The Collective

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Sean Davis-

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Sean Davis is the author of The Wax Bullet War, a Purple heart Iraq War veteran, and winner of the Legionnaire of the Year Award from the American Legion in 2015 and the recipient of the Emily Gottfried Emerging Leader, Human Rights award for 2016. His stories, essays and articles have appeared in the Smoke, Human the Movie, and Ted Talk Books The Misfits Manifesto. Sean has fought in a revolution, a war, and helped save lives in New Orleans during Katrina. He’s a wild land firefighter during the summers. He has been a police officer, a bartender, an incident responder, a supernumerary in an opera, and currently teaches writing at Mt. Hood Community College and Clackamas Community College. Sean not only encourages communion with Nature, he dedicates life and limb to protect her. Each year you'll find him bravely situated on the front lines of wildfires across the Pacific Northwest as one of Oregon's most experienced and decorated firefighters. Sean's love of Nature and of people is the lifeblood in his particular brand of philanthropy. Sean lives in rural Oregon with his talented wife Kelly Davis and their daughter. 

Sean is an interdisciplinary artist and writer. Within the Collective Sean offers his series of paintings surrounding trauma, survival and the interconnectedness with Nature. 

Jennifer Porter-

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Jennifer Porter is a native of Portland and an artist and conservationist. Her early work and focus surrounded spacial theory, the built environment and architecture. She developed and curated 'Centrifuge' at Art Institute of Portland. Centrifuge was a study of the interconnectedness between the disciplines of art, art theory and architecture. Centrifuge featured master artist and GBD Architecture founder Chuck Gordon, two of Portland’s leading architecture firms and several of Portland’s local artists. She curated a series of shows in a massive artist run pop up gallery collective, Deep Field Gallery. She served four years on the planning committee of Portland’s largest art auction, The Annual CAP Art Auction, overseeing the installation and multimedia program. Jennifer’s interest began to take a more personal tone in recent years with focus on nature and conservation issues and most recently the process of finding the new normal in trauma recovery.  Working alongside her family as habitat restoration specialists, reconstructing damaged habitats, she found an inherent similarity to the power of nature in its rejuvenation and restoration, and the healing we do from traumatic instances in our own lives. She is currently dedicated to assisting high risk youth.
 

 

Reading: Jude Brewer

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Jude’s writing has appeared in Retreat West, New Millennium Writings, Fredericksburg Literary Review, Clackamas Literary Review, Scintilla Press, Typishly, and Cultured Vultures. His nonfiction short was a finalist in the 2017 Montana Book Festival, and he was the winner of the 2017 Retreat West Flash Fiction Prize. He also produces and hosts the literary “radio theatre” podcast Storytellers Telling Stories. New episodes available Tuesdays on iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, any podcast app and on sttspod.com


Reading: Jason Arias

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Jason Arias lives in Portland, OR. You can find some of his previous work in past issues of Oregon Humanities Magazine, Lidia Yuknavitch’s book The Misfit’s ManifestoPerceptions Magazine, and Storytellers Telling Stories Podcast as well as other publications.   

 

 

 

Magellan In His Tree Of Honey

The other day I was thinking, I hope I get a shot of him when the leaves turn... Well he granted my wish.

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Small Gifts

Magellan is my yard crow. Over the last year and a half, I've entered into a neat friendship with this unique and beautiful bird. I like to say he chose me. He's been very faithful and constant. I write about his antics quite a bit on F.B. and he even has his little base of dedicated readership!

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One thing he taught me recently, is appreciating the small things.
Magellan will leave trinkets in return for his meals and I've been saving them. I sure do dig that sentient little being. I hope he is around for many seasons to come!

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Evidence In The Fire~ The Place You Will Sit And Recon With Your Demons

Each of us has this place, this shack, this drowned place and in it are all the entities which have influenced us in the past, present and as much as we work against it, they will lay claim to our futures, albeit it in differing ways depending upon our counterbalance and the form which we exact it. 'They' (insert anyone who claims to be a professional in these realms) say that visiting this place, doing the work here, facing it dead on is the path to gaining greater control of our countenance. Inwardly we press on believing we are in control. I make the decisions! Don't I? If we part from this idealism we fear we may splinter, or become confused and walk closer to what awaits us in the shack.

The truth is, I don't believe we want to believe we have less control than we believe we have. Problem presented. I don't think so many of us know what means. The word control. Does it mean we have a full understanding of what is in that dark place? Do we kick the door open with rifle clutched in both hands and demand that forces in this place sit down, shut the fuck up and don't move? Do we walk in slowly driven by a deadly curiosity into a place we know is dangerous, almost as though we'd been taken over? Sit down, trance like in the chair and wait as these forces emerge from the walls and floor and walk toward us, encircle us, and then..... Do we go in like a hostage negotiator, books and publications in hand and tell them "Look here goddamn it! I have a fucking degree! I've armed myself with information! I gained a position of leadership! I have power! You can't fuck with me!"

For whatever reason my shack has been appearing, and asking me for a day of reckoning for two years now. The entities in my shack were born of trauma and abuse, they are large, looming and they laugh at my rifle as they snap it like a match stick. My tribe stands encircling the fire outside this place, a couple members of my family, some very strong friends and an energy worker are there. I choose to believe this is the universe pulling me near, and whispering in my ear, " I'm not messing with you now Jennifer, your pretense, your running, your masks, your fear, your slow evolution it must all go into the fire, it is your job to make sure you don't go in with them, we are here....now walk...."

Fluid Earth

Part of my job working in habitat restoration is to chronicle what we do, hands in the earth to the public, our clients, our environmental community and even our family. Communicating our science many times give us an opportunity to create art. In this case a beautiful new series created from the aerial meanderings of myself and nephew Grayson Moyer. This is a particularly beautiful series captured on Nature Conservancy land in Oregon.