Confluence Project

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See Degree Confluence Project for the quest to find the intersections of whole number latitude and longitude.

The Confluence Project is a series of outdoor installations and interpretive artworks located in public parks along the Columbia River and its tributaries in the U.S. states of Washington and Oregon. Each art installation explores the confluence of history, culture and ecology of the Columbia River system. The project draws on the region's history, including Native American traditional stories and entries from the Lewis and Clark Expedition journals, to "evoke a landscape and a way of life submerged in time and memory."[1] The project reaches from the mouth of the Columbia River to Hells Canyon.[2]

Artist and architect Maya Lin has designed installations that follow the path of Lewis and Clark through the Columbia River Basin. Lin is collaborating with landscape architects to restore natural environments, and each artwork will draw text from Lewis and Clark's journals or traditions grounded in Native American cultures. Confluence sites are meant to be places reclaimed and reimagined. The purpose is to transform our understanding we have been so that we can build a lasting stewardship into the future.

Confluence Project is a nonprofit 501(C)(3) based in Vancouver, Washington, incorporated in 2002. In addition to the public art, the organization manages two programs: Gifts from Our Ancestors brings Native artists and storytellers into schools. Confluence Friends is a program to organize volunteers around each site for maintenance and public events.

Sites

Washington

Oregon

References

  1. ^ Raymond, Camela (November 2007). "The Shape of Memory". Portland Monthly.
  2. ^ http://www.pdxcityclub.org/calendar_day.asp?date=11/21/2014&event=209
  3. ^ Cape Disappointment State Park
  4. ^ Fort Vancouver National Historic Site (U.S. National Park Service)
  5. ^ Sacajawea State Park
  6. ^ Confluence Project: project sites
  7. ^ Confluence Project: project sites: Sandy River Delta
  8. ^ Fogarty, Colin (March 14, 2014). "Art Installation Will Recall Silenced Celilo Falls". The Oregonian. Retrieved 2014-03-14.

External links