Page 10
October 18, 2017
Arts &
ENTERTAINMENT
Mingle
Lounge
Upscale Hip-Hop/R&B Nightclub
25 and Older
322 NW Everett St • FRI-SAT 8PM-2PM
Providing Insurance and Financial Services
Home Office, Bloomington, Illinois 61710
Ernest J. Hill, Jr. Agent
4946 N. Vancouver Avenue,
Portland, OR 97217
503 286 1103
Fax 503 286 1146
ernie.hill.h5mb@statefarm.com
24 Hour Good Neighbor Service R
State Farm R
A ceramic work by Marlene Robbins.
A painting with mixed media by Karen Wippich.
Day of the Dead Exhibit
There’s still time to attend a loved ones with over 48 artists
Day of the Dead group art show at participating.
Guardino Gallery that commem-
Located at 2939 N.E. Alberta
orates our ancestors and departed St., the exhibit includes many of
Portland’s unique art styles from
paintings, prints, wood, ceramics
and more. The show runs through
Sunday, Oct. 22.
The late James Blue, considered an important voice in social activist filmmaking, is the subject of
a new film by University of Oregon professor Dan Miller, presented by the Northwest Film Center on
Thursday, Oct. 19 at 7 p.m.
Showdogs is a full service
salon. We do baths, all over hair
cuts, tooth brushing, nail trims,
soft claws, flea treatments, mud
baths, and ear cleaning. We also
have health care and grooming
products to keep your pet clean in
between visits.
Tuesday-Saturday 9am-7pm
Monday 10am-4pm
Show Dogs Grooming Salon & Boutique
926 N. Lombard, Portland, OR 97217 • 503-283-1177
Yo dawg is gonna look like a show dawg and your kitty will be pretty.
Lens on Activist
Cinema Master
The legacy of the late Os-
car-nominated documentary film-
maker James Blue, a University of
Oregon and Jefferson High School
graduate regarded as one of the im-
portant voices in social activist film-
making, gets a close up look with a
new film by U of O professor Dan
Miller.
An early driving force in media
arts education, and a catalyst in the
formation of regional film arts orga-
nizations, Blue is best known for his
Cannes Film Festival prizewinning
“The Olive Trees of Justice” (1962),
about a Frenchman returning to his
native Algiers to witness mass ex-
ploitation.
His other important films remain
classics, including “The March”
(1964), which chronicled the civil
rights march on Washington and the
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s fa-
mous “I have a dream” speech, and
“A Few Notes on Our Food Prob-
lem” (1968), about the growing is-
sue of hunger around the world.
“Citizen Blue: The Life and Art
of Cinema Master James Blue”
will screen on Thursday, Oct. 19 at
7 p.m. at Whitsell Auditorium, lo-
cated in the Portland Art Museum,
downtown. Admission is $9 general
and $8 for students and seniors.