AUGUST 11, 2016 // 9
“Bridge from Nowhere” by
Brian Cameron at RiverSea
Gallery.
“Remembering the Storm”
by Jon Wippich at RiverSea
Gallery.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
“Edgewater Cove” by Terrie Remington at Luminari Arts.
Celebrating 80 years
of life on the edge
“The Patriots” by Karen Wippich at RiverSea Gallery.
“Unfolding Journey” by Edward
Peterson at Tempo Gallery.
Forsythea will feature new
pottery by Sonja Korpela.
“Genesis” by Edward Peterson
at Tempo Gallery.
“Erotic Still Life” by Tom Cram-
er at Imogen Gallery.
Continued from Pg. 8
SUPPORTING PARTICIPANTS
15. In the Boudoir
1004 Commercial St.
Envelop your senses with ine
linens, lotions, soaps and home decor.
16. Cargo
240 11th St.
Find handmade blouses, dresses
and other items from around the
globe.
17. Holly McHone Jewelers
1150 Commercial St.
Holly McHone Jewelers will
feature the Astoria Bridge Pendant.
La Luna Loca will showcase
items from Tease, a Portland
clothing line that makes
skirts, scarves, shrugs and
more from recycled materials.
Designed by Holly and Kevin McHone,
the pendant commemorates the 50th
anniversary of the Astoria-Megler
Bridge and features an Oregon sun-
stone to represent the area’s sunsets.
Refreshments will be served.
18. Muse Beauty Bar
1168 Commercial St., Suite 206
Muse Beauty Bar will hold its
grand opening with an ocean-themed
photobooth brought to you by Austra-
lian-born photographer and makeup
artist Briony Kendall Staley. There will
also be a trunk show of Tumbled ‘n’
Twisted Jewelry, featuring handmade
designs inspired by the lora, fauna
and geology of the Paciic Northwest.
The venue is located upstairs in the
“Blue Sense” by Tom Cramer
at Imogen Gallery.
“Reconstruction” by Thomas
Benenati at RiverSea Gallery.
historic Copeland building.
recycled materials. Carder will also
show her clothing 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 14 at La Luna Loca’s
Cannon Beach location.
19. La Luna Loca
382 12th St.
Kate Carder, owner of Port-
land-based clothing company Tease,
will show a line of up-cycled T-shirts
and knits from 3 to 8 p.m. The
clothing design and manufacturing
company began in 2008 as a single
project from a T-shirt. “It occurred to
me that we could do this on a larger
scale to provide hip, environmentally
friendly clothing to the denizens of
the Portland area,” Carder said. Tease
has grown to become a line of apparel
and accessories, including skirts,
scarves, shrugs, arm warmers and
more. All products are reconstructed
20. Maiden Astoria
255 14th St.
Stop by for refreshments, and
see new work by Seaside artist Drea
Rose Frost.
21. WineKraft
80 10th St.
WineKraft features art by six local
artists. Hear live folk music by Howly
Slim at 7 p.m.
SUBMITTED PHOTOS
ASTORIA — Astoria artist
Terrie Remington has lived
an artist’s life from a differ-
ent time and era.
She will celebrate her
80th birthday at a reception
open to the public during
Astoria’s Second Saturday
Art Walk, 5 to 8 p.m. Aug.
13 at Luminari Arts. The
reception will feature her
artwork in the show “Living
on the Edge,” which relects
her philosophy of living
with one foot up in the air.
From early childhood in
a basement of a New York
City brownstone, Remington
has been creating art. Her
irst memories are of World
War II air raid sirens and her
mother struggling to feed the
family during the Great De-
pression. But during that time
she created her irst mural in
her kindergarten classroom.
She knew she was an artist.
Adventure and study
called her to travel. In
Puerto Rico, Remington
developed the sculptured
painting medium style. Her
use of sculpture and color
explores the elusive connec-
tion between the spiritual
and physical art form.
During an 11-year residen-
cy in Spain, Remington stud-
ied at the Esquela de Bellas
Artes and opened a gallery in
Barcelona during the military
dictatorship of Francisco
Franco. After his death,
Remington sold paintings to
the Duquesa de Villalba for
the soon-to-be new King of
Spain Juan Carlos.
Remington lived as an
avant-guarde artist. She trav-
eled the world, spending time
with climbers of Mt. Everest,
learned lamenco dancing,
and skied the major slopes.
She owned a gallery on the
Costa Brava in Spain and had
annual shows in Madrid.
But, constantly, she felt the
urge to move. In San Francis-
co she reestablished her art
sales and studied with Frank
Milner. She painted murals
in Tahoe and Mendocino,
California. In the 1980s, she
established Uptown Gallery
in Port Townsend, Washing-
ton. Then it was on to Seattle.
In 1996, Remington
opened a home studio in
Cannon Beach, inally mov-
ing to Astoria in 2000.
“This town has it all,” she
says. “I always lived the life
of an artist with the thought
I would live hard and die
young. I now realize that liv-
ing hard can also mean living
longer and dying harder.
“But Astoria is a wonder-
ful place to be for the last
place I live. There is a peace
here, and I no longer dream
about where to go next. It is
the irst time that I have felt
I am home.”