Get together, share ideas, listen, think, grow.

Support Oregon Humanities.

Sign up to be the first to hear about what we’re doing around the state.

Digest

Recent posts

A Quiet Endeavor

April 08 2010
Sam Nerveza

I recently completed the Humanity in Perspective (HIP) course and am proud of the accomplishment. It isn’t merely that I completed the course, received the certificate or the... More

Linguistically Intoxicating

April 01 2010
Aaron Rayburn

I was halfway through my shift on a quiet night at the bar. To be fair, they were all quiet nights at that bar. I might as well have been tending in a dry county. You’d think a... More

The Stuff of Citizenship

March 25 2010
Raina Hassan

I’m sure most of you have heard of Annie Leonard—creator and host of the insanely popular short animated film The Story of Stuff (now at more than 10 million views worldwide).... More

Quiet

March 18 2010
John Frohnmayer

We live in a noisy and intrusive society. Cell phones and electronic devices summon us non-stop. They are addictive. They must be obeyed. But no electronic device I know of can teach... More

Planting Seeds in Auschwitz

March 11 2010
Jennie Seidewand

My freshman year in college, I stumbled into a class on the Holocaust, and four months later, I stepped off a bus in Auschwitz with a dozen classmates, my professor, and a living,... More

Shadow Art

February 18 2010
Laura Becker

Any regular moviegoer or fan of cult TV favorite Freaks and Geeks knows the name James Franco. He delivered a subtly stellar performance in Milk, stumbled his way as a hysterical... More

The Crying Game

February 09 2010
Kamla Hurst

In 1992, the film The Crying Game opened in Colorado Springs, my hometown. The film played in a cozy, fifty-seat theater tucked behind a café called Poor Richard’s. Next to the... More

The Intentions of Design

January 28 2010
Harriet Fasenfest

I’ve been thinking about design—its merits and its effect. I know nothing can escape it since, in its natural expression, design is everywhere—the rock, the potato, the wisps of... More

A Valuable Insight on Addiction

January 11 2010
Sarah Van Winkle

Perhaps I had never truly contemplated the struggle of drug addiction until I read Beautiful Boy by David Sheff. You may have heard of this book—the author garnered praise, but... More

Looking for an Out

December 01 2009
Cara Ungar-Gutierrez

If you read my last post, you know that I’m interested in gender. And, by the way, for those of you who did read that last post, I remain unsettled by Betty Draper’s character... More

Pages:  <  1 2 3 4 >

The Oregon Humanities Blog

Observations from our staff and colleagues.

Eyes Opened Wide

In late summer of 1979 Dale Eldred created a series of interconnected sculptures of refractive light panels sited at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, across expansive lawns and along the median of Volker Boulevard. The refractive tape created prisms that changed with every movement of the viewer, the sun, the moon, and the earth’s rotation. I was a new freshman at the Kansas City Art Institute, and the playfulness and gentle thoughtfulness of the sculpture quickened my heart and welcomed me home. I felt I had arrived to a place where I would be understood and folded into a community that I would gladly call my own.

I have spent the last several months touring a few state universities and a couple of private colleges with my daughter, a senior at Cleveland High School in Portland. I am proud of her confidence in asking questions and her willingness to jump into unfamiliar situations. But I am watching her carefully. She will learn in many situations and environments. She will continue to travel and ask questions, read and think, dance and sing. I examine the beautifully manicured campuses to see where it is that she will find that alignment of people who challenge her point of view, push her to work hard, and embrace her into a community that she will call her own. I watch. I wonder. Is this the place?

Dale Eldred worked with elemental principles of time, the earth’s rotation, light from the sun or the headlights of passing cars, geography, and the spectrum of colors. Art critic Antero Kare writes, “Dale Eldred is the most public artist. His tools are huge but his method is subtle and gentle. He brings the audience to the essentials and leaves us to a discussion with the seasons, and with the rhythms of nature and culture.” In experiencing this installation I found my eyes were opened wide that freshman year; I began to learn to look and think, carefully and more critically. It was within the safety of that community that I allowed myself to push harder and take greater intellectual and artistic risks. I learned the common language of that visual community. Like all groups, ours included visual, auditory, and kinesthetic learners. We read, drew, painted, discussed, critiqued, and listened.

As for my daughter, next September she will arrive on a large or small campus, look around and carve out her space. She will move through a liberal arts education and glean from it all that she can. In this place she will find that she is a giver and receiver, a student and educator. It is my hope that the community she finds will be large in ideas and supportive of her young self. I anticipate her confidence as she emerges from the next four years and comes into the world with a new depth of understanding, ready to experience the expanding community of our times.

Carole Shellhart
About Carole Shellhart

Carole Shellhart is Oregon Humanities finance manager, known to her colleagues as a numbers guru, finance maven, and artist.

02 November 2009 | Posted by Carole Shellhart in Community Inside O. Hm. New Ideas
Permalink | Comments? (2 so far)


Carole is an intellegent young lady.  She has learned many things during her life, This has helped her to steer her daughter in many ways.  I am very proud of her. I would even feel this way if I were not her Mother

Edna Winsor | 03 Nov at 01:57 PM


Carole,

Thank you for sharing such a wonderful essay.  I hope the same things for my daughter as she decides which school fits her best and will challenge her.  You said it beautifully.

Kathy

Kathy Fishler | 12 Nov at 02:39 PM

Add a comment

Oregon Humanities welcomes your commentary. We encourage lively public discourse and civil debate, but please be respectful in expressing your views.

Name
E-mail address*
Location
Web site


Archive

Organized by category or date

By category
By date
2009
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • Sep
  • Oct
  • Nov
  • Dec