THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2021 A3 LOCAL, STATE & REGION UNSUNG HERO, MYSTERIOUS ARTWORK | SLAVE ON THE LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION Bust of Black pioneer goes up in Portland BY ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press Last year, protesters against racial injustice toppled numer- ous statues around the coun- try. Now, one of the first works of art to emerge in their place depicts an unsung hero of the Lewis and Clark expedition. A huge bust of York, a Black man who was enslaved by Wil- liam Clark and who was the first African American to cross the continent and reach the Pacific Ocean, is sitting atop a pedestal amid a lushly forested park in Portland. It was placed there in the dead of night last weekend by persons unknown. People have flocked to the bust, which seems to be at least 4 feet tall, in Mount Ta- bor Park. The artist’s depiction of York shows him seemingly deep in thought or even sad, his eyes cast downward. York hadn’t been painted contempo- raneously, so how his face re- ally looked is unknown. Officials in the city, which has been an epicenter of Black Lives Matter protests since the killing of George Floyd, love what the head of the parks department called “guerrilla art.” “This past summer, there’s been concern about some of the public art that many states have displayed, and so folks re- ally see this installation as a bit of a reckoning,” Portland Parks and Recreation Director Adena Long said in an interview. “The story of York is really compel- ling and very sad.” Passersby stare up at the bust or touch the tall stone pedes- tal. The anonymous artist af- fixed a plaque describing how York was an integral part of the 1804-1806 expedition to find an all-water route to the Pa- FINAL NS! OW D K R A M Oregon-Idaho boundary measure gets on another county ballot BY PAT CALDWELL Malheur Enterprise Mark Graves/The Oregonian A bust of York, a member of the Lewis and Clark expedition, is seen on Mount Tabor in southeast Portland on Sunday. The statue appeared the day before. cific, but then was denied his freedom by Clark after it was over. Since the killing of Floyd in Minneapolis last May, hun- dreds of symbols of racism and other dark chapters of U.S. history have been removed. Among them were at least 167 Confederate symbols, accord- ing to the Southern Poverty Law Center. Deciding what to replace downed statues with, commis- sioning the artists and having the work done takes time. Whoever made the gigantic head of York circumvented all that by producing the bust — officials believe it might have been done with a 3D printer — getting it into the park with- out being detected and then placing it on top of the pedes- tal, which itself is around 10 feet high. It’s likely the artist had col- laborators to install it. On Friday night, as is customary, park rangers shut gates on the roads and locked them at 10 p.m. closing time. On Up To Saturday morning, a main- tenance worker saw the York bust, perched on a pedestal where a statue of a conserva- tive figure who opposed wom- en’s right to vote had stood until someone knocked it over last year. “None of those gates had been damaged. None of those locks had been damaged. And so we do feel that this was brought in on foot,” said Tim Collier, community relations manager for the city parks de- partment. They had to transport the bust, which seems to be com- posed of plastic or composite of synthetic material, at least 1,000 feet uphill from the near- est road access. Collier said that in the leg- ends of the expedition, York’s role has been overlooked, and that the bust “is really further- ing that conversation here in our very, very white city.” Long hopes the artist comes forward to possibly have a con- versation about making York a permanent art installation. 50% off VALE — Malheur County voters will face a ballot measure in May linked to the movement to shift a number of rural Ore- gon counties into Idaho. The measure would re- quire the Malheur County Court to meet three times a year to consider a plan to move the Oregon-Idaho border. Proponents of Measure 23-64 acquired enough sig- natures Feb. 17 to put it on the May 18 special election ballot, said Gail Trotter, Malheur County clerk. The measure needed 539 signatures and Trotter said her office was able to vali- date 563. Voter approval would require the county court to meet and discuss “how to promote the interests of Malheur County in any negotiations, regarding the relocation of the Ore- gon-Idaho border.” The measure is backed by the group Greater Idaho. The goal of the nonprofit is to slice off 18 counties and incorporate them into Idaho. Mike McCarter, a La Pine resident and president of Greater Idaho, said he was pleased the measure gained enough signatures. In November, voters in Jefferson and Union coun- ties approved measures pushing their leaders to meet about the boundary change. * Select Furniture and Mattresses FINAL DISCOU NTS ! IN A G R A B S ’ N O R S E L T I W * CEN F F O % 75 o t p U Free D Delivery & Special Financing Available** ble** bl SALE ENDS FEBRUARY 28 TH 2017 S Hwy 97, Redmond • 541-548-2066 63485 N Hwy 97, Bend • 541-330-5084 www.WilsonsOfRedmond.net **See store for details. *Off Compare at Price