Saturday, November 27, 2010

Photos from Outreach Events


Olivia Schmidt sent along some great photos of the prints from events that she's been coordinating to spread the word about opposition to LNG projects.


Field trip to the site of the now-defunct Bradwood Landing location, where LNG would have come ashore near the mouth of the Columbia.


Organizers and affected parties with Icky's No LNG poster. (That's Olivia, second from left)


Ted Messing, anti-LNG activist, ogles the banner at the Columbia Riverkeeper benefit auction.


Getting ready to raffle off the small silkscreened edition of the prints.


Here's what Olivia has to say about the variety of events where the prints have been on display in the past several months:

1) Banners were displayed at community meetings with Oregon Citizens Against the Pipelines in Yamhill and Forest Grove. At those meetings landowners impacted by the LNG-related pipeline projects viewed the banners laid out on tables at the end of our meetings, discussed the imagery and tried to identify familiar faces and landmarks in the Oregon piece.

2) Banners were displayed at a community meeting with Anti-LNG activists in Portland at the Portland LNG Working Group meeting. Also on tables after the meeting. At that meeting I laid them out with Indonesia on top and Oregon on bottom which creates a sort of hour glass image (with the conical elements in the center of the image) which one person pointed out has a sort of eerie "time is running out" message.

3) Smaller paper prints of Crisis were displayed at the Lower Columbia 3 meeting in Cathlamet, WA where communities impacted by proposed LNG import terminal development on the Columbia River viewed the prints during our pre-meeting potluck. Vonda Brock is a member of that group and identified with the woman in the fore of the image with a hat and braids (which looks a lot like her). It was totally sweet to see members of that particular community relate so closely with the piece.

4) Banners were displayed at a presentation of LNG:101 (my basic power point) at the Concordia University where 40 attendees heard an LNG info talk, viewed a short documentary about the pipelines and viewed the banners laid out at the front of the room at the end of the lecture. It was really effective to have multi-media methods of communicating about this issue to the audience. Most of the attendees walked to the front of the room to really look at the prints up close.

5) Banners were displayed at the Sierra Club Strategic Planning Retreat near Colton, OR where 30 of Oregon Chapter Sierra Club's core volunteers from across Oregon viewed the images during breaks from our meeting. It was a really effective and subtle way to generate questions and conversation about LNG from attendees without trying to insert that topic into the agenda of our 3-day meeting.

6) 20 people participated in field trip to the proposed site of Oregon LNG's import terminal in Warrenton, OR and viewed the banners as a closing to the day spent on the actual land where Oregon LNG wants to develop. Attendees came from Clatsop, Tillamook and Multnomah Counties in Oregon, and Cowlitz and Wahkiakum Counties in Washington. Attendees included LNG impacted communities as well as Anti-LNG activists not directly impacted by LNG proposals. (you've got pics of this one)

7) Banners displayed at Columbia Riverkeeper auction in PDX with 200 attendees who all viewed the Oregon banner in the hallway and the smaller prints (both Indo. and Or.) in the main silent auction room. Mostly folks from PDX but also some LNG impacted supporters of Columbia Riverkeeper.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

SEA Change Show



Here's some photos from the opening at SEA Change gallery in downtown Portland:






Above: Anne Berblinger, co-owner of Gales Meadow Farm (on the Oregon LNG Pipeline). We were pleased to have Anne at the show, since it's people like her that are the real reason for this project.



Above: A small archive of some of Taring Padi's prints from previous street campaigns!

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Opening at SEA Change Gallery Aug. 5th!

"WE AGREE: A CRISIS IN COMMON"

POLITICAL ARTS GROUP HIGHLIGHTS RESISTANCE TO LNG


Printmakers from Portland and Indonesia map the resistance to imported liquefied natural gas from
the source to the consumer in two giant relief prints

On Thursday, the 5th of August, Justseeds and SEA Change gallery will present an opening reception for "We Agree: A Crisis in Common". On display will be two large blockprints, one made by the Portland-based members of the Justseeds Artist Cooperative, and the other by members of Taring Padi, an artist cooperative from Yogyakarta, Indonesia. The two prints, each measuring three feet by nine feet, are bold, graphic depictions of the impact of the Natural Gas industry and its satellites on the landscape and peoples of both sides of the Pacific. They were designed and printed collaboratively, with the help of generous funding from RACC and Work for Art. Other artworks by Justseeds and Taring Padi will also be on display. The gallery will open at 5 pm. SEA Change is located at 625 NW Everett St, Gallery #110, in Downtown Portland.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Poster for BARK

This is a poster I made for BARK in conjunction with their anti-LNG campaign.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Justseeds/TaringPadi Anti-LNG print

Take a look at some of these photos of the printing session we had yesterday in rainy Portland. People came over to help jump up and down on the giant block, in the traditional Taring Padi manner... This print is part of a collaboration with the Indonesian print group Taring Padi, addressing issues of natural gas exploitation on both sides of the Pacific. Next up, the Northwest Natural shareholders meeting on the 27th!



Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Progress on the Project





Here's some pictures from the ongoing Large Print Project in Portland. Icky, Pete and Roger have begun carving a 3' x 10' block of lino to make a counterpart to the Taring Padi print that Roger brought back from Indonesia a couple months ago.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Printing with Taring Padi



Here's a little photo essay showing the printing process used by Indonesian print cooperative Taring Padi, including images from all stages of the process, from sketching to carving to printing. I had the chance to help print some copies of this massive block, which is the Taring Padi half of a project addressing issues related to natural gas exploitation on both sides of the Pacific: the three Portland Justseedsers (Pete, Icky and Roger) will be working on their half in the coming month. We'll be working with local nonprofit Bark to promote exhibits and displays of the two prints in towns along the route of the proposed Palomar gas pipeline this summer. Enjoy the photos!