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Dad Bods Band Free Concert at McMenamins

Join us for a blast from the past with the return of the Dad Bods 80s cover band! They’re gearing up for a free concert, open to all ages, on Wednesday, May 22nd, 2024, from 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM at McMenamins in the Father Luke’s Room.

The Dad Bods bring the party with their energetic performance of classic 80s rock tunes, sprinkled with some hits from other decades. Don’t forget your dancing shoes for this lively show—it’s a night out the whole family will enjoy!

Hope for Littles Happy Hour

We invite you to join us for a Happy Hour on June 29, 2021, to support our mission of hope and empowerment for youth and community in Central Oregon. This is an in-person event at the Bend Golf & Country Club with a hosted bar and hors d’oeuvres. You will have an opportunity to learn about the work of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon and how we have been a tool of caring, relationship building, and nurturing of young people in Central Oregon, even through the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. Plus, you will meet our new director and one of our graduating Littles.

Heart of Oregon Corp’s 20th Anniversary

Heart of Oregon Corps is celebrating 20 years in 2020, and you’re invited to celebrate with us! For 20 years we have inspired and empowered Central Oregon’s young people to make positive change in their lives. Help us mark the occasion with a virtual celebration!

Boldly Went: Live Outdoor Adventure Storytelling Show and Podcast

The authors of the popular book, The Dirtbag’s Guide to Life: Eternal Truths for Hiker Trash, Ski Bums, and Vagabonds” are bringing their traveling show to XXX to collect your adventure stories and share them in their popular Boldly Went podcast. Come for an evening of sharing your outdoor adventure stories and meet like-minded people. Settle in to listen or get prepared to share your adventure stories in 10 minutes or less from 7-9 PM.

You can’t shred gnar, bomb down trail, climb volcanoes, and run whitewater all the time. But at Boldly Went we know that when you’re not, you want to talk about your adventures with other people who get it – probably over beer. And every thru hiker, trail runner, mountain biker, climber, paddler, sailor, scuba diver, flyer, and Indiana Jones wannabe has at least one story that will inspire, inform, or at least entertain the rest of us, so we’re pulling together crowds of you and randomly selecting you to go on stage to give us your best.

Check out the webpage for more details about what to expect at the event and tips for preparing your 10 minute story if you think you have one to share.

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

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