Page 4 October 19, 2016 Battle Lines Grow C ontinued froM f ront Hales leave office but Commis- sioner Nick Fish should leave with him. They initially target- ed Commissioner Fritz for recall over her vote until it was discov- ered that under Oregon law she is immune from recall until six months after her new term begins in January. Even Shaun King, a promi- nent national Black Lives Mat- ter figure and columnist for the New York Daily News, took to Twitter to warn Hales of the re- percussions the passing of the contract. “PLEASE TAKE NOTICE. Dear @MayorPDX - we will likely boycott your city if you make this contract official,” read King’s tweet. In a separate arti- cle, he describes a planned Dec. 5 boycott of Portland and other cities, businesses and institu- tions “which are either willfully indifferent to police brutality and Subscribe! 503-288-0033 racial injustice or are deliberate- ly destructive partners with it.” Commissioner Steve Novick, the only vote against the new contract, was understanding of the community uproar. He told the Oregonian the reaction was a response to the mistrust people feel about police. “It’s very un- fortunate,” Novick said. Don’t Shoot PDX and Black Lives Matter will remain strin- gent in their demands of the city but will continue to advocate without violence, according to McKelvey. “Our movement will contin- ue to protest against injustice, hold art projects to empower the community, forums to educate the people and a beacon of hope to all those who seek justice in Portland.” As activists work towards getting both the Mayor and Commissioner Fish out of of- fice early, the promise of Mayor elect Ted Wheeler’s term, which begins in January, officers some hope. “I have much more respect for Mayor-elect Wheeler than for Charlie Hales,” McKelvey says, “I think it is important that he notices that the type of violence Hales has inflicted upon peaceful protestors as well as excluding us from policy conversations will not be seen without pushback.” Wheeler has remained rela- tively silent during the protests but McKelvey says he has made some attempts to reach out and show support. “I have confidence that Mr. Wheeler’s office will contin- ue to work with myself and our movement,” says McKelvey. “If he does not, we will hold him accountable just like any other politician.” “We made a mistake on Hales, but I trust we have learned from it and elected a much better may- or. Above all, I think Ted Wheel- er has a conscious - something that has been absent from Char- lie Hales reaction to the new civ- il rights movement.” Historic Artist in Black Smithsonian Fill Out & Send To: Attn: Subscriptions, PO Box 3137, Portland OR 97208 $45.00 for 3 months • $80.00 for 6 mo. • $125.00 for 1 year (please include check with this subscription form) Name: Telephone: Address: or email subscriptions@portlandobserver.com C ontinued froM P age 2 uted five pieces to the program, but her “Medicine and Trans- portation Mural” was part of a collection of paintings she made during the 1940s. Born in 1911 in Yakima, Wash., Streat eventually relocat- ed to Portland with her family where she began pursuing her art career in addition to creative and interpretive dancing. She attended the Pacific Northwest College of Art where she was later awarded post humorously a doctorate degree that Jackson received on her behalf in 2010. Jackson attributes part of her aunt’s success to PNCA and Reed College, who held exhibits for Streat early on in her career. Reed College even holds one of Streat’s works, “The Black Vir- gin,” in their permanent collec- tion. Streat’s works have also been featured at Portland Art Muse- um, northeast Alberta Street’s Art Hop and the Oregon Histor- ical Society. The Harmon Foun- dation in New York gave her an honorable mention at age 18 for her painting “The Priest” and she her works even attracted the at- tention of renowned artist Diego Rivera, who trusted her to assist him in painting his famous Pan American Unity mural. “The work of Thelma John- son Streat is in my opinion one of the most interesting mani- festations in this country at the present,” Rivera wrote in a letter to a Los Angeles art dealer. “It is extremely evolved and sophis- ticated enough to reconquer the grace and purity of African and American art.” Not all of Streat’s work was met with such positivity, as a piece she painted after World War II garnered hatred from the Ku Klux Klan. As a visual protest to the in- crease in lynchings of black men and soldiers following the war, Streat painted a piece depicting a black sailor being hanged called “Death of a Black Sailor,” which led the Ku Klux Klan to send her a threatening cease and desist type letter. Streat and the Los Angeles museum the work was featured in held their ground and the painting remained up. With all of her creative and cultured stories to share, Streat offered some entertaining light to her family whenever she would come back to visit. “As children, we were just so thrilled. When she would come home it was just exciting for us, listening to her stories and watching her paint,” Jackson re- calls. “She would do her creative dancing too and we would try and copy her moves.” Streat passed away at age 47 in 1959 and her family wished to carry on her cultural contribu- tions as well as their fond mem- ories of her, eventually leading them to start the Thelma John- son Streat Project in 1991 as a means to energize attention to her works. Jackson says the family is focused on getting as many of Streat’s pieces viewed by the world as possible and that in ad- dition to seeking venues to show her art locally, they’re in the pro- cess of putting together a travel- ling exhibit to hit the country’s various museums. “She just had this bigger than life, life,” says Jackson. “She was really an exciting figure for our family and we were just so proud of her growing up and still are.”