TOM SPANBAUER’S NEW BOOK I Loved You More isn’t a memoir. It reads like a memoir: first person, introspective, reminiscent. It looks like one: It’s published by Hawthorne Books, a local house that’s built a reputation in part on the strength of personal narratives like Lidia Yuknavitch’s The Chronology of Water, Jay Ponteri’s Wedlocked, and […]
Agenda
Posted inHome
Agenda: Arts & Performance, Spring 2014
Portland’s Arts & Performance Guide
Your essential spring guide to Portland arts and culture.
Posted inFeature
On Empathy
The Unsettling Sculptures of Tip Toland
Tip Toland’s unsettling sculptures at the Portland Art Museum.
Posted inFeature
The Evolution of Kill Rock Stars
Is Comedy the New Punk Rock?
Is comedy the new punk rock?
Posted inFeature
Passion Project
It Only Took 20 Years to Get The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window Staged at OSF
It took 20 years, but a persistent dramaturg finally gets a pet project staged at the Oregon Shakespeare Fest.
Posted inFeature
Three Steps to Greater Art Appreciation
“The Fact That Art Gets Made at All Is a Humanist Miracle You’re Not Fit to Dismiss”
“The fact that art gets made at all is a humanist miracle you’re not fit to dismiss.”
Posted inProfiles
How to Be Alive Now
Ashley Hollingshead Talks Feminism, Destiny’s Child, and Making Her Own Opportunities
Theater-maker Ashley Hollingshead talks feminism, Destiny’s Child, and making her own opportunities.
Posted inProfiles
Theater Builder
Dámaso Rodriguez Is the New Public Face of Artists Rep
Dámaso Rodriguez is the new public face of Artists Rep.
Posted inProfiles
Looking for Connection
NW Dance Project Keeps Sarah Slipper Busy, Busy, Busy
Northwest Dance Project keeps Sarah Slipper busy, busy, busy.
