‘Work spaces’ chronicles Astoria’s changing industries BY JONATHAN WILLIAMS “THE ONLY OTHER PROFESSION THAT GIVES YOU THE SCOPE OF THE HUMAN CONDITION ARE DOCTORS. I REALIZED IF I WAS A PHOTOGRAPHER I COULD MEET ALL KINDS OF PEOPLE AND I WAS CURIOUS.” Michael Mathers was rowing up the John Day River when he hit a piling in the water and nearly fell over. That’s when the idea for his next photography project hit him. He said, “there was a workshop on the road there and I saw it and thought, work- shops, why not do that?” After over two years dedicated to the project, Mathers is showing 144 photos of locals at work in “Work Spaces” at the Royal Nebeker Art Gallery at Clatsop Com- munity College now through Nov. 27 with a reception from 6-8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 7. Michael Mathers, photographer Unsung heroes The show shines a light on the unsung workers and industries in Astoria. The work spaces Mathers focuses on are as dispa- rate as a hand crafted light designer, bakers, marijuana growers and a winery owner. “There are so many remarkable individ- uals here who are doing things that peo- ple don’t know about,” Mathers said. “This is an extremely unique town for the col- orful characters and for the diversity of professions.” He started the project photographing Clatsop Power who he asked for names of other people to photograph, which he asked each person he photographed so his list of people to photograph continued to get larger. “People who work with their bodies are grounded, they look like they belong there, they were comfortable standing. White col- lar workers didn’t have that same grounded- ness,” Mathers said. In a previous project called “Inside Asto- ria” he went to 150 houses and took photos of people. Mathers’ projects have taken him to many heights. He even climbed atop the Astoria Bridge with city workers for a pre- vious project on city workers. Mathers said he’d ideally like to be a fl y on the wall when he takes pictures. When he would take pictures of people for this project, he would consider what the composition is going to be and walk around the people while he’s “painting his picture” visually. Memorable characters include Paul Van der Veldt at Shallon Winery, a 93-year-old ex-Harley-Davidson biker and trompe l’oeil painter, a man who lives in the middle of the forest fi ve miles off a dirt road in a com- See Page 11 10 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Photos by Michael Mathers Photographer Michael Mathers, right, photographing a worker at West Coast Propeller. Workers at the now closed Home Bakery. An industrial work space.