Favorite Things II | Jason Hill

NOVEMBER 8, 2024 – JUNE 29, 2025 | THE AMERICA WALDO BOGLE GALLERY AT THE BUSH HOUSE MUSEUM

Favorite Things is a portrait and short film series depicting regional artists with items that are precious to them. Developed by Portland filmmaker and photographer Jason Hill, this work documents a collaboration wherein artists were instructed to share and speak about a favorite item in a studio setting. The results are an experiment with light and color to create magical portraits and filmed testimonials.

ABOUT THE Artist

Jason Hill (born 1976) is an artist and educator currently living in Portland, Oregon. Born in the Midwest to a father in the military, he moved constantly with his family until settling down in Southern California. His relationship with photographic imagery began with his love of record album covers. He started working with a camera during adolescence and is largely self-trained. His practice today is focused on portraiture with an emphasis in the mechanics of light, vibrant color, emotion, and natural beauty.

Vista Piano Quartet in Concert at the Bush House Museum

Saturday, November 9, 2024 | BUSH HOUSE MUSEUM

Doors open at 6:00pm, show will begin promptly at 6:30pm.

Join us for an unforgettable evening of live music with the Vista Piano Quartet at the Bush House Museum!
Don’t miss out on this incredible opportunity to experience the magic of chamber music in the historic setting of the Bush House Museum.

Location: Bush House Museum, Mission Street Southeast, Salem, OR, USA

ABOUT Vista Piano Quartet

Chamber Music can simply, and most aptly, described as “the music of friends”.

In between the sacred music of the Medieval Era to the contemporary concert halls
seating hundreds of listeners, was the nineteenth century idea of the Salon; amateur
and professional musicians alike gathering in the home to share an evening of music
and camaraderie. It is not out of the realm of imagination to envision an evening of
chamber music at the turn of the 20th century in the historic Bush House.

The Vista Piano Quartet is thrilled to take you on a journey back to that time, with a
twist. Our program consists of nineteenth and early twentieth century works which
would have been the new music of the time. While Schumann or Brahms may
immediately come to mind, we have chosen a different path for this recital.

The number of compositions by women of that, or any era, goes largely unrecognized and
undoubtedly underperformed. It is our aim to shed a ray of light on four highly skilled
and respected composers/musicians of that time whose names and accomplishments
have been nearly lost to history. We’ll present selections from Elfrida Andree,Mel Bonis,
Dora Pejacsevich, and Luise Aldolpha Le Beau in hopes their names will someday
become standards of the musical canon.

We look forward to sharing an evening of music, a little history and friendship with you.

Vista Piano Quartet Members: 

Violin – Cathy Heithaus
Viola – Karen Vincent
Cello – Jenny Gleason
Piano – Brenda Winberg

Bush House Museum Concert with AMENTA ABIOTA

saturday, NOVEMBER 18, 2023 | BUSH HOUSE MUSEUM

Amenta is a singer, songwriter, producer and performance artist from Memphis, TN. In her own woman show, she builds vocal and instrumental loops from kalimba, synthesizer, drum machine and guitar creating atmospheric textures. Boldly mystical and soul-fired, join us for a magical evening in a historic house.   

This concert is part of our initiative to reimagine the Bush House Museum as an intimate space in which artists and performers can transform the burdens of history into hope, healing and joy – a space, in other words, that lies at the intersection of history and art. 

ABOUT AMENTA

Yawa is a songwriter and producer from Memphis, TN. She is currently based in Portland, OR. In her one-woman performance, she builds vocal and instrumental loops from synth, drum machine, and  kalimba creating atmospheric textures. Yawa surprises and tantalizes audiences with mind bending ideas while skipping vocally from soul-shaking gospel to smooth jazz.

LINKS: amentaabioto.com

https://yawamusic.bandcamp.com/music

PAST IS PROLOGUE

PAST IS PROLOGUE

NOVEMBER 19, 2022 – January 28, 2023 | BUSH House MUSEUM

RECEPTION DECEMBER 9, 5:30 PM – 7:30 PM

Two light artists create captivating installations at the Bush House Museum

The Bush House Museum welcomes artists Kathryn Cellerini Moore and Pamela Hadley for the exhibition Past is Prologue. Each artist has created sight-specific light art that interacts with the historic environment of the Bush House. This space-altering art separates expectations by standing in the past while producing a formative experience. The interplay of contemporary technology expands the notion of what is at home in a historic house. 

The exhibit will be available for viewing from November 19, 2022, through January 28, 2023. There will be a reception at Bush House Museum on Friday, December 9, 2022, from 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.

Guided tours are at 1, 2, 3 & 4 pm and free tickets are available at the Bush Barn Art Center.

About Pamela Hadley

Pamela Hadley is a light- and time-based artist living in Portland, OR whose work seeks to engage people in direct relationships with themselves and the world. Hadley’s work has been widely exhibited across the U.S. and in South Korea. She has participated in artist residencies as both an artist-in-residence and a review panel member and has work in several private collections. Hadley earned an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a BFA from the Corcoran College of Art and Design.

This work isn’t trying to sell you anything. It just asks you to look and feel and to be actively aware of the processes by which we look and feel. And maybe we can keep trying to do that after we’ve left the gallery.

https://pamelahadley.com/

About Kathryn Cellerini Moore

Kathryn Cellerini Moore has a question: How can the process of making and experiencing art reveal pathways toward positive stewardship for our planet and beyond?

Cellerini Moore is a self-proclaimed nerd whose interdisciplinary work has been exhibited nationally and internationally. She reuses and recycles media to create immersive experiences for people to reflect on our collective, multifaceted potential as just one species among many. To do this, Cellerini Moore points to the invisible or unnoticed wonders that surround us every day, and offers viewers space to be curious and ask what is possible.

When asked to build work in response to the architecture at Bush House Museum, Cellerini Moore was immediately struck by the house’s elaborate interior design including dense and dark wallpapers, tiled floors, dark wooden furniture and floors, multi-layered molding at the base and top of the walls and ceiling, the gold gilded frames everywhere, and the numerous reflective glass surfaces in the house. Cellerini Moore also learned that when the house was built in the 1870’s, it was ahead of its time technologically speaking, incorporating electricity early on as well as flushing toilets. Cellerini Moore’s clear, minimalist glass and plexiglass structures are intended to heighten the viewer’s awareness of being surrounded by endless patterns and motifs. Cellerini Moore also lets the digital technology, including media players, projectors, tripods, and cords, be visible in the exhibition with the intent to draw parallels between the house’s historic technological advancements and contemporary tech. 
The majority of the digital footage presented is microscope videography. Finding themselves pregnant at the beginning of the COVID pandemic meant spending a great deal of time at home. As a result, Cellerini Moore began to explore her domestic space through the lens of a microscope, viewing daily items using a tool to help us see beyond our innate human capabilities. Salt, water, ice, fermented food, feathers, moss and tree roots are just some of the items filmed and incorporated into the videos. Gold v.2, for example, which eclipses a disk on the hallway wall, was created in direct response to the opulent gold frames found everywhere in Bush House Museum. Cellerini Moore diluted and filmed gold paint under the microscope.

https://www.kmoostudios.com/