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CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS

Posts tagged with: Last Thursday

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phile under: weekend picks

Weekend Picks!

Farm-fresh roots rock, arborial acrobatics, Buddhist revels, and Broadway classics

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Ballyhigh

Sand, sailors, and the formidable Bloody Mary, blow through town on a South Pacific Broadway breeze.

First Friday
First Thursday. Last Thursday. It seems every gallery district wants to lay claim to one notable monthly day. In biblical parlance, “The first shall be last, and the last shall be first,”—and if too many more neighborhoods do this, Culturephile will cease to know first from last, or head from a**. That said, Central Eastside calls official dibs on First Friday, and invites you to revel in the burgeoning eclectica of its galleries. And it’s actually looking pretty good. Some highlights: Newspace Center for Photography will feature New Work by much-lauded anthropology-minded photographer Linda Connor. Poboy Art will showcase the prolific and intricate rock-poster designs of EMEK, and newly-gilded gallery Golden Rule’s grand opening, will hypnotize with the brightly-colored folk illustrations of Inner Lands by Howard Gillam, which manage to simultaneously evoke Medieval manuscript illuminations, and South-American animal totems.

South Pacific
Culturephile caught this production with an intent to review it. But since Culturephile’s date was too swept-up in beach fantasies to endure any hints at critique, and the production itself will pull out with the tide by the time this weekend subsides (it ends Sunday)—South Pacific lands in Weekend Picks. Suffice to say the production is near-perfect. It breezes into town from Broadway, complete with all amenities: A-level singing, acting, and dancing; photorealistic sets; and a rigorous commitment to the classic material. As an added bonus, this show turns up its tropical heat with High School Musical 2 alum Anderson Davis as Lieutenant Cable, who is every bit as “damn sexy” as the character Bloody Mary’s lines purport him to be.

That said, be forewarned: While it’s easy to be beguiled into island delirium, and while the singing and dancing completely “sell it,” it’s hard to overlook the offhanded xenophobia that comes with the script. Yes, we’re transported to a beautiful beach; on the other hand, we’re deployed into World War II, and hence have to overhear a lot of smack-talk about “the Japs” and watch the story’s romantic heroes battle their own inner prejudices. Picture a carefully-sealed crate on the beach. Upon prying it open, you find museum-quality parcels of vintage dry goods—but tucked among them, perfectly preserved rations of racial tension. What retains the play’s relevance and moves you past the cringes, are the gorgeous and unforgettable songs, from the intoxicating “Bali Ha’i,” to the swooningly romantic “Some Enchanted Evening,” to the winkingly sapphic “Honey Bun.” Classics all, and deftly delivered.

Obonfest
Obon is a 500-year-old Japanese custom of honoring the departed through three days of family gathering and traditionally includes a communal dance of joy known as Bon-Odori. Celebrate Obon in Portland at the Oregon Buddhist Temple where traditional Japanese food will be served, Martial Arts and Tanuki Taiko (a relatively recent art-form of ensemble drumming) will be demonstrated, and activities for all ages abound.*

Art In The Dark
The spinning, swooping sylphs of AWOL Dance Collective attempt once again to suspend your disbelief, as they perform aerial feats in twilit trees at the World Trade Center Atrium.

Pickathon
Head for Happy Valley (an actual place) for three days of exuberant indie roots rock at nearby, far-out, Pendarvis Farm. Earlier this week, Culturephile heard more about the fest and the farm straight from the horse’s mouth, in an interview with founder Zale Schoenborn. Also note: this year marks the Pickathon debut of hometown heroes Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside, and Typhoon.

Weekend Picks are published every Friday at noon, and highlight just a few of your local entertainment options. For a more comprehensive list of events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar.

*Obonfest reviewed by guest contributor Logan Buckley.

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Tags: Art, musical, pickathon, Last Thursday, music, Weekend Plans, Events, Theater, First Thursday, Museums, First Friday

phile under: art

Last Thursday in April

galleries in garages in alleys

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Feeling adventurous? If you don’t require your art to be presented in a Pearl District white box, taking a trip down a couple of alleys off NE Alberta will likely prove rewarding this evening. Spring has sprung when Last Thursday swings into action. Thread through the vendors and buskers to find the south alley off NE Alberta between 26th and 27th.
Appendix Project Space kicks off it’s 2010 programming season with a new partnership with Little Field Gallery (another gallery in another garage off another, nearby, alley) and a new performance space, HAY BATCH!, curated by Portland artist Matthew Green.

At Appendix find an installation by Nathan Dinihanian and Molly Cooney-Mesker. Nathan Dinihanian is a site-specific furniture designer and fabricator whose interests reside in the conjunction where place and space meet. Molly Cooney-Mesker’s work investigates the intersections of social and physical space and how pathways change or are determined by guidelines and social patterns.

And at Little Field Gallery FOR REAL! is a show of work-on-computer exploring viral replication, digital image curation, pixel work, and interactivity with work by Tabor Robak, DUMP.FM, Brad Troemel (The Jogging), Zachary Davis, Josh Pavlacky, and Future Death Toll.

Both are open from 6-11 PM. At 8 PM at HAY BATCH!, a rowdy quartet of young Portland artist-instigators (
Matthew Clifford Green, Sean Joseph Patrick Carney, Michael Reinsch, Eric Gibbons) bring
JOSEPH’S BOYZ: BOYZ NIGHT OUT. Stand back.

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Tags: Portland Art, Last Thursday

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