarded to be a masterpiece in that instrument’s repertory. While I don’t usually program a concert of a single coposer, this music is so rich in its contrasts: powerful and elegant, sublimely beautiful and profound, and audiences have been very moved by all of the emotions that this music evokes. I look forward

to sharing this incredible music of this Russian gi-ant,” states Robert Thies. 

The all-Prokofiev program includes the Sonata for Flute, Sonata for Violin, Sonata for  Cello, and they will be joined by Executive Director Isabelle Senger for the incredible Sonata for Two Violins.

HDCM has presented a broad range of chamber groups, ranging from string trios to piano quintets.  In addition to the Series is an Annual Benefit Gala which includes a performance, dinner and silent auction on Fri-day, December 6, 6pm at the Broken Top Club.

Tickets: HighDesertChamberMusic.com, 541-306-3988, [email protected].

Page 40: Cascade A&E October 2013

5 Courses at 5 Fusion 5pm www.bend5spice.com

How to BendFilm at Cowgirl Cash 6pm www.bendfilm.org

Lisa Dae and The Robert Lee Trio at Northside Bar and Grill (Every Tues)6pm www.northsidebarfun.com

Feast at the Old Mill District at Anthony’s 6pm www.anthonys.com

Uke Jam at Kelly D’s Sports Bar (Every Tues)6:30pm www.kellyds.com

Live Music at The Blacksmith (Every Tues & Fri)7pm www.bendblacksmith.com

Audition for The Game’s Afoot at CTC7pm www.cascadestheatrical.org Robert Earl Keen at the Tower Theatre 7pm www.towertheatre.org

Bend Farmers Market in Brooks Alley (Until 10/9)3pm www.bendfarmersmarket.com

Wino Wednesday! Wine Tasting with Maragas Winery at Broken Top Bottle Shop 6pm www.btbsbend.com

Ignite Bend at Volcanic Theatre Pub 6:30pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

Film: Way of Life at the Tower Theatre 8pm www.towertheatre.org

Victory Swig, The Rum and the Sea, and The Autonomics at the Volcanic Theatre Pub8pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

Wild & Scenic Film Festival at the Old Stone Church 4pm & 7:30pm www.onda.org

Reel Rock Tour 8 at Volcanic Theatre Pub 6pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

Meet Your Farmer at Elevation Restaurant 6pm www.cocc.edu/cascade-culinary-institute

Sing and Tell: An Eclectic Mix of Songs Related to History and Literature at Bowman Museum6:30pm www.bowmanmuseum.org

Lucrezio at Broken Top Bottle Shop 7pm www.btbsbend.com

The Dixie Swim Club at CTC (Thru 10/5) 7:30pm www.cascadestheatrical.org

High Desert Chamber Music - the Thies Consort 7:30pm www.highdesertchambermusic.com

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Sophistafunk at the DOJO Outdoor Stage 7:30pm www.dojobend.com

Cascade Center of Photography Photo Walks (Every Mon & Fri)10am www.ccophoto.com

Fall Book Sale (Members Only) at the Deschutes Library Admin Building 4pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

First Firkin Friday at Broken Top Bottle Shop 4:30pm www.btbsbend.com

Bend First Friday ArtWalk Downtown & in Old Mill District5pm www.cascadeae.com

Bend Fall Festival in Downtown Bend (Thru 10/6)5pm www.c3events.com

Reflections on Mirror Pond ~ Past, Present, Future at Bend City Hall5pm www.bend.or.us

Steve Martin & the Steep Canyon Rangers featuring Edie Brickell at the Les Schwab Amphitheater6pm www.bendconcerts.com

Erik Dolson at Paulina Springs Books in Sisters6:30pm www.paulinasprings.com

Led Zepplin Celebration Day Live from London 2007 at The Tower Theatre7pm www.towertheatre.org

Bend Fall Festival Fashion Show at Franklin Crossing 7pm www.c3events.com

Sassparilla w/ Strangled Darlings at the Belfry 8pm www.belfryevents.com

Twangshifters w at the Volcanic Theatre Pub 8pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

Central Oregon Cool Cars & Coffee (Every Sat)8am 19530 Amber Meadow Dr., Bend

Saturday Indoor Market at Masons Hall (Every Sat)9am 1036 NE Eighth St.

Last Prineville Farmers Market in the City Plaza 9am www.prinevillemarket.com

Fall Book Sale at the Deschutes Library Admin Building (Thru 10/6) 10am www.deschuteslibrary.org

Huckleberry Harvest Fundraising Dinner at The Museum At Warm Springs 5pm www.museumatwarmsprings.org

Swinging with the Stars at Bend High School 6pm www.swingingwiththestars.org

The Guys’ Home Relationship Maintenance & Improvement Poetry Manual at Paulina Springs Books in Sisters 6:30pm www.paulinasprings.com

Playwrights Platform at 2nd Street Theatre (Thru 10/6)7pm www.2ndstreettheater.com

Smelly Guru and Silvero at the Volcanic Theatre9pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

Making Sense of the American Constitutionalism Series Kick Off at the Downtown Bend Library2pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

Erik Dolson at Dudley’s Book Store6:30pm www.facebook.com/DudleysBookshopCafe

Da Chara Duo at Broken Top Bottle Shop 7pm www.btbsbend.com

Suzy Bogguss at the Tower Theatre 7:30pm www.towertheatre.org

Oregon Arts Summit at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland 8am www.oregonartscommission.org

The Story You Came to Tell Creative Writing Workshop at COCC 4pm www.cocc.edu

A New World of Food at the Bend Library 6pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

Monday Night Music at Open Door Wine Bar (Every Mon) 7pm www.facebook.com/theopendooratclearwa-tergallery

Bend Song Exchange Meetings at the Bend Com-munity Center (Every Mon)7pm www.meetup.com/Bend-Song-Exchange

Rolling Stones: Charlie Is My Darling Ireland 1965 at The Tower Theatre 7pm www.towertheatre.org

Sugar Skulls at the Downtown Bend Library 3:30pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

Lost and Found at Volcanic Theatre Pub 6pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

Chimps Inc. at Broken Top Club5:30pm www.brokentop.com

Super Water Sympathy at McMenamins 7pm www.mcmenamins.com

Greg Brown with Love Over Gold at the Belfry 7pm www.belfryevents.com

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High Desert Hooligans at Big T’s8pm www.facebook.com/pages/Big-Ts-Redmond

BendFilm Festival (Thru 10/13)www.bendfilm.org

What if Heroes Were Not Welcome Home? at the Bowman Museum 6:30pm www.bowmanmuseum.org

Mai and Dave at the Volcanic Theatre Pub 7pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

Exhibition at the Old Mill Stadium 16 with IMAX 7:30pm www.regmovies.com

Desperado 17th Anniversary Trunk Show & Wine Tasking with Naked Winery (Thru 10/13)5pm www.desperadowesternwear.com

Clearwater Gallery and Framing Print Giveaway 10am www.clearwaterstudio.com

Write Now! at Sunriver Area Public Library 12pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

Know Culture: Carnaval at the Redmond Library 3pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

Art Reception at Artists’ Gallery Sunriver 4pm www.artistsgallerysunriver.com

Contra Dance at the Boys and Girls Club 7pm www.bendcontradance.org

Skippy and High at the Volcanic Theatre Pub7pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

Pigs on the Wing a Pink Floyd Tribute at the Belfry 8pm www.belfryevents.com

Ted Brainard at Broken Top Bottle Shop 7pm www.btbsbend.com

Marc Cohn at the Athletic Club of Bend 6pm www.athleticclubofbend.com

Bend’s Urban Growth Boundary at the Bend Library www.deschuteslibrary.org

Ramblin Jack Elliott w/ Special Guest Nell Robin-son at the Tower Theatre7pm www.towertheatre.org

Horses and the Human Heart: Returning Home through the Heart of the Horse at Healing Reins 9am www.healingreins.org

Sugar Skulls at the East Bend Library 2:30pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

Second Saturday at Cha Gallery in Sisterswww.chaforthefinest.com

Making Mole at the East Bend Library 6pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

Stitching Through History: An Evening with Harriet Langmas at the Bowman Museum6:30pm www.bowmanmuseum.org

Pints & Politics at Broken Top Bottle Shop7pm www.btbsbend.com

Armchair Live Storytelling at Tin Pan Theater7:30pm www.tinpantheater.com

True West by Sam Shepard at the Volcanic Theatre Pub (Thru 10/26)7:30pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

The Perfect Pair at Deschutes Brewery 5pm www.deschutesbrewery.com

Traditional Music and Instruments of Latin America at the East Bend Library11am www.deschuteslibrary.org

Traditional Music and Instruments of Latin America at the Sunriver Area Library3pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

25th Anniversary at The Environmental Center 4pm www.envirocenter.org

Film: Into the Mind at the Tower Theatre 6:30pm www.towertheatre.org

2013 Young Artist Competition at Bend High School (Thru 10/2)7:30pm www.bbcorch.org

Birds of Chicago w/Dave McGraw and Mandy Fer at the Belfry8pm www.belfryevents.com

Making Salsa at the La Pine Library 1pm www.deschuteslibrary.org

Redmond Community Concert Association - Diane Lines at Ridgeview High School 2pm & 7pm www.redmondcca.org

Introduction to Finding Funders with Foundation Directory Online at Downtown Bend Library 9am www.deschuteslibrary.org

Hopeless Jack and The Handsome Devil with Grit N Grizzle at the Volcanic Theatre Pub9pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

Shaken: Be Prepared for the Great Cascadia Earthquake at the Tower Theatre 7pm www.towertheatre.org

Muslim Journeys Series at COCC 4:30pm www.cocc.edu

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Buffalo Bill and the Origin of Pop Culture at the Bowman Museum 6:30pm www.bowmanmuseum.org

Halloween Cyclocross Crusade at the Deschutes Brewery (Thru 10/27)10am www.deschutesbrewery.com/event/hallow-een-cyclocross-crusade

Human Origins, Evolution and Migrations Series II at Sunriver Nature Center6:30pm www.sunrivernaturecenter.org

Comedy Benefit at the Tower Theatre 7pm www.towertheatre.org

Murder at the Monster Bash at 2nd Street Theater (Thru 10/25)7pm www.2ndstreettheater.com

Javon Jackson Band with special guest Les McCann at The Oxford (Thru 10/26)8pm www.oxfordhotelbend.com

Upcycled Fashion Popup at Lubbesmeyer Studio 2pm www.lubbesmeyer.com

Michael Allen Harrison at House on the Metoliuswww.metolius.com

Last Saturday at The Old Ironworks Arts District 5pm www.oldironworksbend.com

From Polio to Peace at the Tower Theatre 7pm www.towertheatre.org

Costume Party at the Belfry 7pm www.belfryevents.com

Arsenic and Old Lace at SHARC (Thru 10/28)7pm www. sunriverstars.org

Parlour at the Volcanic Theatre Pub 8pm www.volcanictheatrepub.com

The Central Oregon Mastersingers at Church of the Nazarene3pm www.co-mastersingers.com

Costume/Halloween Party at Atelier 6000www.atelier6000.org

Oregon Encyclopedia History Night at McMenamins 7pm www.mcmenamins.com

The Manhattan Transfer at The Tower Theatre 7:30pm www.towertheatre.org

Shaun of the Dead at The Tower Theatre7pm www.towertheatre.org

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darSee www.cascadeae.com for full list of events

www.facebook.com/CascadeAE | October 2013 39

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There will be many important conversations this month starting right out on the 1st. Decisions made during this time will bring completion and healing. The New Moon on the 4th is all about relationships, both personal and professional. Be optimistic as you make agreements on the 6th. Decisions made on the 8th will be revisited at the end of the month. Have faith in your journey as you let go of the past. Make a list of what you want to accomplish in the near future.

Be patient near the 10th and be sure to use moderation. Focus on taking care of yourself and doing what’s good for your body. Take more time to yourself than you usually do on the 13th and make your health a priority. Begin taking significant steps forward after the 15th and let your intuition be your guide. Remind yourself that you are happier when you feel good.

Be nice to yourself as you go into the Full Moon on the 18th. Welcome new beginnings even if it feels odd. A shift of directions on the 21st and 22nd brings emotions to the surface. Have faith and know that you are doing something very Divine. Notice how much you have changed on the 28th and be sure that recent decisions still work for you. Be honest with yourself about your new agreements and have faith in your ability to move forward with success. Appreciate what happens on the 31st and let it reinforce your confidence about your choices. Trust that you are moving in the right direction.

Eileen Lock, Clairvoyant Astrologer, 541-389-1159, www.eileenlock.freeservers.com, www.oneheartministry.freeservers.com.

www.CascadeAE.com| October 201340

ARTS CENTRALCultivate your Creativity with the Art

Station! October highlights for teens and adults include: Discover Your Painting Identity October 5-6, 10am-2pm and Oil Painting Basics October 28-De-

cember 2, 6-9pm with Susan Wilhelm; Polymer Clay Beads workshop October

5, 10am-1pm with Gillian Rathbun; Clay Fundamentals October 9-November 13, 6-9pm with Helen Bommarito; Draw-ing Historic Downtown Bend October 12, 10am-12:30pm with Vicki Shuck; Mixed-Media Workshop October 12, 3-6pm with Alisha Mann; Drawing to Painting Acrylics Workshop October 18, 12-3pm with David Kinker; Begin-ning Songwriting October 17-Novem-ber 21, 6-8pm with David Miller. See all

Fall classes at artscentraloregon.org or call 541-617-1317

 ATELIER 6000

541-330-8759, www.atelier6000.org.Workshops are open to the public and perfect for the beginner, serious art stu-

dent and professional. Office hours are 9:30am – 4pm

Monday-Friday.Printmaking and Book Arts Workshops

Linocut, Tues/Thurs October 3-10, 12:30-3pm. Explore relief printmaking with Gomuban, a new and easier plate material to carve into than linoleum or wood, which holds detail exceptionally well. Learn techniques for transferring

images, carving and printing. Includes an additional 3 hours of studio time to print

and practice. Supply list: $90Instructor: Nancy Dasen

Black and White Shades of GrayMondays, October 7-14, 10am - 1pm. Explore how to create the illusion of

depth and rich tonalities in your prints using black ink and white paper. Play

with us using shade, value and contrast in printmaking using traditional print

techniques. Three hours of studio time to practice what you learn are included. Sup-

ply list: $80. Instructor: Lynn RothanReduction Prints

Fridays, October 25-November 15, 10am - 12:30pm. Popularized in the 1950’s and ‘60s by contemporary printmakers, this refreshing relief techniques retains its

There is a charge of $15 to list classes and/or workshops or they are free with a paid display ad. Email [email protected] for more information.

painting • photography • art workshops • printmaking • watercolorappeal today. In place of the traditional linoleum, we use Gomuban, a printing

surface that is easy to carve and holds fine detail. Areas of the block are successively carved away, resulting in an altered block and multi-colored edition print. Supply list: $115. Instructor: Marilyn Burkhardt Collaborative Workshops with Cascade Fine Art Workshops: Create and Em-bellish with Water-Soluble Medium. Artist reception and demo: Thursday,

October 17, 6:30-8pm (demo $5, registered students free)

Workshop: Friday-Sunday, October 18-20, 9-4pm. Discover the versatility of drawing and painting with water-soluble

mediums. Experiment with tools and surfaces in printmaking, print by hand or with a press to create new work or

embellish and enhance old work. Supply list: $290. Instructors: Judy Hoiness with Master Printmaker Pat Clark. To attend

artist demonstration, please RSVP: 541-408-5524. Workshop Reg-istration: www.cascadefineartworkshops.

com/workshop-schedule PSU Continuing Education/Gradua-tion School of Education with Annie

Painter and AssociatesPrintmaking, Page Design and Book-

making for Educators, K-12Perfect for K-12 core-subject and

arts teachers, language teachers and teaching artists, this course introduces centuries-old, easy-to-learn print, page and book-making techniques. Create

block, collagraph, stamping and pressure prints to make a unique page design, a large broadside and a small ‘chapbook’.

Integrate writing, text design and poetry standards to a curriculum that students love, using successful lesson design and teaching methods. Reserve your space:

Contact Annie Painter at 541-549-9539

Bank of Cascades Fall Festival En Plein Air Workshop with Ken Roth Featured on Oregon ArtBeat, Ken is a Cen-tral Oregon artist whose paintings are filled with rich color and light on the landscape

and figure. Enjoy the outdoor painting experience, grab your easel, paint and hit the streets. At Crow’s Feet Commons, Sunday, October 6, 2-3:30pm. Registration required. [email protected]. $35 Workshop Fee.

CASCADE FINE ART WORKSHOPS 2013

Judy Hoiness, Explorations in Water-based Mixed Media Reception/demo

October 17, 6:30-8pm at Atelier 6000, $5 for non-students.

Workshop: October 18-20, $2902014 Workshops:

Registrations start November 1Terri Ford, pastel, June 5-8 

Skip Lawrence, all mediums, August 18-22

Colley Whisson, oil, October 17-20Contact: Sue Manley, 541-408-5524info@cascadefineartworkshops.comwww.cascadefineartworkshops.com

RODES SMITHEY STUDIOwww.rodes-smithey.com, 541-280-5635.

Plasma Cut SteelFor those of you wanting to play with fire,

a one day workshop is being offered in creating a metal art piece for the wall or garden. Discussions in design principles will be addressed along with participants

plasma cutting the steel and finishing with a rusting patina. Support/frame can be made to have the piece ready for its new home! All materials and access to our large supply of steel are included in the $225 participant fee. September 14,

9am-4pm or October 12, 9am-4pm.

SAGEBRUSHERS ART SOCIETYRegister: sagebrushersartofbend.com, 541-617-0900 or [email protected],

117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend.David Kinker, Drop in Studio,

Mondays, 9am-12pm. Starts October 7. Cost: $25 per session.

David has a background in various art mediums and with working with artists at

different levels of experience. Contact David at

[email protected] Zylius Watercolor Workshop,

October 8-9, 10am- 4pm. Class is limited to 10 students. cost: $125 for two full

days. Don Zylius is an award-winning, renowned watercolor artist.

541-508-1055, [email protected] Wednesdays with Jennifer Ware-Kempcke. Watercolor artists will

love this informal, informative group. Cost is free to SageBrushers members,

$5 per Wednesday forall others. Have fun trying new tech-niques in a relaxed atmosphere. Every Wednesday, October 2-November 20

from 10am-2pm. Contact Jennifer at [email protected]

 THE NATURE OF WORDS224 NW Oregon Ave. Bend, 541-647-2233, [email protected].

October Writing WorkshopsThe Garden of the Finzi-Continis -

Three Evenings of Italian Literature, History and Wine

Mondays, October 7, 14, 21, 6–8pm at The Nature of Words. Cost: $65 per

person (book not included).Join local writer and Oregon State

University-Cascades literature instructor Ellen Santasiero in a discussion of the novel The Garden of the Finzi-Continis,

which tells the story of an Italian-Jewish family living in 1930’s Fascist Italy.

Learn about the life and work of the author, Giorgio Bassani, while tasting

wines of Italy’s Emilia-Romagna region, where the novel is set. Please come

prepared to discuss the first 100 pages of The Garden of the Finzi-Continis by

Giorgio Bassani (Quartet Books Limited, 1997).

Blogging for WritersWednesday, October 16, 6:30–8pm at The Nature of Words, cost: $30 per

person. Join blogger and travel writer Nicole Meier for an introductory blog-ging class for writers. Nicole will review elements of the online world, and how to choose the right community for you.

Other topics to be covered include choosing the focus of your blog and create a unique voice, incorporating

design elements with text and images, and using social media to promote

and increase traffic to your blog. The workshop will conclude with a list of resources for writers who are looking to expand their work into the blog-

ging world. Nicole Meier is a former advertising executive-turned writer. She has a travel blog, Have Tote Will Travel,

that combines the love of travel and literature with trip ideas, inspirational

travel stories and destination reads. www.havetotewilltravel.com.

New Perspective For October by Eileen Lock

Page 43: Cascade A&E October 2013

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Page 44: Cascade A&E October 2013

Paul Scott Gallery is happy to announce new works by

Central Oregon artist Donald Yatomi.

His exhibition will run from September 28 through October 29, 2013.

Come meet Donald and enjoy his new works on

First Friday Art Walk, October 4, from 5-9pm.

Paul Scott Gallery specializes in contemporary works in a

variety of mediums from a select group of established

fine artists from the Northwest and beyond.Donald Yatomi “Tekka Maki 002” 9”x12” oil on canvas

Donald Yatomi “Corona 002” 17”x10” oil on board

Donald Yatomi “Airport 003” 24”x48” oil on canvas