A while ago I reported on a mural painted by noted comic and
science fiction magazine illustrator Alex Schomburg that was installed in
Portland General Electric’s North Fork Fish Viewing Station in 1963. Schomburg
Since then much on that project has
happened.
Schomburg, as we already knew, was a key figure in the
so-called Golden Age of Comics, and was responsible for 100s of covers for some
of the most iconic magazines ever published in that genre. The PGE mural led us, eventually, to Mr.
Schomburg’s estate (Estate),
maintained by Alex’s grand-daughter, Susan.
Susan has been a wonderful source of information on Schomburg and, as
things developed, provided us with information we’d never have obtained
otherwise.
PGE, as part of its improvement of the fish passage at the
North Fork Dam was required under Federal law to mitigate some of its effects
on historic properties. The Fish Viewing
Station, closed to the public since 9/11, was sitting rather forlorn well
within a secure area and nobody really remembered the mural was even
there. So, in consultation with Oregon
SHPO, we decided to restore the mural, relocate it to a more accessible
location, and tell the public the story of not only the North Fork fish ladder
(once the longest in the world) but of the amazing artist that PGE found to
help educate 1000s of school children who visited the project between 1963 and 1991.
Nina Olsson, a fine arts conservator in Portland, took on
the project of restoring the 4x8 main panel and the two 40” x 48” side
panels. After 40 years sitting 10’ from
what amounts to a river, in an unheated (okay, space-heated occasionally) metal
building, they were dirty, the photos were stuck to the glass, and the colors
were, um, a bit muted. Not anymore!
We developed two interpretative panels to flank the historic
ones; one on the history of the North Fork Fish Ladder and the other on
Schomburg. At this point it looks like the
entire assembly of five framed panels will go on a long-term loan to a local museum. There will be a grand “unveiling” at some
point this Fall and the public will be invited. Stay tuned!
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