The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, February 21, 2019, Page 24, Image 34

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    24 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
Celebrate Picture
Attic’s expanded gallery,
new artists in style
LONG BEACH, Wash.
— An Evening at the Attic
— an event celebrating the
bigger space and new art at
The Picture Attic in Long
Beach, Wash. — takes place
5:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 23.
There will be live music by
Fred Carter, plus food and
other refreshments.
Now art and artists
include Darlene Montgom-
ery’s rope baskets, made
with recycled crab fi sh-
ermen’s rope; acrylics by
Cecelia Haack; and Beverly
Cole’s painted rocks.
Other participating art-
ists: Susan Mitchel, with
oils and pastels; Susan Wil-
son, with stained glass mir-
rors, wall hangings and
jewelry; Linda Marsh with
pots and mugs with faces,
hand-decorated vases and
vessels, and other hand-
made pottery items; Jean
Nitzel’s watercolors and
acrylics; Al Betters’ acrylic
paintings of wildlife and
military life; Carol Couch’s
Jean Nitzel
A painting of a forest path
by Jean Nitzel.
watercolors; Monica Cam-
eron’s watercolors and
prints; Lynda Kinnuen’s
art pieces crafted with col-
ored leather and nails; Wes
Moenhke’s watercolors of
trains, bridges and old cars;
and abstract oils by Oscar
Nelson.
The Picture Attic is at
711 Pacifi c North on Wash-
ington State Route 103,
eight blocks north of Bols-
tad Avenue in Long Beach,
Wash.
La ~
CABANA
Go down the rabbit hole in Cannon Beach
CANNON BEACH —
Go down the rabbit hole
with a free, one-woman per-
formance of “Alice in Won-
derland” at 2 p.m. Saturday,
Feb. 23, at Tolovana Hall in
Cannon Beach.
All of Lewis Carroll’s
indelible characters —
including Alice, the Queen,
Cheshire Cat and the Mad
Hatter — will be chan-
neled by Anne Rutherford,
an award-winning story-
teller and arts educator from
Portland.
Rutherford’s ping-pong-
ing among Wonderland’s
wild points of view might
seem daunting — if not
downright mad — but Car-
roll’s story, after all, is about
exploring what’s really pos-
sible. As Carroll wrote,
“Alice had begun to think
that very few things indeed
were really impossible.”
Perhaps it’s fi tting for a
single performer to adapt
and deliver this shapeshift-
ing tale. As Alice herself
says: “How puzzling all
Tolovana Arts Colony
Anne Rutherford, an award-winning storyteller and arts educator from Portland, performs
‘Alice in Wonderland’ as a one-woman show.
these changes are! I’m never
sure what I’m going to be,
from one minute to another.”
Presented by Tolovana
Arts Colony, this show for
Raya
503-325-3656
and poems read by local
writers during the Writers
Read Celebration at 7 p.m.
Crossword Answers
AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD
35431 Hwy 101 Business
Astoria, OR. 97103
S. Hemlock St. For more
information,visit tolova-
naartscolony.org, email tolo-
vanaartscolony@gmail.com
or call 541-215-4445.
Writers read essays, poems about North Coast life
CANNON BEACH —
Life on the North Coast
will be the topic of essays
Thank you
for voting us Best
Mexican Restaurant!
familes and children of all
ages is made possible by a
grant from the City of Can-
non Beach.
Tolovana Hall is at 3779
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Friday, March 1, in the
Cannon Beach Library.
The 10 writers’ resi-
dences range from Gray’s
River on the Washing-
ton Coast to Nehalem
in Oregon. Their pieces
were selected from among
49 entries by a panel of
library volunteers, a book-
store representative and a
professional writer.
Many iconic experi-
ences special to the North
Coast are contained in the
selections. They include
a walk along the Colum-
bia River waterfront, a
drive from Portland to
Manzanita, an early morn-
ing stroll between the
river and the sea, a visit to
Klootchy Creek, a child’s
discovery in the Haystack
Rock tidepools and a new
resident’s first impres-
sions of living here full
time.
From November
through January, the Can-
non Beach Library asked
local residents and visitors
to submit entries about
life on the North Coast
to be read at the Writers
Read event. The pieces
were to be no longer than
600 words. The panel
making the selections read
the submissions without
knowing who the authors
were.
Entries — both those
that will be read March 1
and others submitted —
will be compiled in a per-
manent collection at the
library.