The Portland Art Museum: Shine A Light

shinealight

event poster/catalogue-front

About Shine a Light: A Night at the Museum
For one night only, on Saturday, September 19 from 6 p.m.–midnight, the Portland Art Museum hosts Shine a Light: A Night at the Museum. The event consists of six hours of performances, installations, tours, workshops, and games by 15 artists drawn from Portland State University’s MFA, Art and Social Practice concentration, led by Harrell Fletcher and Jen Delos Reyes. The Northwest Film Center joins in by breaking out of the Whitsell Auditorium to present vintage and contemporary works in some surprise locations. The projects are centered on artist and audience participation and visitors are encouraged to experience the Museum’s spaces and collections in new ways.

About Art and Social Practice at Portland State University
The Masters in Contemporary Art Practice with an emphasis in Art and Social Practice at Portland State University is a two year program that educates and activates students to develop and utilize their artistic skills to engage in society. Sometimes social practice might look more like sociology, anthropology, social work, journalism, or environmentalism than art, yet it retains the original intention of creating significance and appreciation between the audience and artist in a similar way to more conventional art. Students learn about a variety of working artists and non-artists who have engaged in civic activity, and will apply their knowledge and abilities to initiate, develop, and complete projects with the public – individuals, groups, and institutions. More information available at http://psusocialpractice.org/.

About the Portland Art Museum
The seventh oldest museum in the United States and the oldest on the West Coast, the Portland Art Museum is internationally recognized for its permanent collection and ambitious special exhibitions drawn from the Museum’s holdings and the world’s finest public and private collections. The Museum’s collection of 42,000 objects, displayed in 112,000 square feet of galleries, reflects the history of art from ancient times to today. The collection is distinguished for its holdings of arts of the native peoples of North America, English silver, and the graphic arts. An active collecting institution dedicated to preserving great art for the enrichment of future generations, the Museum devotes 90 percent of its galleries to its permanent collection. The Museum’s campus of landmark buildings, a cornerstone of Portland’s cultural district, includes the Jubitz Center for Modern and Contemporary Art, the Gilkey Center for Graphic Arts, the Schnitzer Center for Northwest Art, the Northwest Film Center, and the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Center for Native American Art. With a membership of more than 22,000 households and serving more than 350,000 visitors annually, the Museum is a premier venue for education in the visual arts.

Rob and me manning the silvering station.

Rob and me manning the silvering station.