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X-WR-CALNAME:Tumalo Art Co.
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Tumalo Art Co.
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DTSTART:20210101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220902T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220930T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T130531
CREATED:20220414T030602Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220902T023755Z
UID:10124-1662130800-1664564400@tumaloartco.com
SUMMARY:Dorothy Freudenberg—Quiet Moments & Lively Interactions
DESCRIPTION:Quiet Moments & Lively Interactions\, a retrospective by photographer and digital artist Dorothy Freudenberg\, opens September 2\, from 3-7pm\, during the Old Mill District’s First Friday Gallery Walk. Juxtaposing introspective images with expressively vibrant digital compositions\, Dorothy blends different artistic mediums by incorporating them all in her imagery. Her work transcends the graphic arts\, suggesting that music\, the written word\, and the visual arts all overlap. \n \nAn accomplished pianist Dorothy references music as inspiration for her artwork. During the opening she will be offering musical improvisations on her electric piano—the melodies are interwoven with the creation of her images. Musical improvisations support the different images presented\, or make suggestions of musical works to which one can reference. \n \nContemplative photography\, implying the seasons\, are displayed along with lively and unique digital compositions that are an expression of the artists inner world. The pieces are printed on metal and individually framed for a vivid\, lustrous presentation. \nDorothy’s images have two distinct sides—her layered digital images that use multiple photos\, textures\, and filters and are created overall using a computer program. These “Lively Conversations” are literally painted with digital tools. Dorothy’s digital media images tend to be quite colorful and vibrant with lots of detail. \n \n“Quiet Moments” are Dorothy’s contemplative images. These compositions come to her during her morning walks where a single ray of light filtering through branches\, or a blossom with out-of-focus colors from a building in the background or other plants\, become a rich expression of awareness. The commonplace and overlooked becomes magical. These moments are captured in a single photograph. \n \nDorothy Freudenberg set out to college many years ago intending to study art and literature. Four years later she came out with a degree in Piano/music. Family circumstances prevented her from pursuing her dreams in that field\, but before long her life changed once again and she emerged on a motorcycle with a camera strapped on. This would be the start of a journey where\, even though some threads got dropped\, the pursuit of art became a passion that carries through to today. Finding creativity in photography captivated her but it wasn’t until recently that the threads of visual art and music came together. As she once again is taking music seriously all of the threads have converged. This time with a creativity and freedom that wasn’t present the first time around. In this show Dorothy is expressing all these forms simultaneously and it is a joy. \nCome into the gallery and enjoy the show. Or\, shop online anytime. \n 
URL:https://tumaloartco.com/event/dorothy-freudenberg/
LOCATION:Tumalo Art Co.\, 450 SW Powerhouse Dr. #407\, Bend\, OR\, 97702\, United States
CATEGORIES:exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tumaloartco.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/DF-Look-up-event.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220805T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220831T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T130531
CREATED:20220414T030500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220730T051736Z
UID:10123-1659711600-1661972400@tumaloartco.com
SUMMARY:Katherine Taylor—Thinking Wild
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Wild\, opening August 5\, from 3-7pm during the Old Mill District’s First Friday Gallery Walk\, features a new collection of Katherine Taylor’s poignant wildlife portraits. The exhibit will be up through August. \nKatherine’s oil paintings of animals are so intimate\, their spirits and personalities shine through. This exhibit includes a bobcat\, raccoon\, wild horses\, a fox\, an owl and many more…all in action and with eyes that that make you feel you can see into their reality. A “painter of light and dark”\, she succeeds in portraying their wildness and their natures by employing the dramatic chiaroscuro lighting and luminous glazing she learned from her classical art training. \n  \nKatherine Taylor paints “Wild Wild Horses” in oil\n  \nA portion of the proceeds from this show will be donated to the non-profit\, Think Wild\, a local animal hospital dedicated to providing care to injured or orphaned native animals so as to facilitate their successful release back into the wild. “I am a big fan of the work that Think Wild does in our local community; these dedicated individuals not only volunteer their time to rehabilitate native birds and mammals\, they advocate for wildlife conservation. Their hospital compound off Neff Road in Bend continues to grow to accommodate the many species they treat\, as well as to provide a venue for public educational events. I wanted my August art exhibit to help highlight the good work this group does\,” says Katherine. \nKatherine Taylor paints a wild gray wolf in oils for her August exhibit at Tumalo Art Co.\n  \nKatherine’s original love as an artist is painting the human figure. However\, wildlife portraiture has proven to be just as compelling for her. “It’s the spirit of a sentient being that I am ultimately most interested in capturing\, and animals have spirit in spades.” \nA Red Fox is Katherine Taylor’s collection of wild animal portraits\n  \nIn choosing which wildlife to paint for the show\, Katherine handpicked mammals and birds local to Oregon that best captured the spirit of the species. Only two of the animals featured\, the Kiger Mustangs and the mountain lion\, are not treated at the Think Wild hospital but are included in their Oregon wildlife conservation-education efforts. \n  \nPeregrine Falcon\, an oil by Katherine Taylor\n  \nKatherine’s initial wild animal easy picks were from the lynx genus\, the bobcat and the mountain lion. They are closely related to the domestic cat\, and being a cat caregiver herself\, she is a fan! Though she has never been granted her life-long wish to experience a red fox sighting\, painting one turned out to be the next best thing. She discovered foxes have the most fascinating eye color and came to appreciate the eyes of many of the animals she painted. “The bobcat and cougar have riveting eyes\, but so do hawks\, owls\, and falcons. And the bald eagle I captured in paint really surprised me with its pale green glitter-eye.” \nCanadian Geese in the golden light of autumn\n  \nThis quote by Anthropologist Loren Eiseley partly explains why Katherine chose to paint close-up portraits of the wild animals in her August exhibit: \n“One does not meet oneself until one catches the reflection from an eye other than human.” \nIf you come across an injured or orphaned wild animal that needs help call the Think Wild hotline at 541-241-8680. \n 
URL:https://tumaloartco.com/event/katherine-taylor/
LOCATION:OR
CATEGORIES:exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tumaloartco.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/KT-TW-Bobcat-24x20-wb.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220701T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220803T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T130531
CREATED:20220414T030403Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220702T053353Z
UID:10116-1656687600-1659553200@tumaloartco.com
SUMMARY:Adell Shetterly—P3  Press | Pull | Print
DESCRIPTION:Beaming Up above—remember Star Trek and the myriad worlds that the crew landed on and explored? They transformed into small particles to beam down or up. Perhaps this is one of the worlds they explored. \n \nBend artist\, Adell Shetterly\, has followed her own artistic path as defined in ink. Her July show at Tumalo Art Co. P3 Press | Pull | Print\, opening July 1\, from 3-7pm during the Old Mill District First Friday Gallery Walk\, features original hand-pulled prints which investigates the processes and various techniques in print. \nShe presents new work\, rich and diverse in wealth of marks\, color\, layers and lines drawing on imagery that ranges in style from abstract to deconstructed landscapes\, inspired by nature\, memories and moments of daily life. \n \nUsing her own press\, every image Adell inks on a plate is pulled by hand. The impression is transferred from the plate to paper creating a unique image. As she works Adell unlocks her imagination to the possibilities in print questioning\, “what would happen IF?” \nFor Entwined\, the past and the present are interwoven revealing the stories of a lifetime. To tell this story Adell used glue to make the circles that the dried and became a relief when run through the press. \n  \n \nAdell used hot glue stencils for Quantum Entanglement\, playing with abstract design and shapes. Initially printing the plate with light gray on cream paper she placed the stencils first\, then inked plastic wrap and ran it through the press. \nQuantum Entanglement is the physical phenomenon that occurs when a group of particles are generated\, interact\, or share spatial proximity in a way such that the quantum state of each particle of the group cannot be described independently of the state of the others. “This piece kept pulling me in\, and when the title emerged it all came together.” \n \nMagnetic field lines near sunspots often tangle\, cross\, and reorganize. This can cause a sudden explosion of energy. “I played off this idea to create a landscape strongly influenced by the sun.” \n \n  \nCome enjoy all of the art in the show—see you Friday\, July 1st and throughout the month.
URL:https://tumaloartco.com/event/adell-shetterly/
LOCATION:OR
CATEGORIES:exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tumaloartco.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/as-beamingup-32.25-x-25.75-940-wb.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220603T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220630T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T130531
CREATED:20220414T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220608T021411Z
UID:10114-1654268400-1656615600@tumaloartco.com
SUMMARY:Danae Bennett-Miller—New Sculptures & Printmaking
DESCRIPTION:Small birds\, cranes\, eagles and elk and other wild animals show up in Danae Bennett-Miller’s\nJune show\, “Spirit Found”\, opening June 3\, from 3-7 pm during the Old Mill District’s First Friday Gallery Walk. The show is up through June. For this exhibit Danae has created both bronze sculpture and collage monoprints with polyurethane layers on cradled board. \nDetail of Danae Bennett-Miller’s “Grassland”\, a monoprint of a buffalo.\n  \nNature always wears the colors of the spirit.\n—Ralph Waldo Emerson \nThe animals who live with and around Danae are her inspiration. They connect to the spirit of the earth and fill her soul. A rancher who raises chicken and other farm animals\, Danae has a close relationship with her surrounding environment and is well-known for her organic\, life-filled forms of animals. To create their dynamic shapes she flows out strips of wax with ripples and texture and forms them into the shapes she is imagining for each creature. This technique gives an organic aliveness to each one. Once cast her pieces are one-of-a-kind. Augmenting her sculpture works with printmaking has given a new avenue to express form\, texture and line to all of her animals. \n“Sunburst Raven” is cast in bronze and glass by Danae Bennett-Miller.\n  \nBesides sculptures for residential and corporate placement\, Danae has had many public sculpture commissions. These include roundabout art of a horse on Greenwood Ave. in Bend\, Oregon; herons in a pocket park at the end of Minnesota Street in downtown Bend and a heron sculpture in downtown Sisters\, Oregon. The most ambitious of her public art installations is a tableau of life-size elk and pronghorn bronze sculptures with towering basalt rocks\, in the roundabout on Highway 20 in Sisters\, Oregon. \nSee more of Danae’s available sculpture and monoprints
URL:https://tumaloartco.com/event/danae-bennett-miller/
LOCATION:OR
CATEGORIES:exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tumaloartco.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/DBM-Elk-bronze-wb-1.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220506T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220531T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T130531
CREATED:20220414T025641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220504T055418Z
UID:10112-1651849200-1654023600@tumaloartco.com
SUMMARY:David Kinker—"Over Water" New Paintings
DESCRIPTION:Exhibit runs through the end of May. The first solo show of the year at Tumalo Art Co. features new works by David Kinker. \nWith “Over Water”\, Kinker dives into his entrancement with all things water. \nDavid Kinker’s 24 30 painting\, “Hyptomist”\, looks directly down into swirling water.\n  \nAn avid rafter and river guide and adventurer on wild rivers from the Pacific Northwest to South America and beyond\, Kinker has learned water. As a painter\, he is able to describe the mesmerizing movement and atmosphere\, and colors and feeling of water\, bringing it to the viewer as a felt experience. A colorist by nature\, Kinker’s painting are the perfect focal point to a room. \n  \n“Doubletree”\, is a 24 x 36 acrylic painting of Oregon’s Metolius River in the autumn\, with a snow-covered Mt. Jefferson in the background.\n  \nMany of the works in this show are large. Kinker also makes plein air study paintings in the field and these are available. Well-known for murals across Central Oregon\, he was recently commissioned to do murals and original paintings for the Partners in Care facility in Bend\, along with many private residences. Multi-talented\, Kinker makes the frames for all of his paintings\, mixing exotic woods\, many that are reused materials\, to complement his paintings. \nTumalo Art Co. is an artist-run gallery in the heart of the Old Mill District\, open 7 days a week. Call 541-385-9144 for details. \n 
URL:https://tumaloartco.com/event/acrylic-landscapes-by-david-kinker/
LOCATION:OR
CATEGORIES:exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tumaloartco.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/dk-sundrops-acrylic-25x20-1000-.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220401T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220401T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T130531
CREATED:20220310T133046Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220416T042211Z
UID:9740-1648825200-1648839600@tumaloartco.com
SUMMARY:20 Year Anniversary Retrospective
DESCRIPTION:Tumalo Art Co. celebrates with its 20 Year Anniversary Retrospective show\, which will include art from about 40 members and represented artists from over the years. Join us for music\, libations and special food from Luckey’s Woodsman Off-Grid Provisions! \nFrom its beginning in the Tumalo Junction in the tiny burg of Tumalo\, to moving just off the hub of Downtown Bend on Greenwood Ave.\, and then moving to the Old Mill District just as the great recession began in 2008\, Tumalo Art Co.\, has always been filled with some of the best art the Northwest has to offer. Owned and operated by artists\, the gallery has thrived through the years through good times and hard times. \nArtists who were the in the first show in 2002\, Marta Batha\, Chari Rich (Grenfell)\, Karen Piedmont\, Annie Ferder\, Tracy Leagjeld\, Deanna Hansen\, Janet Guiley\, Mary Marquiss and Susan Luckey Higdon are all represented in the 20 Year Anniversary Retrospective. And well-known artists who have been represented by the gallery will come back for this show\, among them Kim Chavez\, Ingrid Lustig\, Kathy Deggendorfer\, Vicki Shuck and Gary Vincent. Cheri-Lee Helfenstein\, who taught art at COCC after her membership at Tumalo Art Co. will present her book of poetry illustrated with her paintings. Loved artist Pamela Bird will have a painting in the show loaned by her husband Dave Hewitt. \nTumalo Art Co. is built on relationships\, both between the artists themselves and their collectors. When you visit Tumalo Art Co. you are greeted by one of the 14 member artists. As artists themselves they can talk knowledgeably about all of the art\, explaining their colleagues techniques\, styles and stories. Customers meet the artists whose work they love. One of the groups goals is to make art accessible to all and take away the intimidation of entering a gallery. People coming in for their “art fix” are encouraged\, whether they purchase art or not to stay and be inspired. They also offer many ways for people to get started collecting art\, from original art cards\, limited edition Giclée’s and tiny art. Collectors looking for large pieces for their homes and offices will also find many pieces of art to choose from. The gallery represents artists making ceramics\, glass\, sculpture\, photography\, digital media\, original hand-pulled prints\, hand-turned wood and hand-made jewelry from four local makers as well as painters in all mediums. \n\nThe 20 Year Anniversary Retrospective Show is open until April 30th.
URL:https://tumaloartco.com/event/20-year-anniversary-retrospective/
LOCATION:Tumalo Art Co.\, 450 SW Powerhouse Dr. #407\, Bend\, OR\, 97702\, United States
CATEGORIES:exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tumaloartco.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/DH-Galloping-Acrylic-collage-11x14-wb.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220304T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220304T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T130531
CREATED:20220222T001442Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220414T031033Z
UID:8820-1646406000-1646420400@tumaloartco.com
SUMMARY:Tweet: A Group Show about All Things Birds
DESCRIPTION:Spring is in the air and art for our Tweet group show. As the birds serenade us with their songs\, our artists have turned their minds toward depicting their favorite winged ones. \n“Mojo”\, by printmaker Adell Shetterly is one of a series of three linocuts.\n  \n“Courage” is a mixed media on cradled board by Sarah B Hansen.\nWaking up to birdsong\, watching the ducks land on the water\, a peacock in full plummage\, an owl camouflaged in the trees but with those blazing yellow eyes…birds take so many forms. From the unassuming to the majestic\, our artists portrayals are are completely unique from artist to artist. \nHelen Brown’s watercolors on rice paper are representational but at the same time loose and capture her peacock in full plumage. Adell Shetterly’s two linocuts of song birds are whimsical and graphic in bold blue. Majestic birds hidden in the abstract multi-media Central Oregon landscape by Judy Hoiness leave so much to the imagination and honor the lands history. Ravens cavorting in the air by Janice Druian and a sweet yellow birdie semi-abstracted with flowers by Dee McBrien-Lee—any mediums\, lots of perspectives. This is a joyous exhibit of our feathered friends to celebrate a new season. \n\n“Harlequin Around” is an acrylic on cradled board by David Kinker.\nThe Tweet Group Show is open until March 30th.
URL:https://tumaloartco.com/event/tweet-all-things-birds/
LOCATION:OR
CATEGORIES:exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tumaloartco.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/HB-watercolor-Proud-As...-19x19-950.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220204T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220204T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T130531
CREATED:20220221T235704Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220414T031033Z
UID:8809-1643986800-1644001200@tumaloartco.com
SUMMARY:Loving Central Oregon Group Show
DESCRIPTION:For the month of love\, Tumalo Art Co. artists are presenting artwork about what we love – our home\, Central Oregon. Expect to see art that celebrates the beauty of our unique landscape from every perspective—paintings\, sculpture\, photography and even jewelry. \n \nKatherine Taylor’s oil\, “Kaleidoscope Sunrise at Sparks” is in the February “Loving Central Oregon” group show at Tumalo Art Co. in Bend\, Oregon this February. \n \nDee McBrien-Lee paints her favorite hike in the Badlands of Central Oregon for the “Loving Central” Oregon group show at Tumalo Art Co. in February. \nBruce Jackson’s iconic fine art photograph of Sparks Lake\, “Where Cranes Speak Freely”\, is print on canvas and has wrapped edges.\nInspired by their majestic surroundings many of the artists in this show worked large for the show. Dee McBrien-Lee painted a 30 x 48 canvas of Dry River Canyon\, a favorite hike of hers with a more high desert landscape. Katherine Taylor painted the Cascades mountains at sunrise from Oregon’s Sparks Lake using oils. While Anne Gibson choose a the rocky river rim in a dramatically wide horizontal painting. Digital media photographer Dorothy Freudenberg presents a pine forest with a winding path printed on metal with rich rust and green tones. Nancy Becker interprets the rich green\, blue\, purple and rust of Central Oregon is swirling hand-blown glass. These are only a sampling of the many pieces in the show during February focusing on the diverse Central Oregon landscape. \nA portion of sales from this show will benefit a local nonprofit with a cause dear to the artists’ hearts\, the Hunger Prevention Coalition. Not surprisingly\, some indigenous societies call the February full moon\, the “Hungry Moon\,” and as we enter what is often the coldest month\, hunger is with us today. Hunger Prevention Coalition raises funds to support partner agencies that feed the hungry through meals or groceries that that are nutritionally dense\, as these foods are less likely to be donated because of perishability and expense. \n\nThe Loving Central Oregon Group Show is open until February 28th.
URL:https://tumaloartco.com/event/loving-central-oregon-february-group-show/
LOCATION:OR
CATEGORIES:exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tumaloartco.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/kt-KaleidoscopeSunrise-Sparks-Lake-oil-12x24-830.jpg
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