Thursday, October 28, 2010

Evening with an Abstract Artist: Exhibit Walk Tonight


Explore an acclaimed abstract exhibit with the artist - James B. Thompson: The Vanishing Landscape features this Oregonian’s paintings and prints exploring the transformation of the American West.
The Oregonian
called the works “ravishing … a considered and sophisticated grappling with matters of space, color and mark-making.” 7 p.m.
$5. Members, free.

Sponsored by Oregon College Savings Plan

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Saturday: A Night You'll Forget Nevermore!


At Tales of Hallow's Eve this Saturday, you'll hear the gripping tales of Edgar Allen Poe and Edward Gorey live as mysterious live raptors of the night surround you at a cabin lit by jack-o'-lanterns.

To hear Poe's classic poem The Raven, alongside our live raven, Hera, and our owls, is a richly atmospheric experience that takes the commercialism out of the season. A dramatic reading of Poe's The Tell-Tale Heart and Gorey's Gashlycrumb Tinies will heighten the mood even further.

And, you'll be invited by Victorian characters from the frontier's past to join in puppet shows, puppet making, apple bobbing and pumpkin butter churning.

Dress appropriately for this fun outdoor event that you'll forget nevermore!

4 p.m. - 8 p.m.

$5. Members, free.

In association with B.E.A.T., the Bend Experimental Art Theater

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

A Great Conversation @ the Museum - Free

Not satisfied with the conversations you've been having lately? Why not join us Thursday evening at the Museum and be engaged with your community in a thoughtful, challenging conversation about ideas critical to our daily lives and our state’s future. On Oct. 21 at 7 p.m., award-winning writer and editor Gail Wells will discuss Seeding a Sense of Place: Science, Stories, and Smart Forest Policy, an Oregon Humanities Lecture.

What affects our opinions about forest use? How do we build meanings into places through storytelling and public policy? How does our allegiance to places affect our opinions about land use, particularly forest use? How do we build meanings into places individually and collectively through storytelling and public policy?

Wells is an award-winning writer and editor specializing in history and natural-resource science. Her most recent book is The Little Lucky: A Family Geography. She is also the author of The Tillamook: A Created Forest Comes of Age and coauthor of Lewis and Clark Meet Oregon’s Forests: Lessons from Dynamic Nature.

The event is free and open to the public.


Sponsored by Oregon Humanities

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Butterflies Landing at Museum on Saturday


Hundreds of brilliantly colored butterflies have been released into the new Butterflies exhibit which opens Saturday at the Museum. Exactly 364 painted lady butterflies took flight today, feeding on the nectar from more than 300 plants in a re-created tropical garden. Hundreds more butterflies of a dozen species will be in the exhibit when it opens on Saturday.

Today, the orange-and-black painted lady butterflies landed on Museum staff and a photographer, lingering on them as the insects grew accustomed to their new home.

Visitors will always find something new at the exhibit as new species hatch, metamorphose and fly during the course of the exhibit, which runs through Feb. 6. Visitors will be able to see brilliantly colored chrysalis hatching behind the glass of the pupa room.

There will undoubtedly be much ooooh-ing and ahhhh-ing as colorful, winged wonders whirl around you. At the same time, you will learn how butterflies live, fly and migrate up to thousands of miles. You’ll discover what they eat, how important plants are to them, and what we can do to protect these winged wonders.

On Saturday, visitors will see the following species:

Pedeides blue morpho – an iridescent tropical butterfly with a wingspan of about up to nearly eight inches. They flash their brilliant blue wings to frighten predator birds. This butterfly drinks juice from fruit. They live in South American rainforests and can be found in Mexico, Central America, Paraguay and Trinidad.

Three-tailed tiger swallowtail - from South America with a wingspan of up to nearly four inches.

Green-spotted triangle butterfly - from Australasia/Indomalaya ecozone of Australia with a wingspan of up to nearly four inches.

Kleiner Mormon - from Australasia/Indomalaya ecozone of Australia with a wingspan of up to nearly four inches.

Scarlet Mormon - from Australasia/Indomalaya ecozone of Australia with a wingspan of about five inches.

Great eggfly from Australasia/Indomalaya ecozone of Australia is black with white, orange and blue spots.

Autumnleaf – found throughout Asia, with camouflaging coloration that remarkably resembles fallen leaves.

Blue or brown clipper – a fast flying butterfly from Southeast Asia with bright blue and white markings.

Great yellow Mormon – Asian swallowtail that feeds on citrus.

Pink rose butterfly – from the Philippines.

Paper kite/rice paper or large tree nymph – they taste horrible to predators, such as birds. They derive this defense mechanism from toxins in plants that they eat.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

An office visitor

Why we love working at the Museum - Bonnie dropped by today! She's doing a great job packing on the pounds for her winter torpor (semi-hibernation). She's already in her big-girl harness...

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