Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current, October 28, 2004, Page Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 2
i.Pi!yjyJymo' Warm Springs, Oregon
October 28, 2004
Portland exhibit to feature tribal art
Ancestral art of the Confed
erated Tribes of Warm Springs
will be part of an exhibition in
January at the Portland Art
Museum.
The exhibit, People of tlx Hirer:
Nutiit Arts of the Oregon Terri
tory, will run from January 22
through May 29, 2005.
This will be the first major
exhibition to focus specifically
on the art created by the Native
Americans who lived from time
immemorial along the shores of
the Columbia River, said Bill
Mercer, curator of Native
American art at the Portland Art
Museum.
Cultures featured in the ex
hibit will be those of the Con
federated Tribes of Warm
Springs, and the Umatilla,
Yakama, Grand Ronde and Chi
nook. The exhibition has been care
fully assembled to present a com
prehensive overview of the ar
tistic traditions that emerged
over thousands of years and
countless generations along the
Columbia River. "This region
has been continuously populated
from time immemorial by the
direct ancestors of our current
tribal communities," Mercer
said.
The exhibit, he said, will be
divided into three sections:
sculpture, beading and basketry.
The goal is to present a com
prehensive examination of the
artistic traditions that emerged,
while emphasizing the unique
ness of these traditions and how
they emerged independently of
any other cultural region in
North America, said Mercer.
People of the VJivr consists of
204 objects dating from the pre
contact era to the middle of the
Twentieth Century.
The objects are being brought
together from private collections
and museums around the coun
try including the Portland Art
Museum, Field Museum of
Natural History, Yale Peabody
Museum of Natural History,
Maryhill Museum of Art, and
the Burke Museum of Natural
History and Culture, among oth
ers. There has never been a ma
jor museum exhibition that has
examined the arts and culture
of the Columbia River before,
and this will be the most exten
sive collection of these art works
ever assembled, said Mercer.
Many of these objects were
collected more than 100 years
ago, have been stored away in
museums and private collec
tions, and have never been on
public display before.
People of the Hirer will identify
School board to meet
Nov. 8 in Warm Springs
The Jefferson County
School District 509-J Board
of Directors will meet in
Warm Springs at 7:30 p.m. on
Monday, Nov. 8.
The meeting, in the library
of Warm Springs Elemen
tary School, will be in regard
to Impact Aid funds.
The public is invited to at
tend. Parents and guardians
of students who reside on
the reservation are encour
aged to ask questions and
state opinions regarding dis
trict 509-J programs and the
use of funds.
The school district board
meets annually in Warm
Springs to discuss federal
Impact Aid funding. The
funds are in lieu of property
taxes.
People who have disabili
ties who wish to attend the
meeting are asked to contact
the district 509-J office. .Call
Cindy Harris at 475-6192 to
discuss special arrangements,
which may allow full partici
pation in this public hearing.
Lecture series at High Lookee
Suzie Slockish of the Culture
and Heritage Department will be
the featured speaker this after
noon, October 28, at High
Lookee Lodge.
Slockish will speak as part of
the Celilo, Salmon, & Smoke
lecture series, presented by the
Warm Springs branch of Cen
tral Oregon Community College.
For the occasion, High
Lookee will serve a salmon
lunch for $3. To reserve a lunch,
call 553-1182. The program be
gins at noon.
and trace specific stylistic char
acteristics that through time, and
from one medium to another,
further cmph isize the unique
nature of Columbia River art.
The first section of the exhi
bition focuses on sculptural
works made from stone, wood,
horn, bone, and antler, includ
ing some that pre-date European
contact
Highlighting this section of
the exhibition is a four and one-half-foot
tall anthropomorphic
figure carved from basalt that
is the largest prc-contact Native
American stone sculpture ever
found in North America.
The second section of the
exhibition will feature the vari
ous basketry forms and tech
niques used by the people of the
Columbia River.
Included in this portion of
the exhibition are rare Nineteenth-Century
Chinook bas
kets, as well as finely woven cyl
inder baskets created by the
Wasco and Wishram.
The final section of the ex
hibition consists of beadwork,
a major form of artistic expres
sion, with an additional focus on
the art of a rare type of woven
beadwork made only on the
Columbia River and nowhere
else in North America.
Your Favorite
A
I A
Furnishings desksVU
fT9n? LIVING
CK ROOM
i r DINING R00M
I TABLES LAMPS
I CLvJ . RECLINERS
IUHtir-H MATTRESSES
ftSMtifoA' fm BEDROOM DAYBEDS
f mm SLEEPERS BUNKBEDS
KSI rjST-, LEATHER
gf OBlTOHl3V ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS
LL ' I I AND MORE!
T I IOMK JURNIM LNGS RI J)M().NI) J
K:-t Cunr.il Opni7Dys
W.:?' 1 ' " -U W h St. A i The "V JJ-IIJJ
- cHaNge
I Al
CLOWIl
Don't forget to move
your clocks one hour
back, Oct. 31.
Furniture, gifts, glassware,
pottery, Fenton dealer,
Anheuser-Busch dealer for
steins & collectibles, dolls
dragons, candles and more
10,000 sq. feet of great trea- T
sures, new and olcj, with new ";
items arriving weekly; HI d7 M ft
ucaici spokes avaiiduie iv
antiques and collectibles
1 -Vi
r
We buy antiques, f ClAris: P-01
Stop in
and check us out
Lay-aways
and credit cards
accepted
Financing available
collectibles,
Native American art
i-
Mattress sets, new and used.
World of Treasures Inc.
Second Time Around
178 SW 5th
Madras, OR 97741
(541) 475-6991
Truancy
meetings help
address lack of
attendance
Are you concerned about
your youth's education?
If you are, then Flossie
Wolfe of the Juvenile
Coordinator's Office encourages
you to attend a Community Tru
ancy Board meeting.
Attending a meeting is a good
way to begin doing something
about a potential problem in a
student's school attendance, said
Wolfe.
Community Truancy Board
meetings are held at the Juve
nile coordinator's office, upstairs
at the Tribal Courthouse. The
meetings are from 6 to 8 p.m.,
the first of every month until
the end of the school year.
"If you live in the commu
nity of Warm Springs,
Simnasho, Sildwalter or
Seekseequa, then please come
and join us," said Wolfe.
"We have been having these
meetings for the last two years
now, and we have only a few
interested members. We need
more people to show interest in
our children's attendance," said
Wolfe.
For more information, call
Wolfe at the Juvenile
Coordinator's office, 553-3335.
r 'j i"f
DOUG
(t)
DAVID JOHN
475-2279
RRNsD CS3 475-2333
05 DODGE RAM 3500 4x4
CUMMINS, 6 SPEED, LOADED
33470
T33
HPU056C
FACTORY REBATE 1 1000
CfC BONUS CASH JS0O
TSS DISCOUNT 3387
S4BB7 Bolow MRRP
$35.373
04 DODGE RAM 2500 4x4
CUMMINS, AUTO, SIT, MUCH MORE
33038
KB' WB5f5
FACTORY fltBATE JiMO
CFCB0NU6CSMt7S0
TSSOlSWLWTUnj
$onn Bolow M'snp
$30,595
04 DODGE RAM 1 500 SLT 4X4
HEMI. SLI a MORE
FACTOHY RfBATfe SJS00
LDBllNUSSIIXX)
CFC SONUS (.ASMSiWO
TSS DISCOUNT S3l,ae
so5!i Rir,w ms;rp
S27
7650
04 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER
33324
$15788
U-C &.JNUH CASH liItjtK)
Si?07 f?rjtrw MSRP
01 FORD F250 4X4
XLT. DIESEL. LOADED
$26388
02 P0NTIAC MONTANA
LOADED, CLEAN
323 18A $11.988
02 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LEATHER, VERY CLEAN
33624A
97 DODGE 1500
AUTO, SLT, SHARP
3 1978 A
$7.988
02 JEEP LIBERTY 4x4
LEATHER, EXTRA CLEAN
32223A S
TTI7
16.988
03 TOYOTA MATRIX
LOW MILES, NICE
333046
$16,988
03 DODGE 1500
VERY CLEAN. GAS SAVER
i .
32992A
18,988
00 DODGE DAKOTA
AUTO, V8, 4X4, AND MORE
I
33078A QKN
' t
located Acnocs Fof.i cou.ituouse in DOvHTOvn m:::
Come see the difference in Madras.
? Tf - 'm r rr r r r s) Come see the difference in Madra
"!
'
nil