List of public art in Portland, Oregon

Portland, Oregon, has an extensive public art collection. Displayed artworks undergo an approval process.[1] Many of the artworks are administered by the Regional Arts & Culture Council.

Several statues were toppled during the 2020s, including ones depicting Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Teddy Roosevelt.[2] The Promised Land, the Thompson Elk Fountain, and a statue of Harvey W. Scott were also removed.[3]

Mosaics, murals, and paintings

Black Lives Matter street mural (2020)

Mosaics, mural, and paintings have included:

  • Black Lives Matter street mural (2020)
  • Capax Infiniti (2014), Faith47
  • Conduit (2009–2010), Emily Ginsburg
  • George Floyd mural (2020)
  • Lovejoy Columns
  • Never Look Away (2021)
  • Oregon History (1989–1990), Richard Haas
  • Packy mural (1990, destroyed in 2008), Eric Larsen
  • Portland Memorial Mausoleum Mural (2009), Dan Cohen and Shane Bennett
  • The Continuity of Life Forms, Willard Martin
  • The Knowledge (2010), Harrell Fletcher and Avalon Kalin
  • Tri It (2015), Blaine Fontana
  • We Stand with You (2021)
  • Women Making History in Portland (2007), Robin Corbo
  • Woodstock Mural (2013, original, 2015 reproduction), Mike Lawrence

Sculpture

Sculptures have included:

  • Garden Wreath (1997), Larry Kirkland, Central Library
  • Mago Hermano (Brother Wizard or Magician) (2003), Antoinette Hatfield Hall
  • Solar Wreath (1997), Larry Kirkland, Central Library

Outdoor sculptures

Statue of Abraham Lincoln (1928 — 2020), George Fite Waters
Equestrian statue of Joan of Arc
Fountain for Company H
Liberty Bell
Sacajawea and Jean-Baptiste (1905)
Skidmore Fountain
Statue of Paul Bunyan (1959)
The Quest (1970), Alexander von Svoboda
Theodore Roosevelt, Rough Rider (1922), Alexander Phimister Proctor

References

  1. ^ Streckert, Joe. "Experts Critique Portland's Most Famous Public Art". Portland Mercury. Archived from the original on 2022-09-06. Retrieved 2022-09-06.
  2. ^ "Some of Portland's most prominent public art tumbled this year. Which ones should come back?". opb. Archived from the original on 2022-06-14. Retrieved 2022-09-06.
  3. ^ "Arts board says statues toppled during Portland protests should not return to original sites". KGW. September 29, 2021. Archived from the original on 2022-06-01. Retrieved 2022-09-06.

External links

  • flagOregon portal
  • iconVisual arts portal
  • Media related to Public art in Portland, Oregon at Wikimedia Commons
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Public art in Portland, Oregon
Sculptures
Fountains
Portrait
statues
Murals
Key: † No longer extant or on public display
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Public art in the United States
By city
New York City
Washington, D.C.
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