View this email in your browser
by Rowan Johnson
SOU Class of 2025, Creative Writing
It's Giving Tuesday! Please consider making a donation to the Schneider Museum of Art to help keep our admission free for everyone. Donate Now
Matt Conklin's World of Wonders
Behind the Zine: From science fiction in the 30’s to riot girls in the 90’s, zines have been a way for people to connect since their invention. These small, self published articles can be found for every interest, niche and mainstream. Zines have been a way for common people to spread their work without hierarchical publishing companies. People can write about what they want, when they want, and still have an impact on their communities. Matt Conklin, one of the artists featured in We Take the Long Way, has his zine available in the front lobby of the Schneider Museum of Art.
To learn more about zines and zine culture, click the link below. 
The Uncertainty Principle
Craig Hickman
Donated by Glenda Goldwater (Estate)
Craig Hickman: Co-founder of Blue Sky Gallery, Craig Hickman is a photographer, software designer, and professor at the University of Oregon. With many collections like Oxide, Someplace Else, and Explanations and Clarifications, Hickman highlights what it means to experience humanity.
Read more about his work below and come in to see his piece The Uncertainty Principle in The Schneider Museum of Art.
Reptile
Matt Cosby
Donated by Glenda Goldwater (Estate)
Matt Cosby: Hypnotizing patterns, masterful shading, and intricate geometric designs, these are all defining characteristics of Matt Cosby’s work. Born in Seaside, California, Cosby’s work can be seen in multiple exhibitions across Portland, Oregon.
Explore some of his work at the Augen Gallery down below and make sure to check out his piece Reptile in the Entry Gallery. 

 Subscribe to our YouTube Channels

The Schneider Museum of Art and the Oregon Center for the Arts now have YouTube channels. Subscribe today to stay up to date on all the art happenings at SOU.
Schneider Museum of Art Schneider Museum of Art
Oregon Center for the Art Oregon Center for the Art
(VIDEO) Creative Industries Discussion: Avantika Bawa

Thank you to our sponsors!

Twitter
Facebook
Website
Email
Instagram
YouTube
The Schneider Museum of Art is located within the ancestral homelands of the Shasta, Takelma, and Latgawa peoples who lived here since time immemorial. These Tribes were displaced during rapid Euro-American colonization, the Gold Rush, and armed conflict between 1851 and 1856. In the 1850s, discovery of gold and settlement brought thousands of Euro-Americans to their lands, leading to warfare, epidemics, starvation, and villages being burned. In 1853 the first of several treaties were signed, confederating these Tribes and others together – who would then be referred to as the Rogue River Tribe. These treaties ceded most of their homelands to the United States, and in return they were guaranteed a permanent homeland reserved for them. At the end of the Rogue River Wars in 1856, these Tribes and many other Tribes from western Oregon were removed to the Siletz Reservation and the Grand Ronde Reservation. Today, the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Community of Oregon (https://www.grandronde.org) and the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians (http://www.ctsi.nsn.us/) are living descendants of the Takelma, Shasta, and Latgawa peoples of this area. We encourage you to learn about the land you reside on, and to join us in advocating for the inherent sovereignty of Indigenous people.
Copyright © 2018 Schneider Museum of Art, All rights reserved.

Our address is:
555 Indiana Street
Ashland, OR 97520

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.