The Josephy Center for Arts and Culture announces the installation and celebration of Nez Perce artist Doug Hyde’s granite and bronze sculpture, ‘etweyéewise, which means, literally, “I return from a hard journey.” The celebration begins on Saturday, June 22 at 2:00 p.m. Salmon will be served.
Artist Doug Hyde was born in Hermiston, Oregon, grew up at Lapwai, Idaho, went to the art school in Santa Fe, NM, and then to Vietnam. On his return, he learned to carve stone working in a monument yard in Lewiston. For the last 40 years he has worked in stone and bronze. Much of his recent work has been telling tribal stories in those mediums across the country. His bronze of Chief Joseph is at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington D.C., and at the Clearwater Casino near Lewiston.
And he will soon have a major piece—‘etweyé·wise (literally, “I return from a hard journey”) on Main Street in Joseph, Oregon. The Josephy Center for Arts and Culture received a generous grant from the Oregon Community Foundation to commission a Plateau Indian artist to design something special for the city. Joseph’s bronze streetscape has several sculptures depicting Indians, but none of them are the work of an Indian artist. The Josephy Center, with Oregon Community Foundation’s huge support, set out to change that.
Saturday Jun 22, 2019
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM PDT
Saturday, June 22, 2019
Celebration begins at 2:00 pm
Josephy Center, 403 N. Main St., Joseph
Cheryl Coughlan 541-432-0505
Send Email
Printed courtesy of www.wallowacountychamber.com/ – Contact the Wallowa County Chamber of Commerce for more information.
101 W Main Street / PO Box 427, Enterprise, OR 97828 – (541) 426-4622 – info@wallowacounty.org