Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Collector's Special for November

Well, I missed October completely, and now it's already half way through November, but here finally are my "Collector's Specials" for November: a couple of lovely 11x14 black & white prints for the deeply discounted price of only $175 each!!! (unframed)

These are both archivally processed, fiber-based silver gelatin prints, printed by me in my darkroom. There is only one of each of these available at this price, so get them while you can -- this is more than $100 off their regular price! they'll make great Christmas or Hannukah gifts!!

Below are the images and details:

Girlfriends going to Alaska on the Greyhound - somewhere in Montana, 2000"
11"x14" silver-gelatin fiber-based archival print
signed and editioned on back of print (2/25)
$175 (unframed)
I will deliver in the Portland area for free, shipping elsewhere costs extra.


"Phongasli, Laos (fence & shadow), 2001"
11"x14" silver-gelatin fiber-based archival print
signed and editioned on back of print (2/25)
$175 (unframed) SOLD
I will deliver in the Portland area for free, shipping elsewhere costs extra.

Last of Jewish Portland project images

Well, it took me a little while to get permission from the Cedarwood Waldorf School to share these, and then I got distracted with my own teaching work, but here, finally, are the last of my Portland Jewish project photos for the upcoming show at the Oregon Jewish Museum. These are all shot at the Waldorf School, which used to be a Portland Jewish community center called "Neighborhood House." This first shot is of a boy in a classroom inside the school, and then below that are several shots of children playing out in front of the school during recess.










There is an adjacent annex building that housed the Neighborhood House's swimming pool and raquetball courts. This is where many, many Portland Jews learned to swim as kids -- many many years ago. The "men's room" is from that same building. The building had sat in disrepair for many years -- for a while a secret hideout and playground for some skateboarders. The annex is soon to be redeveloped by the Waldorf School -- the swimming pool will be filled in.






Friday, November 6, 2009

Another good "one in 8 million" story


photo by Todd Hiesler
I just caught this new "One in 8 million" story (click here to view) in the NYTimes today online. I really like this format -- simple, honest -- feels like a real person, a real life. I also like how the photographer, Todd Hiesler, does such a good job of snapping photos of what they both encountered while walking together. It really feels like we are there right along with her on her walk, listening to her talk.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

More Portland Jewish history project photos



One of the places I have been focusing as part of my exploration of Portland Jewish history is the Meier & Frank buiding downtown. It used to be one of the largest department stores in the country, founded and run by two Portland Jewish families until the 70s (I believe). There is now a Macy's on the bottom few floors, and the upper floors of this building (I believe there are 14 floors in all) now houses an upscale hotel call "The Nines." on the top floor is a restaurant & club called "Departure." My girlfriend Patricia told me that as a kid she used to go to the top floor of the Meier & Frank building to eat in a kind of department store restaurant/cafe up there -- and many other folks have told me of going up to the top floor to sit on Santa's lap during Christmas time. Needless to say, the inside of the building looks completely different now.


I was able to get permission from the hotel marketing department to get into the building and shoot for a couple of hours one day last week. here are a few pics that I like: The first two (above) are of "Departure" employees getting ready to open up the restaurant/club. The third shot below is of one of the rooms in "The Nines" hotel. pretty swanky place!


Back to SW Portland, another place that I photographed last week is at the National College of Natural Medicine -- which is housed in a building that used to be the public school that served the Jewish Community in the neighborhood. again, things have changed quite a bit from the old photographs I saw of this school in the Oregon Jewish Museum.








And last for today: Below is the inside of an old church bldg in SW Portland, on what was the end of a street car line that ran south from downtown to the Jewish neighborhood -- I could imagine folks who lived in the Jewish neighborhood go to the church to catch the streetcar, and coming home at the end of the day, sun setting on the stained glass windows as the trolley ride came to their neighborhood.

now it's a bookstore called "The Great Northwest Bookstore" -- filled to the brim with used books -- mostly functioning as a wharehouse, though they will let you in to brouse.




Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Portland Jewish History

Finally I've found a chance to scan and post some of the photos I've been shooting for the past 8 weeks for an upcoming exhibit at the Oregon Jewish Museum entitled "The Shape of Time." Here is a link to the museum's website about the show.

Basically, the show is and exploration of Portland Jewish History by 6 different Portland photographers, each of us looking at photos from the museums archives and then going out to shoot based on our own inspiration. From what I hear each of us is doing something a little different. One photographer is focusing on cemeteries. Another is making tin-types by taking pictures old photographs from the museum's archive.

What I have been doing is wandering places that were once the sites of Portland Jewish history -- trying to photograph as if I am a ghost, or an very old man come back to find what remains of my memory. Pretty impossible stuff (especially since I have no memories of Portland's Jewish past).


I will post a few photos today, and more in the coming days - -there are still some photos I am waiting to get releases for --- because I photographed at a local Waldorf school that was once "The Neighborhood House" -- a place that served the Jewish community in SW Portland in the 20's, 30's, 40's and 50's -- it is now a elementary school -- so I need to get permission from the parents to show the images with the children.

So here are some of the photos. I will need to narrow these all down to about 5 to print for the exhibit, so if you have any comments of what are your favorites, based on my goal, please let me know.

This first one above is of Mory -- he is a Persian Jewler -- I went wandering through this really old building in downtown Portland (Willamette Bldg, on SW Third Ave) that is the home to about a couple dozen jewlers -- looking for someone who could tell me about Portland's Jewish history, hoping to find a link to a Jewish jewler in the past. Mory was the oldest guy I could find -- he's not Jewish -- actually Muslim -- but he talked to me about days gone by for hours -- told me stories about many Portland Jews he had done business with over the years, and about his own history as an emigrant from Iran, coming to New York City first, then moving out to Portland in the 50's to find a better life. (this is a very similar story to that of the Ashkenazi migration to Portland in the earlier in 20th century -- most all came thru NYC and Ellis Island, and then moved out west to Portland in search of better opportunity.)

Mory also told me a long story about a young Jewish man he had counseled years ago, a Jewish student at Reed College who was from New York City, who was in love with a young Gentile woman from Portland, on how to win his parents approval for his decison to marry the woman, have a child with her, and raise it here in Portland. It was a beautiful story about how he told the young man to take his parents (after convincing them to come out to Portland to meet his bride and child) to show them all the beautiful natural spots in Oregon -- to the Columbia River Gorge and to Bagby hot springs and up to the top of Mt. Hood -- and then to cook them home cooked meals every night with all the delicious foods that are grown here. The parents were so impressed with how happy their son was, and what a good home their grandchild had, that they not only gave their approval for the marriage, but also decided to move out to Portland to be near their son's family, and enjoy the "better lifestyle." The story brought tears to my eyes.

Mory said it really doesn't matter what religion people are brought up with, or believe in, but rather "...it's what you do for other people that counts."





Most of the Eastern European Jews who emmigrated to Porland in the early 20th Century settled in SW Portland. The neighborhood thrived until the late 50's or early 60's, when it was torn down as part of the city's first urban renewal plan. There were many synagogues and Kosher deli's and bakeries and schools and a place called the Neighnborhood house, which was like a community center for the neighborhood.

Above, and below are a few shots I shot in the neighborhood as it appears now.

these first couple above and the one that is just below are just below the Naito Pkwy, and just above Interstate 5 and the Ross Island bridge. This would be the southern-most end of the old Portland Jewish shtetl -- now, as you can see, grassy highway medians and overgrown blackberry bushes -- home to more than few homeless individuals. (in case you can't make it out, the two shots above show a homeless person's tent and boots as the sun rises early one morning).


Congregation Kesser Israel was founded in 1916 and built their synagogue on the corner of SW 2nd Ave and Meade Street. the building still stands, but is now houses the Christian "Church of all Nations" congregation. They gave me permission to photograph there one recent Sunday morning. Here are three shots. The first in the main chapel before the service. The second shot is of church elders praying up in the tower room of the building before the service. The last of these is a painting I found in a back room off the main chapel of Armageddon.






And the last bunch for today, a few random shots from around SW Portland. This first one is a man I bumped into down by an old Greyound terminal on Corbett Avenue.


This next shot below is of him walking away from me, north towards downtown, past the old terminal (he asked me if I knew how to get to downtown from there -- he said he had already walked all the way from Beaverton -- a very long way -- very strange...);


the next shot below is a couple of homeless men (I guess) pushing a shopping cart full of junk across SW First Avenue, I'm shooting through the windshield of my truck;


And the next below is the shipping and receiving door on the side of an old buisiness on the northeast corner of Arthur St. and First Avenue;

and last of this bunch is a road sign showing the intersection of Baker and Water St. -- this would be on the Northern bank of the old Marquam Gulch as it ran down to the Willamette (there was a gulch that ran from the west hills of Portland thru the middle of the Jewish neighborhood, down to the river; many Jews lived along it).



Oh, I have to post one more today, sorry, but this is too good to pass up! -- this was shot on Saturday -- Halloween -- the first year of what is supposed to become an annual tradition for a group of Portlanders -- to play soccer in Halloween costumes at Duniway Park. This is just to west of what was the heart of the old Jewish neighborhood, in an area that used to be the Marquam Gulch (if I'm reading my maps and geography correct).