Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, July 24, 2019, Page 7, Image 7

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    July 24, 2019
Page 7
Arts &
ENTERTAINMENT
Last Thursday
Opens Exhibit
Swaggering, Soulful Rock
The Seratones, a brash, soulful and swaggering new rock
band from Shreveport, La. fronted by the gospel-trained
powerhouse A.J. Haynes will perform in Portland, Thursday,
Aug. 1 at 9:30 p.m. at the Bunk Bar in southeast Portland.
The group has grown a national fan base since their debut
album in 2016 and a performance on CBS This Morning.
Promoting diversity and embracing Native American culture and
learning, the new Cully Park in northeast Portland will host a Portland
Parks & Recreation screening of the Disney movie Finding Nemo
dubbed into Navajo with English subtitles on Saturday, July 27.
Nemo Movie at Cully Park
The Native American Youth
and Family Center in northeast
Portland (NAYA)and Portland
Parks and Recreation invites the
community to a free screening of
a Native American-voiced version
of the popular Disney movie Find-
ing Nemo.
In a collaboration between the
Navajo Nation and The Walt Dis-
ney Company, Nemo Hádéést’į́į́/
Finding Nemo was the second
film dubbed into Navajo as part
of a larger effort of the tribe to
promote language learning and
speaking. The first was Star Wars.
The movie will begin at dusk on
Saturday, July 27 at the new Cully
Park in northeast Portland. Spe-
cial pre-movie entertainment with
the Native drum group Turquoise
Pride will kick off the event at 6:30
p.m. Cully Park is located at North-
east 72nd and Killingsworth Street.
Guardino Gallery, 2939 N.E. Al-
berta St., kicks off its next monthly
exhibit with a reception with the art-
ists on Last Thursday, July 25, from Shannon Weber uses materials from nature to create the
sculpture “All Lines in the Water Boat”
6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
The showcase features artists
Shannon Weber, Sarah Waldron, Mi-
chelle Gallagher and Dayna Collins.
Weber collects materials from
nature and various odd forgotten
objects to create sculptures using
various techniques; Waldron is an
oil painter who refers to her water
series as distance realism; Gallagher
works with clay to create sculptures
and Collins uses old books which
are stained, defaced, torn or marked
up to create collages.
The exhibit runs from July 25 to
Aug. 29.
A white raven sculpture by Michelle Gallagher