As one of the oldest and best organizations serving writers and readers in Portland, the Willamette Writers board awarded the Humanitarian Award to Literary Arts. From their Portland Arts & Lectures series to the Oregon Book Awards, they have truly demonstrated exceptional philanthropy and contributed to writers throughout the Pacific Northwest in a variety of ways.
Andrew Proctor, as Executive Director, has graciously accepted the award on behalf of himself and the organization.
Their story (from their Who We Are page)
Literary Arts began in 1984 with a small lecture series designed to bring leading authors and cultural thinkers to Portland. Within four years, demand for tickets moved Portland Arts & Lectures to the 2,700–seat concert hall at which it currently resides. Now a Portland tradition, the series brings the brightest minds of our day to present original talks about literature, art, history and contemporary culture before one of the largest lecture audiences in the country.
In 1993, they joined with the Oregon Institute of Literary Arts to support and celebrate Oregon writers and publishers. Through the Oregon Book Awards and Fellowships, they have honored over 500 Oregon writers and publishers and distributed more than $700,000 in fellowships and awards.
In 1996, they started Writers in the Schools (WITS) to cultivate young readers and writers, and support Oregon authors, through residencies in the public schools. The program has grown to employ over 20 Oregon writers each year, who teach semester–long writing workshops in all Portland public high schools and several alternative programs.
In 1997, they made literature a part of commuters’ everyday lives with Poetry In Motion®, which displays artfully designed poem cards on buses and lightrail trains throughout the Portland metro area.
In 1998, they introduced the Oregon Book Awards Author Tour, which presents readings by award-winning authors and finalists in rural and underserved communities throughout the state. In 2001, they began Poetry Downtown, bringing world–renowned poets to Portland to read from and discuss their work in a four–part series. In 2004, they brought short fiction to the stage through Verb: Literature in Performance. And in 2005, they began offering Delve: Readers’ Seminars, a tuition-based program that engages readers in discussion-based seminars led by professional writers and scholars on classic and contemporary literature.
In all, their programs reach more than 13,500 writers, readers, teachers and students across the state each year.