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BEST FUNCTIONAL PUBLIC ART
From the Hawthorne Bridge to bike lanes to Bud Clark, Portland has no shortage of institutions to make a cyclist's pulse beat even stronger than usual. And it keeps geting better. Over the past couple of years, a unique series of bicycle racks have transformed otherwise mundane pieces of urban hardware into opportunities for art and humor. The rack outside the Lucky Lab Brew Pub (915 SE Hawthorne Blvd.) features a dog's head. The rack in front of Fremont Family Vision (2480 NE Fremont St.) is shaped like a pair of glasses. Outside World Cup Coffee (1740 NW Glisan St.), rests a steaming cup of java--you get the drift. The art racks are the brainchildren of Merrill Denney, a Dundee metal worker and industrial sculptor who built his first rack because his favorite grocery, the Petrich General Store in Scholls, had no place for him to tether his 10-speed. An avid cyclist himself, Denney builds the racks out of inch-and-a-half schedule-40 steel pipe, encased in a powder coating that is baked in an oven at 400 degrees Fahrenheit. "It's tough as nails," he says. The Bicycle Transportation Alliance is now working with businesses and neighborhood groups to increase the number of art racks around town. "This is a way to bring the delight of bicycling to people where they live and work," says Diane Dulkin of the BTA. "It's one of those things that makes Portland a fun place to live." We couldn't agree more.

BEST PLACE TO IGNORE A
NO TRESPASSING SIGN
Wander past the No Trespassing sign that marks the threshold of the side yards between Il Fornaio and Northwest 22nd Place, and you'll find yourself at the home of Hazel Hall. It's OK to loiter on the periphery of the late poet's house. In fact, it makes sense that you have to set foot in her domain to read the poems on view at her understated memorial; when she was living, you would have had to drop by her house if you hoped to meet with her. Hall survived scarlet fever when she was 12 and spent the rest of her life in a wheelchair. Her final home was at 52 Lucretia Place--now 106 NW 22nd Place--where she is rumored to have relied upon a mirror held at angles to observe the world outside her windows. In a letter to her editor, she wrote, "Writing has been everything to me. Sometimes it seems that I must write my way out, and sometimes a flash of feeling cries that I will."

BEST WRITER FOR THE NEW MILLENNIUM
When this year's calender turns over, many people expect major chaos ranging from screwed-up bank balances to the end of the world as we know it. So it's no surprise that apocalyptic mayhem has become a popular subject in the world of literature. Fortunately, Portland has a writer who not only has a firm grasp of post-modern angst, but is poised to become a millennial media fixture in the next few months. The movie version of Chuck Palahniuk's Oregon Book Award-winning debut novel, Fight Club, is being released in September. The story is about guys who meet in basements to beat the crap out of each other. The film stars such megastars as Brad Pitt, Edward Norton and Helena Bonham Carter. This is coupled with the debut of Palahniuk's third novel, Invisible Monsters, and a book tour across the country. His second book, Survivor, was published in the spring. With hype and hard knocks, Palahniuk leads us into the unknown.

BEST CD ART
When the CD first emerged as a force to be reckoned with, many lamented the eminent death of album art. How would anyone do anything interesting with such little space? No one thought label owners like JJ Gonson of Undercover Records would make CD packaging more dimensional than LP sleeves. "The least noticed thing about music is the packaging, and it's my favorite part," she says. "We've done things in envelopes, and all of our singles are hand-silkscreened." The best example of Gonson's design fetish is H Om, Kevin "Bingo" Richey's debut solo album, an elaborate project that required equally elaborate presentation. The expansive nature of the music, which incorporates traditional American country-folk and Indian ragas, is captured by mystical illustrations and an intricate chart of Bingo's guest musicians and their instruments. Mirrored images reflect the song "Sham Ba Q'allah," which sounds the same played forward or backward. Bingo chose the imprints, including a constellation map and a William Blake illustration, and Gregg Weiss silkscreened them onto red card stock in black and gold ink. Gonson designed a unique tri-fold package that encloses the CD inside a pouch with a protective flap. Now if only there were some way to get a life-size poster of Bingo in there...

BEST AUDIO GUIDE
The ideal guide comforts and elucidates. John Buchanan fits the bill perfectly. Last winter, as he did earlier for the Imperial Tombs of China exhibition, the Portland Art Museum's executive director used his wonderful narrative voice and great subject knowledge to lead thousands through Monet's late paintings of Giverny. Less understood by museum visitors is the audio guide's other function: to regulate traffic flow. Here, too, Buchanan's southern drawl proceeded at just the right pace.

ANNE RESSERBEST KNOCK-OUT MURAL
It all started three years ago. Silver Dollar Pizza Company (501 NW 21st Ave., 227-1103) general manager Angie Carver was sick of the heinous art on the restaurant's wall. So she did what any self-respecting sports fan working in a sports joint would do--she tore out pictures of her favorite athletes from magazines, handed them over to artist Larry Kangus and asked him to create a mural. What Kangus created free-hand is a striking portrait of some the world's most memorable sports images: Muhammad Ali slamming into a world championship, Dennis Rodman going for the hoop and Steffi Graf turning in some topspin. Kangus put faces of various customers and former employees on some of the other players. While a sports bar isn't always the most soothing place to be, there's something comforting about chomping into some pie with The Greatest standing guard.


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Willamette Week | originally published July 21, 1999


 

 

 

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