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Date: 12/8/2019
Subject: Reminder: Fun Things to do this Friday thru Sunday at the Art Triangle
From: Marilyn Wolverton



HO HO HO!

Please join us in the ASA Classroom on Sunday, December 15th from 3 to 5 pm for a fun gift exchange and holiday celebration.   Bring a wrapped, art related gift valued at under $20 if you'd like to participate in the gift exchange.  Bring a snack food to share if you wish, otherwise just join us to look back and celebrate another happy and eventful year of art at ASA.

Guests are welcome!


Enjoy an evening of art at the Pacific Artists’ Co-Op's reception from 5 pm to 7 pm Friday, December 13th. 

 The Co-op gallery features an exhibit of student work from the Taft High Student Art program.

Come share in the students’ exploration of various media resulting in surreal collage imagery, colorful storyboards, linoleum stamp carving, digital design techniques, and more.  This imaginative artwork offers new perspectives. The artists begin to make their mark with lasting impressions while learning from their creative communities.

A selection of this years’ student artwork is on display at the Co-op galley during the month of December from 10:00am to 5:00pm daily.

We look forward to seeing you there.



At the Cultural Center:

EWEB Steam Plant- A Photographic Study

By James Bailey

December 13th- January 6th

 

LINCOLN CITY- EWEB Steam Plant-A Photographic Study” is an exhibit, by photographer James Bailey, represents 3 decades (20’s,30’s and 40’s) of early industrial design. It is a photographic study of a EWEB Steam Plant preserved in a pristine state for 20 years by the Eugene Water and Electric board and is now decommissioned and listed for sale.

 

The Opening reception is: Friday, Dec. 13 from 5 – 7 pm and the show will run through January 6 at the Chessman Gallery inside the Lincoln City Cultural Center.

 

 James Bailey photographed the Eugene Water and Electric Board's (EWEB) “Steam Plant” from 2009 to 2015. The Steam Plant was constructed in phases from 1930 to 1952. Its purpose was to serve as backup power generation for the utility's hydroelectric plants. It continues to be protected from deterioration and is considered surplus property. Its future is unclear at this time.

 

Bailey’s photographic work from the plant is most closely aligned with the industrial landscape genre of photography.