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Vancouver Reporter

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

City commemorates historic James Lee Hansen public art installation with ribbon cutting

Friday, Oct. 28, the City of Vancouver celebrated Pacific Northwest artist James Lee Hanson with a ribbon cutting to commemorate the public art

installation of 34 historic sculptural panels designed by Hansen 60 years ago.

The panels, now permanently displayed at the Esther Street Underpass along a popular thoroughfare between the city center and the Vancouver

Waterfront, were commissioned in 1962 to grace the original façade of the Clark County Title Company building that opened in 1963 in downtow

Vancouver. The five-foot, white Portland cement square panels were salvaged prior to the building’s demolition in 2019 with funding from the City of

Vancouver's Culture, Arts & Heritage Grant Program and iQ Credit Union.

“I want to thank the community organizations, business partners and City employees who have helped make it possible to put these panels back on

display in Vancouver,” Mayor Anne McEnerny-Ogle said. “Their work supports our City’s efforts to preserve historical legacy and has made our

community an even more beautiful place to call home.”

Hansen was also honored by State Representative Sharon Wylie during the ceremony. Rep. Wylie introduced a house resolution in January 2022 to

recognize and appreciate Hansen and his unique contribution to preserving, honoring, and celebrating the creativity, innovation, and richness of the arts

of the past, the present, and the future.

“My biggest gratitude of all goes to my late wife Annie and my present wife Jane, who have experienced by obsession regarding sculpture with patient

understanding,” Hansen said. “I would not be here except for them.”

Prior to being installed, the panels were previously stored on City property and were cleaned and resealed, a process that took about three months, to

protect sculptural integrity. The next step – in December 2021 – was to connect the panels to their frames and then attach the frames to the retaining

walls where they’re on display. The final step, completed Oct. 4, was re-painting the panels and applying anti-graffiti coating. Cost for the entire project

was $113,000.

About James Lee Hansen

James Lee Hansen, 97, has created over 700 works of art during his long career, including several architectural commissions. His sculptures are part of

the permanent collections of several art museums in the region. Locally, his work can be seen at the Vancouver library branch on C Street, the Clark

College campus, the downtown Portland Transit Mall and Gresham Town Fair.

He attended the Portland Art Museum School (now the Pacific Northwest College of Art). After graduating in 1950, he opened Burnt Bridge Studio on

39th Street in Vancouver, where State Route 500 meets Interstate 5 today. In the 1970s, Hansen sold his Vancouver studio property to the state to make

way for construction of State Route 500 and built Daybreak Studio in northern Clark County, where he still resides.

Original source can be found here.

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