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Alchemy at Caldera
Photo by Jeredon O’Connor

Transforming by means of creativity.

Caldera is many things. An arts camp for underserved youth. An environmental organization focused on youth development. A program that nurtures adult artists. The organization puts in place people and processes to transform human beings in mysterious and impressive ways. At the end of the day, one could argue that Caldera might be akin to alchemy.

Caldera was originally created in 1996 as a program to bring together limited-opportunity kids from both the city and the country to make art. It seemed simple. A fun summer camp with music, drawing and writing, as well as hiking, canoeing and campfires.

But the alchemy started immediately. Kids found out they were artists. They realized they could use creativity to solve life problems. And they were transformed.

Now in its twentieth year, Caldera’s Youth Program has been named one of the top fifty youth development organizations in the United States by the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities. Last year it was one of the top twelve programs honored at the White House. Today, Caldera works with twelve partner middle schools in Portland and Central Oregon, offering art and nature programs to 430 middle and high school youth, as well as providing year-round mentoring and camps to at-risk kids.

Realizing that grownups could use a little alchemy, too, Caldera opened up its doors during the winter to adult artists and creative thinkers. These artists now work onsite for month-long residencies as part of an Artist in Residence program.

The natural next step of the alchemical process was to blend the Caldera Youth Programs and the Artist in Residence programs.

“It’s our belief that by having the youth work with a variety of talented adult artists, committed environmental stewards, and caring mentors, they are introduced to a variety of ways in which creativity can be expressed, which will encourage their own creativity and help them grow,” said Elia Unverzagt, communications director for Caldera. “They see value in expressing their own creativity and unique voices, and become able to imagine a new set of possibilities for their lives.”

Artists in Residence work with kids at every level. Youths may be invited on studio tours, interview artists, or participate in workshops. Some artists come back to teach at Camp Caldera during the summers, finding that collaboration with another generation can be generative and, thus, transformative.

At the end of the day, the alchemy Caldera offers happens by using creativity of all sorts to facilitate a deeper sense of self and possibly a greater humanity in both children and adults. ‒Katrina Hays

Get Involved
Caldera Arts Center
31500 Blue Lake Drive
Sisters, OR 97759
541.595.0956
calderaarts.org
Learn how you can volunteer and help with special events, youth programs and administrative projects. caldera@calderaarts.org

Susanne Kibak Redfield

From mainstream to main street, this Sisters artist rose to commercial success before returning her brand and designs to a small-town scale.

written by Lee Lewis Husk

Bend_Magazine_Susanne_Redfield_Artist_Profile_Sisters_Studio_Redfield_by_Talia_Galvin(14of19)
Photo by Talia Galvin

Decorative, hand-painted tiles have formed the backsplash of Susanne Redfield’s life for the past thirty-five years. Among her professional successes was the time she made tiles for White House holiday decorations. She ran a commercial and custom tile factory from Redmond. She hobnobbed with the country’s best interior designers and sold a line of hand-painted ceramic tiles through Ann Sacks Tile & Stone, a Portland-born company. When Ann Sacks sold her business to Kohler (of plumbing fame), Redfield’s tiles got fired into prime time, appearing in twenty-three showrooms from New York to Los Angeles and London.

All this success happened from Sisters, where Redfield has lived since the early 1980s. “It’s been fun to do what I’ve done from this little town,” she said. “I didn’t have to live in New York to access the markets.”

Redfield earned a degree in ceramic arts from the University of California Santa Cruz and began as many fledgling artists do—selling the product of her craft at Saturday markets. Her work caught the eye of a local contractor and interior designer who commissioned murals for kitchens and baths in Black Butte Ranch.

“I love the utility of tile,” she said. “It is a building material everyone needs, but it is a constant challenge to make an everyday item transcend the mundane and really become an inspirational surface that lifts the spirit.”

As commissions poured in, Redfield opened Kibak Tile to manufacture hand-painted tiles. In 1996, the factory moved into an industrial space in Redmond where Kibak made high-end tiles for everything from pools to restaurants.

By 2013, Redfield was ready to downsize. She sold the factory to a California company and repurposed her energies toward opening Studio Redfield on Hood Street in Sisters in 2014. The space is part gallery, part studio, part retail store. It’s a place where local artists and crafts-people can showcase and sell their work—from husband Randy Redfield’s contemporary paintings and Kathy Deggendorfer’s folk art to hand-carved wood pieces, tribal art, jewelry and even her mom’s hand-knit baby sweaters.

Redfield is looking forward to collaborating with companies such as California-based Fireclay Tile, which recently launched a hand-painted collection of Redfield’s designs. Instead of selling out of a showroom, the company sells factory direct to consumers, she said, allowing her to focus exclusively on design. For production with non-Fireclay products, Redfield is doing research and development on new patterns and glazes with an Arizona factory that has cutting-edge tile-making capabilities. From her small studio on Hood Street, she hopes to launch other national accounts.

“I never thought of myself as an artist in the classic sense,” she said. “I think of myself more as a designer in the same vein as furniture or fabric print designers. The challenge is to design something unique but livable, something lasting and not trendy.” 

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