Two-unit votive slip with double black border. Scene with people on a beach. Brown band against upper border with white slips containing black text, white symbol with black text.
Single-unit votive slip with double black border. White slip with black text, purple cartouche with black text at top. Image of small white temple structure on a beach near water.
Single-unit votive slip with black border. Light purple square with black text, red rectangle with white text in upper half. Background scene of people on a beach on a sunny day. Red seal against left border edge.
A color photograph depiciting a view of a waterfront between two houses. The house on the left has a screen door standing open as well as a short clothes line in front of it with a piece of clothing blowing in the wind., Neighbors in the Season, Deborah DeWit was born in 1956 in Portland. Oregon. Four weeks after her birth, her mother returned with her to South America to re-join the rest of the family. She grew up traveling with her family and living in such places as the Philippines, New York, Minnesota, South Carolina, Florida, El Salvador, Colorado, Scotland and finally ended up in Portland in 1979. Photography was never a career choice and she entered Cornell University as an Agronomy major. After two years she decided to give her hobby, photography, more serious attention and moved to Colorado where her parents were living at the time. In order to finance her endeavors, she cheffed in restaurants for two years and in her spare time roamed the mountains outside Denver looking and experimenting with her camera. In 1978 she left for Scotland, where she worked on a farm, driving tractors, hoeing turnips and moving cattle from field to field. It was here that her real passion developed. The skies and the hills and the wildnes, Deborahdewitmarchant@verizon.net, http://www.dewit-marchant.com/, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is: Regional Arts & Culture. You may view their website at http://www.racc.org/
This is one of two images of the same piece. Irregularities between the pieces may reflect a difference in the source material. <br><br>A color rendering of what appears to be the repeated mirroring and fragmentation of a beach scene reflected in the water. The piece is formally divided in near-half. Below the meridian of the piece is a blue section with what appears to be the sihouette of the mirrored beach scene. Above the meridian of the piece is a skyscape with clouds and a pink line running through six rectangles of varying sizes and orientations that contain ghosted fragments of the same beach scene in the lower portion of the piece., Seal Beach; Lyle Matoush; litho; Pendelton State Office Building, Internet resources on Lyle Matoush: Mail Tribune Online (4/28/00 issue) http://archive.mailtribune.com/archive/2000/april/042800n4.htm <br>Southern Oregon University: http://emeritus.sou.edu/News.asp?NewsID=26, http://emeritus.sou.edu/News.asp?NewsID=26; http://archive.mailtribune.com/archive/2000/april/042800n4.htm, The Oregon Arts Commission has nine Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is: Eastern Oregon Regional Arts. You may view their website at http://www.artseast.org/
A painting of Cannon Beach,Oregon rendered in cool and neutral color tones from the point of view that looks up the beach, out over the water. The right side of the art piece contains three different shades of greens that define what appear to be trees., Acrylic/Linen, LaVerne Krause, American painter and printmaker, was born 1924 in Portland, Oregon. She was awarded a tuition-fee scholarship at the University of Oregon where she undertook drawing and painting, studying with Andy Vincent, David McCosh, and Jack Wilkinson. She received her undergraduate degree in 1949, returning in 1966 to teach art, and by 1972 was a full professor. Professor Krause taught at the University of Oregon for 20 years until she retired in 1986. She died in Eugene, Oregon in 1987., The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is: Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
A platinum/palladium-toned photograph centered from inside a "beach cave," which consists of a formation of rocks as an archway. Looking out to the beachfront and sea the viewer encounters more rocks laying in what may be the sand, land-fog or sea waves. The misty faded background makes it difficult to tell which element is in place., Beach Cave; Cannon Beach; 8 x 10 inches; 1982; Platinum/Palladium print, http://www.okartinst.org/gallery/quartzmountain/index.cfm?a_id=17&im_id=40&imx=1, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Mid-Valley Arts. You may view their website at http://www.oregonlink.com/arts/index.html
An ominous beach scene in which the horizon line is delineated near the bottom of the picture plane. The action of the scene takes place in the broad brush strokes used to render the sky in blues and blacks, accented with pink and green., Oregon Clam Diggers; Constance Fowler; State Capitol, http://www.askart.com/askart/f/constance_e_fowler/constance_e_fowler.aspx, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is: Mid-Valley Arts. You may view their website at: http://www.oregonlink.com/arts/index.html