10 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
june
4
PHOTO BY KATHERINE LACAZE
All ages participated in Seaside’s 2015 Fourth of July Parade,
including some youngsters riding on the loat for Mrs. Tami’s
Daycare & Preschool.
Register for Seaside’s
Fourth of July Parade
SEASIDE — Registration
for Seaside’s annual Fourth
of July Parade is now open.
Registration may be
done online at www.
seasidefourthofjuly.org
through June 29.
T he
Illah
ee
A partm ents
A s G ood A s It G ets
In D ow ntow n
A storia!
1046 Grand Avenue
Astoria, OR 97103
503-325-2280
The parade line up will
be on Necanicum Drive,
and all entrants must be
in line and ready to go
by 10:45 a.m. Since the
July 4 is on a Monday,
large crowds are expected,
resulting in traffic delays.
Arriving early is strongly
suggested. Those entrants
not at their assigned
position will be put at the
end of the parade as space
allows.
Entries must be able to
negotiate turns onto and off
Broadway. Floats cannot
be over 40 feet in length,
towing vehicle and float
combined, and no more
than 8 feet wide.
If a float or vehicle dis-
tributes “goodies,” it must
be done by someone walk-
ing alongside. No goodies
or candy can be thrown
from the float or vehicle.
The parade starts at
11 a.m. From Necanicum
it will turn east on 12th
Avenue, then south on Hol-
laday Drive to Broadway,
west to Columbia, east to
First Avenue back to Ne-
canicum. The parade takes
place rain or shine.
Emails with additional
parade information and as-
signed position will be sent
out to registered entrants
July 1 and 2.
SEASIDE — The Seaside First Saturday Art Walk, cele-
brating 12 years in 2016, is all about the arts. Visitors walk
about, meet artists, sip wine or snag appetizers, view artist
demonstrations, listen to an artist talk or enjoy live per-
formances in music. The next art walk is from 5 to 7 p.m.
Saturday, June 4 at galleries located in the historic Gilbert
District of downtown Seaside.
SunRose Gallery
606 Broadway
SunRose will host an open house
featuring new work from pique assi-
ette artist Kathleen Jones, credit card
mosaic artist Mari Cardinal Walker,
sand dollar mosaic artist Mimi Cern-
yar Fox, and mixed-media artist Patty
Thurlby, who will be in attendance.
Local musician Richard Thomasian
will provide live jazz music.
Gilbert District Gallery
613 Broadway
The gallery, a co-op shared by
artists from Washington and Oregon,
is celebrating12 years and features
watercolors, bronze sculptures, giclee
prints, Native American jewelry, oil
paintings, greeting cards, nature
designs and gifts. Artists include
Mike Sage, photographer Steve Bash
and more. Gallery co-owner Dave
Bartholet is represented by over 200
galleries across America.
Beach Books
616 Broadway
Beach Books features work from
the Green Cab Artist Collective, a
working artist group in the Portland
area created to encourage and inspire
one another, share techniques and
info about the business side of art,
and share work with the public. The
Cabbies are a synergistic alliance of
artists, working in diverse mediums.
Participating artists for June are
Annie Brown, Barbara Martin, Elina
Zeberg, Jim Zaleski and Jefery Hall.
Brown paints on wooden
panels. Martin comes from a line of
storytellers and is the product of an
internationally nomadic life. Zeberg
works in a variety of mediums, includ-
ing acrylics and encaustic painting.
Zaleski combines the traditional art
forms of painting and drawing with
a computer world to produce art that
is loaded with whimsy. Hall will do a
sand painting demonstration during
art walk. He enjoys using re-purposed
materials in his art making process.
Fairweather House and Gallery
612 Broadway
Fairweather will hold an opening
reception for “Works on Paper,” an ex-
hibition that includes established and
emerging artists who have created
works using paper as their primary
medium. The show highlights nation-
ally known artist Patricia Clark-Finley
through the month of June with new
works on graphite and sennelier ink
on yupo. Clark-Finley, a multi-media
artist with an interest in narrative and
mythology, studied art and business
at University of California, Berkeley,
and holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts
from the San Francisco Art Institute. A
native of Washington, she has studio
space by the beach in Ocean Park.
“Paper ofers a shorter gap be-
tween the concept and the execution
of an image,” Clark-Finley says. “It is
possible to take an image through sev-
eral versions in the same studio session
... Artists historically have created piles
of drawings and work on paper for
each master work produced. Often the
drawings ofer more insight into the
artistic process than the inal work.”
Other artists will also show work,
including Penelope Culbertson, who
creates calligraphy quotes on antique
paper; Christine Trexel, who plants
and harvests the materials to make
paper boxes; Gary Pearlman, who
embeds individually cut patterns of
handmade paper into original art;
and Denise McFadden, who often
works on dampened paper and
mixes color directly onto her painting.
Seaside nature photographer Neal
Maine will introduce his latest natural
history journal of images and speak at
6 p.m. Adult beverages, wine tasting,
light refreshments and artist lectures
will be provided.
T.anjuli Gallery
7 North Holladay Drive
Gallery owner and artist Billy
Lutz focuses on what lies beneath
appearances in his artwork: Having
reemerged into the ield of opposites,
the irrational landscape, now
exposed, is stitched into the physical
realm for all to see. From now on,
one cannot escape or deny that there
is more going on in present tense
than just the world spinning and us
moving about on its surface.
More original art:
Seaside Cofee House, 3 N. Holla-
day Drive; and Seaside Antique Mall,
726 Broadway.
Participating restaurants:
Guido and Vito’s at 604 Broadway;
Three Little Bird’s Bakery at 8 N. Hol-
laday Drive; Tora Sushi at 619 Broad-
way; Nonni’s Bistro at 831 Broadway;
Yellow Curry, 20 N. Holladay Drive.
SUBMITTED PHOTOS
“Dancing” by Christine Trexler at Fairweather’s.
A work by Jefery Hall at
Beach Books.
“Tuna” by Mimi Cernyar Fox at
SunRose Gallery.
“Heron” by Dave Barholet at
the Gilbert District Gallery.
“Sand Hill Crane” by Denise
Joy McFadden at Fairweath-
er’s.