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CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS

Posts tagged with: Arts Education

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phile under: books

Portland Zine Symposium

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Does that say “readings 4 dorkz?”
Read at your own risk.

What happens when just anyone can publish their own book or magazine? As you might imagine, many elements slip into the mix at Portland Zine Symposium.

Rebels
Content that would normally get nixed by a publisher, becomes fair game for the printed page: incendiary rants, unauthorized cut-and-pastes of copyrighted content, and a barrage of unedited, indulgent diary confessionals. Some of this stuff is cathartically irreverent, or awkwardly humorous. Some of it is intriguingly “outsider.” And some of it is illegible, or otherwise un-readable, point blank. (Caveat emptor: if you can’t read the cover, may as well put it down.)

Artisans
On the other hand, with little economic incentive, and no third-party directives, many zine-makers feel free to create something more wonderful than the market demands. Handmade touches emerge, like letterpress impressions, screen-print, hand-coloring, and crafty binding. Illustrations abound. Some authors who don’t try to “market,” prove nevertheless quite compelling to read. One gets the sense that the content is purer, unchecked by an editor’s agenda-pen.

Professionals
Some small publishers, like recent Culturephile featuree Brandon Seifert, writer of Witch Doctor, self-publish with one eye on the prize of a mainstream deal. They bring slick, shelf-ready books to the zine scene, providing readers a sneak preview of work that will eventually “go big.”

So what does the zine world offer? Variety. Freedom. Risk. Rarity. Enough stuff, that there’s probably something for you. Head over to PSU, browse the tables and meet the makers.


For a more comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar!

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Tags: Publishing, comics, writer, weekend, weekend, weekend picks, Arts Education, author, book, Weekend Plans, zine

phile under: pop policymaker

Cary Clarke’s First Official Summer

Former PDX Popper makes local music a municipal matter.

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PDX Pop Now! is—well, very soon! There’s the City Hall showcase on the 22, and a week later, a three-day onslaught of all-ages music will blast industrial Southeast like a midsummer super-soaker. But all that will get plenty of press.

Meanwhile, former Pop-eratti Cary Clarke is making his own splash in local government. A founding member of PPN *, as well as a longtime local musician, rock journalist, and all-ages scene supporter, Clarke signed on this April with Mayor Sam Adams as the City Of Portland’s Arts & Policy Coordinator, parlaying several summer flings with the arts, into a year-round commitment.

“‘I work on policy in the mayor’s office’ definitely sounds better to my grandparents than ‘I help run an all-volunteer local music nonprofit,’” he laughs. But despite his new, more official role, Clarke’s original goal remains: to make the Portland metro area an environment where arts—and perhaps especially music—can survive and thrive.

For those of you keeping score at home, here are five things Clarke has already helped change:

• The Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC), under Clarke’s and others’ prompting in ’07 and ’08, revised its rules to allow more performing arts facilities to admit people under 21.

• The Portland metro area has attained a partnership with the Kennedy Center’s Any Given Child program, which will help build an arts education plan for every K-8 student in the area.

• Portland’s municipal on-hold music is now a hand-picked selection of 15 top-notch indie rock songs by local bands.

• Clarke has partnered with the Right Brain Initiative, a program of the Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC), to bring working artists into K-8 classrooms for curriculum-integrated arts learning.

• The city is working closely with the Creative Advocacy Network (CAN) to bring a measure to the ballot that would create a $15-20 million annual dedicated public fund for arts and culture in the region.

*alongside your Culturephile

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Tags: music, portland, PDX Pop Now, politics, portland politics, education, Arts Education

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