- About the Oregon Culture Keepers Roster
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Search the online Oregon Culture Keepers Roster—an ever-expanding, juried selection of folk and traditional artists—and connect with cultural experts documented through our regional surveys and Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Program.
Rostered artists and culture keepers can provide educational presentations, hands-on demonstrations, or performances to a variety of audiences. We recommend a fee of at least $250 plus travel expenses unless otherwise noted, for such appearances. We do not serve as a booking agent, so please contact the artists directly.
Search the roster by county or keyword to find
- highly skilled traditional artists for your classroom,
- storytellers for your library event,
- cultural experts for your humanities program,
- performers for your festival stage, or
- craft artists for demonstrations.
Check back often—we regularly add new folk and traditional artists!
- Apply
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Interested in applying to be on the roster?
First, review OFN’s definition of a Culture Keeper:
- A Culture Keeper is a folk or traditional artist, who actively practices, passes on, and preserves the living cultural traditions of the cultural community to which they belong and is recognized by that community. Folk and traditional arts do not include folk-inspired art, which is produced by individuals and groups who are not part of the cultural community that originally produced/created/developed the art form, even if the quality of the art is excellent.
Second, fill out and send in the application form and all required work samples.
Or contact us at 541-346-3820 | ofn@uoregon.edu for assistance.
Oregon Culture Keepers Roster
Found 286 profiles.
Wilson Wewa (Warm Springs) is a storyteller, spiritual leader, and the Warm Spring’s Paiute Tribe’s oral historian. A descendant of Paiute Chief Paulina and Chief Weahwewa, he learned most of the stories and legends he tells from his grandmother and tribal elders in Oregon, Washington, Nevada, and California. Wewa is the author of Legends of the Northern Paiute (2017, OSU Press).
Wilverna Reece (Happy Camp, Calif.) is a traditional Karuk basket maker and weaver. Reece, who has served on the Karuk Tribal Council, learned from her mentor 35 years ago. Today, she passes along her traditional knowledge to a new generation.
Yat Sing Music Club (Portland) is a group of Cantonese opera singers. Founded in 1942, the group still rehearses twice a week in Portland’s Old Town. The group once produced complete Cantonese operas with traditional costumes and a full cast of characters, but eventually scaled down their performances. Yat Sing Music Club performs parts of operas for public events and private parties.
Yingwana Khosa (Portland) is a traditional Tsongan dancer and drummer originally from Soweto. At 10, Khosa began studying drum and dance with the Mzumba Dance Troupe, a dance company that performs traditional drumming and dancing from tribes all over South Africa. He has also performed with the Ringling Brothers.
Yuki Martin (Washougal, WA/Portland, OR) is an origami artist, instructor, and writer. Since 2007, Yuki has taught, demonstrated, and presented origami at a multitude of community venues throughout Oregon and Washington. She is also the author of Super Cute Origami Kit: Kawaii Paper Projects You Can Decorate in Thousands of Ways!, which won the 2019 Moonbeam Children’s Book Award Bronze Medal.
Yuqin Wang (Portland) is a traditional Chinese Rod Puppeteer. Before coming to America, Yuqin Wang, and her husband and fellow performer, Zhengli Xu, were both leading puppeteers with the famous China Puppet Art Troupe for more than 30 years. Yuqin Wang, a 2012 Oregon Folklife Network Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Program Master Artist, was honored by the National Endowment for the Arts in 2004 when she received the National Heritage Fellowship Award, the highest honor our nation gives to folk and traditional artists.