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About The skanner. (Portland, Or.) 1975-2014 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 2017)
January 25, 2017 The Skanner Page 7 Arts & Entertainment Local Mural Artist Gets First Solo Show tion of African Amer- icans to northern and western states and the Vanport flood of 1948. Frison’s panel, “Civil Rights” — which includ- ed thematic images of Martin Luther King Jr. and Ralph Abernathy — was the first to be completed in February 1978. The four addition- al mural panels followed later that summer. His second contribu- tion, “Black Cowboys,” told stories of the timber industry, cattle ranches and dairy farms, as well as the relationship be- tween recently migrated African Americans and the indigenous people of the Northwest. No stranger to cow- boys, Frison spent part of his childhood living By Melanie Sevcenko Of The Skanner News L PHOTO: ROBIN J. DUNITZ ocal African Amer- ican painter Henry Frison will exhibit close to 20 portraits at the end of the month, in what will be the art- ist’s first solo show. Opening on July 29 at greenHAUS Gallery and Boutique, Frison’s inti- mate portraits of iconic Black figures — Presi- dent Obama, Rosa Parks and Michael Jackson among them — will be on display until the end of summer. “I want Henry to feel the respect of the masses, and not because he’s an elderly Black man, but because it should have been provided 40 years ago,” said Cole Reed, own- “ Henry Frison on his back porch at home on NE Fargo Ave. er of greenHAUS. At 77, Frison is primar- ily known as a Portland mural artist and one of seven Black painters that collaborated on the Al- bina Mural Project from 1978 — a work of five 20 foot by 20 foot murals, spearheaded by artist Isaka Shamsud-Din. At the corner of North Vancouver Avenue and Northeast Alberta Street, the murals depicted a se- ries of pivotal points in Black history, including the transatlantic slave trade, the Great Migra- Everybody is really unique in their own right, but that’s why I love por- trait paint- ing on a ranch in his native town of Bellinger, Texas. Growing up, Frison said he was always sketching — mostly boy- hood fascinations like Mighty Mouse and other cartoon characters. But as he matured, he discov- ered his gift for render- ing images of people. “Drawing people was always a challenge to try to capture each person,” Frison told The Skan- ner. “Everybody is real- ly unique in their own right, but that’s why I love portrait painting.” As a young man Frison SHOWTIMES ROUGH NIGHT (R) Fri-Thur: 4:15, 9:25 IT COMES AT NIGHT (R) Fri-Thur: 2:15, 9:45 CAPTAIN UNDERPANTS: THE FIRST EPIC MOVIE (PG) Fri-Thur: 11:20, 2:25 PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES (PG-13) Fri-Thur: 4:25 PHOTO: DARRYL CLEGG Henry Frison’s portraits of Black legends will exhibit at greenHAUS Gallery July 29 Portrait of Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr., featured in Frison’s exhibit moved to New Mexico, where he lived for 10 years and worked at a cotton compress. In 1965, at the age of 25, he landed in Portland and found work at a steel foundry. After suffering an illness that put him out of work, Frison en- rolled in the now-closed Advertising Art School. It was there that he learned the art of sign painting, which would later inform his large-format skills for murals. He also graduat- ed from sketching with charcoal pencils to paint- ing with oils. Shortly after com- pleting school, Frison would join the socially conscious Albina Mural Project. Robin Dunitz is a mu- ral historian who used to give mural tours through the Mural Conservan- cy of Los Angeles. “We tried to educate people how murals were a way to present different cul- tures and to show the ar- tistic talents of a diversi- ty of people in a city,” said Dunitz, who now resides in Portland. In a similar spirit, this The Week of Friday, July 28 through Thursday, Aug. 3, 2017 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 2 (PG-13) Fri-Thur: 11:30, 4:00, 6:45 THE LOST CITY OF Z (PG-13) Fri-Thur: 11:35, 6:30 JURASSIC PARK (PG-13) Fri-Thur: 1:20, 7:05, 9:35 $4.00 adults, $3.00 senior citizens (65+), $3.00 for kids (12 & under) 7818 SE Stark St, Portland, OR 97215 503-252-1707 • AcademyTheaterPdx.com Babysitting: Children 2 to 8 years old. Fri: shows starting between 3:30 pm and 8 pm. Sat - Sun: shows starting between 1 pm and 8 pm. $9.50 per child for the length of the movie. Call to reserve a spot, no drop ins. year marks the 50th an- niversary of Chicago’s 1967 “Wall of Respect,” and several mural pro- grams across the nation are acknowledging its influence on community mural movements. Com- posed by 14 artists, “Wall of Respect” is a montage of portraits depicting close to a dozen Black heroes in various fields such as music, sports and politics. “Black Cowboys” from the Albina Mural Project of 1978 “Artists of color have historically been exclud- ed from a lot of main- stream galleries and museums,” continued Dunitz. “So the streets became their gallery.” According to Frison, he was never asked to exhibit his work in Port- land’s downtown galler- ies. One of the reasons, he said, was because his prices were too low. Dunitz and muralist Joanne Oleksiak curated the 2010 exhibit “Walls of Heritage, Walls of Pride: African American Murals” for the Oregon Historical Society, which included work from the Albina Mural Project. The exhibit is also re- flected in Dunitz’s book of the same name, co-au- thored by Jim Prigoff. Some images featured See ARTIST on page 8