$3ortlanb QObserUcr Page 10 May 25, 2011 ENTER Holiday Weekend Opens Rose Festival Portland’s Rose Festival kicks off this Memorial Day weekend on Friday, May 27, with the first of three weekends of fun at Waterfront Park, downtown. Carnival rides, special attractions, musical enter­ tainment, and the new RoZone venue which features national and local acts, and the Pacific Northwest Barbeque Championship are all included in the festival’s City Fair opening. The family favorite Funtastic carnival features gentle Kiddie Land rides and over-the-top twisters for older, more adventurous thrill seekers. Beginning at 8 p.m. on Friday, the Curtis Salgado Band will play, followed by the Rose Lighting Cer­ emony at 9:45 p.m. and the fireworks show at 10:00 p.m. Other fun features include happy hour specials, the Big Sling -the thrilling human catapult, a live animal exhibit by KOIN 6 News, festival foods at the culinary courtyard, and a variety of performances on the Dex Grand Wheel Stage. Waterfront Park, downtown, will turn into CityFair this weekend as the annual Rose Festi val opens for carnival rides, entertainment, food and other featured events. SPRING ANNUAL FUNDRAISER V JUNE 3,2011 f C E N T E R FOR SELF E N H A N C E M E N T 3920 N. KERBY PORTLAND OR. 97227 7=00-9:30PM___ \ < z „ *fc A R t Q H f . . K Ú K A 0N Ó N AFRICAN li k * A . k ¿7 + * * A f r ic a n da N ê ^ DANCE TROUPE Purchase Tickets in Advance $ 1 0 A d u lt | $5 C hildren U nder 12 Contact Lionel Clegg at 503 380 848? or Idogglfapp*. V1? or if, Walls of Pride A self-guided tour of African American murals The recent handmade publica­ tion, “Walls of Pride: A Tour of African American Public Art in Port­ land,” offers a slice of our city’s art history that has often been over­ looked and poorly chronicled. Created by The Dill Pickle Club, a local nonprofit cultural or­ ganization, the tour book­ let provides a self-guided tour to twenty of Portland ’ s African American public artw orks through color photos, a detailed map, mural descriptions, and art­ ist bios. Providing context for these vital works are inter­ views with artists includ­ ing Adriene Cruz, Henry Frison, and Isaka Shamsud- Din as well as a transcribed conversation between his­ tory professor Professor Reiko Hillyer and Robin Dunitz. “If you know where to look, Port­ land is an art gallery. And some­ where amid this miles-wide show­ room is acollection of African Ameri­ can mural art. But there’s no glass or alarms to protect what artists have made here; no guards to tell people not to touch. So, while bits have survived, some have been defaced and others have been tom down in the name of development.” —Ryan Kost, The Oregonian. Since June 2009, the volunteer- run Dill Pickle Club has led field trips exploring public life in Oregon and produces publications document­ ing local culture and history. After successful bus and bike tours held in D ecem ber 2010 throughout Portland, The Walls of Pride was published to make avail­ able these stories and cultural con­ tributions to a larger community in Portland and beyond. To order Walls of Pride, contact Amanda Tillstrom of The Dill Pickle C lu b at 5 0 3 -2 3 5 -2 9 0 9 or distro@dillpickleclub.com.