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About Oregon Coast today. (Lincoln City, OR) 2005-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 2019)
artsy An artist who goes to great lengths Oregon Coast artist Duncan Berry will present a personal reflection on life within the Cascade Head Biosphere Reserve on Wednesday, Dec. 4, at the Newport Visual Arts Center. Appearing at a joint meeting of the Mid-Coast Watersheds Council and the Salmon Drift Creek Watershed Council, Berry will present “The Story of Life as Told by Water,” including images and a narrative from his walk down the entire length of the Salmon River Watershed. That excursion took Berry from the river’s headwaters high in the Coast Range, through old growth forests to small and large streams, and finally through its restored estuary to the near shore and deep sea. “My work is to channel the beauty and power of this place,” Berry said, “and to show what is possible when we care for the last great places.” Designated in 1976 by the United Nations Man and Biosphere Program, the Cascade Head Biosphere Reserve includes 58,000 acres within the Salmon River Watershed. The area’s special qualities are further recognized through an Oregon Marine Reserve, a US Forest Service Scenic-Research Area and The Nature Conservancy’s headland preserve. Berry grew up on the Clatsop Plains of the North Oregon Coast, the son of author Don Berry and photo-journalist Wyn Berry. He began a fishing career at the age of 13, salmon trolling out of the Columbia River, then turned to diverse careers including gold-smithing, porcelain enamel, apparel, eco-system services and sustainable seafood. He and his wife, Melany, raised two children on an island in Washington, then returned to the Oregon Coast more than a decade ago to help purchase and preserve the Westwind site just north of Lincoln City. “This is life on the wild edge of a continent,” Berry said, “where 3,500 miles of the North American land mass meets 5,000 miles of open ocean…The land, sea and air of this place acts as a muse, sanctuary and teacher for me.” Berry’s creative work currently includes poetry, the Japanese technique of fish printing Gyotaku, and photography. When he is not creating art, Berry loves to swim with salmon in the upper reaches of coastal rivers, and is a dedicated conservationist. He believes that native species are key to the iconic salmon’s future in the great Northwest. His other work includes his co-founding of the national seafood company Fishpeople, as well as acting as a co-organizer of the Cascade Head Biosphere Reserve effort. The presentation will begin at 6:30 pm at the Newport Visual Arts Center, 777 NW Beach Drive. Refreshments will be provided. Art in the spotlight “Fern Spiral” by Kim Cuc Tran The latest Spotlight Show from Newport’s Yaquina Art Association features the photography of Kim Cuc Tran alongside the watercolors of JoAnn Campbell. Born and raised in Vietnam, Tran escaped the communists by boat to Malaysia in 1980, and immigrated to the US in 1981. She moved to West Linn in 2001, and retired to Newport in 2009. Photography has been a hobby and interest in her life. The process of capturing an image is so fulfilling and enjoyable to both her and her husband. They travel to many locations in the U.S. and to other countries, including Canada, 22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • November 29, 2019 Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Japan, Peru, New Zealand, Mexico, Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Slovakia and Hungary. Jo Ann Campbell retired to Newport in 2002 after a career at a nuclear power station in New Jersey, followed by an epic, cross-country trip in a motor home. She enjoys gardening, traveling, genealogy and crafts and her tries her hand at watercolor painting The show will be on display through Friday, Dec. 6, available to view from 11 am to 4 pm daily at the Yaquina Art Association Gallery, 789 NW Beach Drive. “Cup of Joy” by JoAnn Campbell