May 5: Mark Rothko, Sera Cahoone, Women in Tech, Chris Coleman

Published: May 4, 2018, 11:36 p.m.

b'Had enough of the status quo? This week\\u2019s wonders are shaking it up: the greatest modern artist who ever called Portland home, a director who set the bar higher, two friends turning fan-favorite songs upside down, and ladies calling time\\u2019s up on tech.

Painfully Honest Job Descriptions for Women in Tech \\u2014 1:15

Backfence PDX is about to welcome some storytellers from the tech world to the MainStage for an evening of home truths on May 12. #MeToo isn\\u2019t just limited to Silicon Valley. We heard about this in 2016 when we welcomed one of the Backfence storytellers, Megan Bigelow, to our studio. Along with friends Kasey Jones and Amanda Brooks, they helped us rewrite job descriptions for women in the industry. All three say they\\u2019re in good places with their current employers, but some of their past experiences at other firms, from start-ups to big players, were truly hair-raising.
Rothko in Portland \\u2014 10:08

This week, Oregon Art Beat premiers a new documentary about a painter who was, arguably, the greatest modern artist ever to call Oregon home. Mark Rothko flew in the face of convention and ultimately helped create a new American vanguard, but his early years as an immigrant kid in Portland were a hard education. We talk with producer Eric Slade about Rothko\\u2019s Portland roots, and the experiences that influenced his visual vocabulary.

Sera Cahoone Flora String Sessions \\u2014 16:43

There\\u2019s a simple honesty to the music of Seattle singer-songwriter Sera Cahoone. Her songs tell intimate stories about love and loss, where acoustic guitar and Cahoone\\u2019s voice are complimented by the steady percussion that is a holdover from her days as the drummer for Seattle\\u2019s Band of Horses and the occasional cello, piano or country-tinged slide guitar. It\\u2019s hard to imagine that her twist on Americana needs any embellishment, but while she was touring with the multi-instrumentalist Alex Guy, they had an idea: Guy would arrange full strings for a number of Cahoone\\u2019s songs for a big upcoming concert. What started as a one-off show has grown into the new album \\u201cThe Flora String Sessions.\\u201d

Chris Coleman Says Goodbye to Portland Center Stage \\u2014 26:48

After 19 seasons, the artistic director of Portland Center Stage is leaving for a new job in Denver. Chris Coleman brought the city\\u2019s largest company to new heights, carving out programming space for original works as well as new interpretations of classics, while midwifing the renovation of the Armory into a new multi-stage venue. He also had a busy side hustle advocating with state and local governments for arts funding. Coleman stopped in to talk to Think Out Loud\\u2019s Dave Miller about his time in Portland.'