Page 4 July 19, 2000 •< Focus >- (Ulfe JlorUanb ©bsrruer ONDA: art with a voice Art by D anny B ell ONDA art gallery, located at 2215 NE Alberta, offers art that traverses a terrain from eclectic furniture to wood paintings o f Ecuadorian folk art o f rural Indians. Allan Oliver, a form er o rd ain ed m in ister and missionary, has brought a unique perspective to A lberta Street - which is experiencing an emergence o f art galleries, restaurants and other commercial enterprises. O liv e r, w h o se v o c a tio n a l background is in graphic design and fabric, says he focuses on the c o n te m p o ra ry . H e w ent into discussion about commercial art being “m odem ” which shares a commonality with popular art. His idea is that art may also be an investment economically and have broad appeal and yet be more on the cutting edge o f how art is rendered. These are the kinds o f pieces he seeks out. Drawing on his experience as a missionary based in Latin America, Oliver often utilizes his contacts th e re to e x h ib it L a tin o and sometimes Cuban work. In June, he had a showing o f Ecuadorian wood paintings at very affordable prices. Another point o f interest is that Oliver exhibits a lot o f functional art such as beds, coffee and cocktail tables, pottery, and room divider screens. The screens in many cases are his own work in fabric. Recently, O liver has moved more toward showing paintings. He recently exhibited a group by a young artist, Kam Piana, which made powerful social and emotional statements. Oliver observed that, even though there is an evolution o f enterprise on A lb e rta , he hopes the n e ig h b o rh o o d can re ta in its indigenous flavor similar to that o f the Hawthorne area or the Alberta neighborhood o f40 years ago. True composition. ONDA and Oliver communicate through art a message that man does not live on bread alone, that the em otional and spiritual aspects in our lives also play parts in our well-being. A complete service salon with a... Owner, Allan Oliver with a Junctional artwork clock - one o f many items o f artistic expression in his gallery. to his socially conscious roots, he would like to see basically what is Calling it “a way to share the spirit ofnative peoples,” theConfederated Tribes o f Grand Ronde announced that it will donate $500,000 to the Portland Art Museum through its Spirit Mountain Community Fund. The recent gift, and an earlier one for $500,000, is being used to create the museum ’s new Grand Ronde Center for Native American Art, which is part o f the museum ’s two- year renovation o f the Hoffman Wing. The center will providemore than 7,000 square feet o f exhibition sp ace an d s ta te -o f-th e -a rt installations so museum visitors for the first time will gain a true sense o f the scope and importance o f the m u se u m ’s N a tiv e A m e ric a n Collection. “Art tells us so much about the people who came before us,” said Kathryn Harrison, chair o f the Grand Ronde Tribal Council. “This is a wonderful way to share the spirit o f n a tiv e p e o p le s. S in ce the termination o f our Tribe in 1954, Tribal members have been working hard to reclaim and reconnect with our unique past. We welcome the chance to be partners with the talented people at the Portland Art Museum who also are committed to sharing the stories o f native people. The Grand Ronde Center is part of the museum ’ s two-year “Project for the M illennium,” which includes a new Center for Northwest Art, new education, including major gifts to the Oregon Children’sFoundation’s SMART reading program, Oregon P u b lic B ro a d c a stin g , O M S I, Western Oregon University and Young A udiences. A C o m m u n ity F u n d g ra n t a llo w e d L ife F lig h t to purchase a guidance system and build weather stations so it could answer emergency c a lls d u rin g in c le m e n t w eather. In addition, the Com m unity Fund recently gave $ 2 7 0 ,0 0 0 to help Raphael House in Portland d ram atically in crease its capac ity to provide shelter for abused w om en and their children. The Confederated Tribes o f Grand Ronde is a confederation o f the tribes that in h a b ite d the v a lle y s o f Western Oregon from what is now the California border to presen t-d ay P ortland. Its p rin c ip a l trib e s are the Kalapuya, Molalla, Chasta, Umpqua and Rogue River, with several other smaller bands and trib e s. T he Confederated Tribes were formed in the winter o f 1856 when the federal government forced member tribes to code their ancestral lands and relocate to a 60,000-acre reservation inO regon’sCoast Range. The G rand Ronde reservation was decreased over the years until the U.S. " evolving - a community that is re fle c tiv e o f an in te rn a tio n a l Grand Ronde Tribes’ gift to Portland Art Museum galleries for special exhibitions, a community education center, a state- of-the-art auditorium , a newly renovated outdoor sculpture garden an d an in c re a se d o p e ra tin g endowment. A Community Grand Opening Celebration is planned for August 19-20. A Community Day to celebrate the Grand Ronde Center for Native American Art will be held Saturday, August 26. The Grand Ronde Center forNative American Art will feature exhibition space and installations conceived byCuratorBill Mercer and designed by Clifford Lafontaine. It occupies the entire second floor o f the new wing, along with part o f the third. Some 375 works o f art, drawn from virtually every major cultural group in North America, will be placed on view. Two galleries will feature pieces from the tribes that lived along the Oregon and Washington coast, the Willamette Valley and along the Columbia River. Plaques will acknowledge all o f Oregon’s federally recognized tribes. The Confederated Tribes o f Grand Ronde created the Spirit Mountain Community Fund in 1997 as a way for Tribal members to practice their age-old traditions o f sharing and g iv in g back. E ach y e a r, the Com m unity Fund distributes 6 percent o f the profits from Spirit M o u n tain C asin o . S ince its inception, the Community Fund has given more than $9 million to a variety o f non-profit organizations. The fund has given $2.4 million to S T government terminated the Tribe in 1954. Through the hard work o f Tribal members, federal recognition was restored in 1983. Call: ZZ8-6510 305 N.E. Wygant Portland. OR. 97211 Live M usk Nightly Ilearty Pub Fare Spirits Available in M any Forms B56 North Russell S ired, Portland, Oregon (>()3)282-6810 tvtvn.iiK nienamins.t mn