THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 2021 • THE BULLETIN GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 7 talent Factor: Artists need community support “If you have a community that is unaffordable for artists to live, you can’t expect to have an art community. Because that’s not how it works. (Bend) is already such an expensive, growing — by leaps and bounds — community that is already unaffordable for the average artist.” BY DAVID JASPER The Bulletin A community like Central Oregon must care for its artists, says fine artist Ian Factor. The Bulletin Especially now, said Factor, who excels in and Scalehouse, portraiture and teaches art at Central Or- a collaborative for the arts, have egon Community College, as well as Bend joined together to raise donations to Academy of Art, which he founded. help Central Oregon’s creative artists — “The more help that artists can get in this musicians, visual artists, performers and really difficult time, in this really difficult creative workers — by offering grants community for artists, the better,” said Fac- and a platform to bring attention to local tor, the second artist to be featured in The amazing talent. This is a crowdfunding Bulletin’s Central Oregon Creative Artists effort with a first-round fundraising goal Relief Effort, or CO CARES. (To make a do- of $40,000. To make a tax-deductible nation or apply for a grant, visit bendbulle- donation or apply for a grant, go to bendbulletin.com/talent. tin.com/talent/.) He also believes that the pandemic brings into sharp relief the need for community support of artists even when a pandemic has of growing costs of living and COVID-19, not impacted incomes for a year. As the cost Bend risks losing the artistic community it of living increases in Bend, it pushes out art- has to more affordable places, Factor said. ists who help create the town’s culture. “What happens is you get more and more “If you have a community that is unaf- money moving in, and the artists get pushed fordable for artists to live, you can’t expect out, further and further and further away to have an art community. from these areas that they Because that’s not how it themselves made interest- works,” he said. “(Bend) is ing and desirable,” he said. already such an expensive, “The artists are there. Then growing — by leaps and they have little cafes open bounds — community that up, before you know it, is already unaffordable for there are little shows and the average artist.” galleries. ” Whereas trendy, expen- Factor gets it. “They’re sive places such as Wil- like, ‘This is really cool.’ liamsburg, a neighborhood People are drawn to that in the New York borough kind of energy, that life,” of Brooklyn, already had a he said. strong art foundation prior He’s seen the gentrifica- to gentrification, Bend has tion process firsthand in always been more about many of the cities in which the mountains, outdoor he’s lived, worked and activities and beer, in terms taught. of its draw. “I saw it in New York Courtesy Ian Factor City, I saw it in Portland, “There’s no core, real Bend artist Ian Factor in a 40-by-30- Maine … all these places tight community” of art- ists here, he said. “I mean, inch self-portrait in oil. I’ve lived. San Francisco,” there are tons of artists, he said. “The same pattern but everybody’s dispersed, happens: The artists move doing their own thing and just struggling in because it’s an affordable place and they to survive. And this was (true) even before can get big space for cheap, and they create COVID.” energy. They’re creating life. And that life — Ideally, he would love to see subsidized that’s the life force. That’s the magnetic life live-work spaces, designed and engineered force that draws people to that community.” ý David Jasper: 541-383-0349, specifically for artists of all disciplines. djasper@bendbulletin.com And right now, with the double whammy Submitted photo Ian Factor, artist, teacher