New Exhibit Explores "Portland Past and Present"—Video: KATU AM NW
Video Interview Marcia Volk Video Interview Marcia Volk

New Exhibit Explores "Portland Past and Present"—Video: KATU AM NW

What was Portland like in the past? A new exhibit at the Oregon Historical Society (OHS) seeks to provide a deeper understanding of the present by looking back at the past. OHS Executive Director Kerry Tymchuk and Professional Photographer Peter Marbach joined us to share what went into to creating "Portland Past and Present."The exhibit is on display until July 7, 2024. Entry to OHS is free for all Multnomah County residents.

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Celebrating 100 Years of Oregon State Parks—Interview on KATU 2 ABC
Television Interview Marcia Volk Television Interview Marcia Volk

Celebrating 100 Years of Oregon State Parks—Interview on KATU 2 ABC

Back in 1922, Oregon dedicated its first State Park. That number has now grown to 254. To commemorate 100 years of Oregon State Parks, The Oregon Historical Society commissioned photographer Peter Marbach to document as many as he could. Peter joined KATU 2 ABC to share a little about his travels across Oregon photographing what makes each place unique, along with some of the challenges he faced.

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‘Do Something Big’: Photographer Helps Tell Columbia River History In ‘Healing The Big River’—Northwest Public Broadcasting Interview
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‘Do Something Big’: Photographer Helps Tell Columbia River History In ‘Healing The Big River’—Northwest Public Broadcasting Interview

He’d undergone open-heart surgery eight months earlier. Hiking along the river’s edge helped him recover.

He watched as the water stretched on forever.

“I made a promise that at some point I would do something to honor the Columbia and thank the river for its role in helping me heal,” Marbach recalls. “So I said, ‘Someday I’m going to do something.’ But that someday took a long time.”

It took him more than 10 years to “do something big” and finish his book Healing The Big River: Salmon Dreams and the Columbia River Treaty. In that time, he’s traversed the Columbia, from its headwaters in British Columbia …

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Healing the Big River: Salmon Dreams and the Columbia River Treaty—KATU TV Interview
Television Interview Marcia Volk Television Interview Marcia Volk

Healing the Big River: Salmon Dreams and the Columbia River Treaty—KATU TV Interview

For more than ten millennia, the Columbia River has been the most important and intensively used part of Oregon’s natural landscape. Perhaps nobody has devoted more time to capturing the astounding beauty of that river than photographer Peter Marbach. He joined us to share his latest book--Healing the Big River: Salmon Dreams and the Columbia River Treaty--which combines Peter’s imagery with compelling essays from individuals concerned about the river’s future to provide a unique window into this critical moment in the history of the Columbia.

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Nepal’s Hidden Wonders’ program comes to CCA July 18—Photographer Peter Marbach teams with trekking guide Jagat Lama: Newspaper article in Hood River News
Newspaper Article Marcia Volk Newspaper Article Marcia Volk

Nepal’s Hidden Wonders’ program comes to CCA July 18—Photographer Peter Marbach teams with trekking guide Jagat Lama: Newspaper article in Hood River News

Hood River photographer Peter Marbach presents a public program about the humanitarian work of Nepali trekking guide Jagat Lama at Columbia Center for the Arts on July 18 at 7 p.m.

Lama will be joining Marbach in sharing stories about his life work to bring healthcare, education and sustainable work opportunities to the people of his home area in Kumari.

Marbach first met Lama while serving as a volunteer photographer for a documentary film project in Nepal in 2013, the start of a long-term connection to Nepal for Marbach and other members of the Hood River community.

“That journey changed my life,” said Marbach.

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Gun Sales | School Safety And Walkouts | Columbia River Tribes: OPB Radio Think Out Interview
Radio Interview Marcia Volk Radio Interview Marcia Volk

Gun Sales | School Safety And Walkouts | Columbia River Tribes: OPB Radio Think Out Interview

From its headwaters in Canada to its estuary at the Pacific, the Columbia River is central to the cultural history and day-to-day life of many tribal and First Nations communities. Dr. Michel of the Upper Columbia United Tribes joins us to discuss what the river and its resources mean to tribes today. We also speak with Oregon landscape photographer Peter Marbach, who’ll be joining Michel and others to present his photo series on the Columbia River at a show and panel discussion tonight in Hood River.

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Photographer Finds Healing in Wilderness: OPB Television Interview
Television Interview Marcia Volk Television Interview Marcia Volk

Photographer Finds Healing in Wilderness: OPB Television Interview

In 2001, Peter Marbach hiked off Mount Hood and felt his heart do something odd. “There was no pain,” he says. “It just felt like it rolled over on its side.”

This billy goat of a man who’d climbed mountains all over the world still felt fine.

Yet, he paid attention to that bobble in his chest. His doctor in Hood River did tests and within days he found himself having an angiogram in Portland. 30 minutes later doctors came in and suggested he have open-heart surgery.

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Where Did the Carter White House's Solar Panels Go?—Scientific American Article
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Where Did the Carter White House's Solar Panels Go?—Scientific American Article

in 1986 the Reagan administration quietly dismantled the White House solar panel installation while resurfacing the roof. "Hey! That system is working. Why don't you keep it?" recalls mechanical engineer Fred Morse, now of Abengoa Solar, who helped install the original solar panels as director of the solar energy program during the Carter years and then watched as they were dismantled during his tenure in the same job under Reagan. "Hey! This whole [renewable] R&D program is working, why don't you keep it?"

After they came down it took a soft-spoken administrator named Peter Marbach from a small environmental college in Maine to rescue the Carter panels from being a forgotten curiosity stored in the dark corner of a vast government warehouse.

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