Continued from Page 8 Nancy McCarthy Metal and wire sculptor Joe Police was commissioned to create a wire sculpture at Breakers Point. Police died before he could begin the sculpture so his wife, Pat Egan Police, completed it with help from fellow artists. photos of 111 artists who spent time in Cannon Beach. It also describes 61 galleries and studios — ranging from a gas sta- tion annex to the White Bird Gallery, which cele- brates its 50th anniversary this year. Colored plates of some artists’ works are included as well. In addition to inter- viewing artists, Bartl perused 25 years of local newspapers, including the Cannon Beach Gazette and Seaside Signal. Bartl included stories about art- ists and their exhibits in the book. The reasons artists descended on the town are as diverse as the art- ists themselves. Painter and sculptor Jane Horns, a Portland Museum Art School student, visited the area on a field trip in 1964. Horns was stranded when the school bus left without her — so she found a $25 room in Can- non Beach. She spent the summer exhibiting her work in the M&M Building, home to numerous art galler- ies through the years. The building now houses the Sesame and Lilies store. Painter Steve McLeod rode his motorcycle to Cannon Beach during a cross-country tour in 1970 and became one of Cannon Beach’s beloved residents until his death in 2015. Frank Lackaff visited his family’s cabin in 1960 and eventually opened the Sketch Pad Gallery at a gas station. He later reno- vated a building on Hem- lock Street into a home and gallery, and sold that to artists Harry and Hanne Greaver, who still operate the gallery. Jim Hannen decided to open a stained glass studio in 1975 in Can- non Beach after a visit. In those days, an artist could rent a place large enough to live and work in for $50 a month. “I thought what a cool thing it would be to live in Cannon Beach and have a shop in Cannon Beach,” said Hannen, who still lives in the area and sells his glasswork. “It was such a different town. There was some- thing kind of dreamy about it.” Bartl also tells the story of Joe Police, a metal sculptor who became Cannon Beach’s mayor. Police was com- missioned to do a sculp- ture of Sacajawea at the then-new Breakers Point condominium devel- opment. Police died in 1980 before he started the sculpture. His wife, Pat Egan Police, completed it with the community’s help. “There was a lot of creative energy,” Bartl said. “There were a lot of reasonably young peo- ple starting out their lives and careers, and they had ideas. They were differ- ent from 1950s, early ‘60s mainstream ideas, and it created something. It wasn’t just in the arts. There was a revolution in what kind of town we should be and how we get there.” When Portland State University opened the Haystack Summer Arts Program in 1969, Cannon Beach became an even greater draw for artists and visitors from through- out the U.S. The program, which continued for more than 30 years, impacted the village economically and culturally. But those early days were special, Bartl said, because the arts were “woven into the community.” “That was the best time in Cannon Beach, there’s no doubt about it. I think it was a special time, I really do,” he said. THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2021 // 9