Art Exhibits Workshop, sale set Maude I. Kerns Art Center is offering three spe cial Spring Workshops Friday and Saturday in con junction with its Spring Festival “Earthworks” (see below). On Friday Ukrainian Egg Decorating taught by Ida Moffit will introduce students to this traditional Christian Easter egg, plus the technique of waxing and dyeing to create their own nontraditional de signs. The workshop occurs from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and costs $10. All materials are provided. Registration must be made by 5 p.m. today in the office. Moffit has some of her work on display at the Art Center office. Saturday, a Basketry workshop taught by Jacci Weller and Susan Marrant will cover construction of twined and coiled baskets of fiber, pine needle, raffia and other natural fibers. Cost of the workshop is $12. It will happen from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Registration must be made at the Art Center office by Friday. Also on Saturday, a Creative Flower Arranging Workshop with Will Speer will occur from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. It will cost $10. The workshop will feature work ing and designing with found objects and heirloom pieces plus the Japanese (Ikebana) style of arrang ing flowers. Flowers and foliage will be provided, but students are asked to bring greenery and flowers also. Registration for this workshop must also be completed by Friday. “Earthworks” is the Art Center’s Spring Sale of paintings, prints, and drawings in a setting of plants and planters, indudeing stained glass and other Spring craft items. The festival runs Friday through Sunday with the hours being 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Each area of the Art Center will contain specific art and craft work. House and garden plants, pots and other garden needs will be sold in the “Potting Shed.” Homemade soups and breads will be for sale Friday and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the “Soup Kitchen.” Pottery donated by ceramic stu dents and faculty will be available for bargain prices at the “Crack Pot Sale,” proceeds will go toward the purchase of new equipment for the department. Gallery West shows impressionist painter Eugene artist, Barbara Rodway, will open her first major one-person show at Gallery West - Eugene on Sunday, April 3. Born and raised in Port land, Rodway studied at the University and has painted professionally for thirteen years. She works in oil and also does collages of rice paper depicting landscapes in an impressionistic form. The public is cordially invited to meet the artist at the opening of her show between 5:30 and 8 p.m. Airbrush paintings shown at LCC Airbrush paintings by LCC Assistant Professor Rosco Wright will be exhibited in the Art and Applied Design main galiery at Lane Community College from April 1 through 20. A reception for Wright will be Friday, April 1, from 8 to 10 p.m. in the gallery. The event is open to the public. Wright has been employed by the LCC Art and Applied Design Department since 1968. He served as the Department Head from 1968 to 1972. Previ ously, he served as an art consultant with the State Department of Education, was Art Department Head with the University of Oregon Job Corps, and taught at Western Montana College, Cascade Junior High in Eugene, and Lowell Elementary School in Lowell. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees at the University of Oregon. Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays. 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San Mateo, California 94404 AMERICAN MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS INC ________ An Equal Opportunity Employer M F Local artists selected for multi-media show The Artists of Oregon annual will be on view at the Portland Art Museum March 23 through April 24. The selections were made by a jury consisting of Donald Jenkins, Director of the Portland Art As sociation; William J. Chiego, Curator and Diane Tsurutani, As sistant Curator, Portland Art Museum. Artists were allowed to submit one piece and from the 883 works entered 173 were accepted. For the first time since the inception of the Artists of Oregon annual works in all media including photography were eligible. Eugene artists who are rep resented in the exhibition are James Bodoh, Nikki Bromberg, Lynn Frost, Heidi Fuhrmeister, Hannah Goldrich, Katie Jarman, Kacey Joyce, Marcia E. Lynch, Barbara Setsu Pickett, Richard L. Quigley, Rene Richabaugh, George H. Rogers, Greg Sund berg, Robert Terry, Charles True, and David Turner. West Coast artists display in Museum Works by four West Coast ar tists will be featured at the Museum of Art in April. Paintings by Stephen Tse will be shown in Gallery 1A. Tse, who is currently chairman of the art de partment at Big Bend Community College at Moses Lake, Wash., has exhibited extensively throughout the United States and in Paris. Cheryl Olsen Bowers’ paintings will be exhibited in Gallery 1D. Bowers who is a visiting lecturer in art here this year, has received recoanition as a Dainter and teacher in the San Francisco Bay area. Ceramic works by Brad Miller, Eugene, will be shown in Gallery 1C. This exhibit explores forms produced by tension and com pression that recur in basic pat terns at all scales in the universe. Photographs by John Ryder Lentz, of Creswell, Ore., will be shown in the Focus Gallery. His photographs have been exhibited throughout the U.S. The four shows will open with a reception from 2 to 4 p.m. on Sun day, April 3, and will be on exhibit thrnnnh Sunriav Anril ?4 f^3 MUSIC ^ BULLETIN For information on tonight's music in Eugene, and concerts coming to the area. 485-1411 10 A.M.-1 A.M. ■CLIP and SAVE A Octopus, Spitfire, Dragon Fly B|lr§y (plus all Airplane LP’s [I Mofe; $4.25 "« rSun ShoD hv