Independent Publishing Resource Center

917 SW Oak Street #218, Portland, Oregon 97205 USA

Tel/Fax: 503.827.0249 | Email:

Outreach

The IPRC is available for lectures and workshops on topics relating to independent press. Any of our regular workshop offerings can be tailored to your group. In addition to giving tours of our Center, we engage in more in-depth outreach projects that serve the local community. We have presented to a variety of ages and grade levels, from elementary schools to colleges and universities, primarily in the Portland Metropolitan Area. Please contact info@iprc.org or call us at 503.827.0249 for rates and availability.

The Media Action Project

“The information I learned in the Media Action Project was so valuable to me.  It really helped me process my own thoughts on the subject rather than just agreeing with the media and everyone else.”

– Sandra Villegas, age 17, Gateway to College Student

The Media Action Project (MAP) is a four-session outreach curriculum that teaches youth how to critically deconstruct print ads and television commercials in order to examine their true messages about masculinity, violence, and beauty, and to consider how these messages might affect their own sense of self and physical health.

After breaking down the media message, MAP allows youth to take their critical thinking a step further by creating their own media in the form of a personal “zine.”  For more information about how the IPRC can bring MAP to your school or youth venue please contact justin@iprc.org.

Zines 101!

Zines 101 is our basic outreach program.  During the course of just an hour or two, our expert instructors introduce zines and their history, and then work with participants to create and publish a collaborative zine right on the spot. The emphasis is on own empowering individuals to creatively express themselves and to get their work out in the world through self-publishing. Zines 101 can also be expanded to a workshop that assists students in publishing individual zines over multiple sessions. 

Zines 101 has been presented in hundreds of classrooms at grade schools, junior highs, high schools, community colleges and universities throughout Portland and the surrounding areas.  We’ve also presented in a variety of alternative venues, including homeless shelters, treatment centers, other nonprofit arts organizations, writers groups, festivals and conventions.

Zine Camp!

Initiated in the summer of 2002, “Zine Camp” will become a yearly event in which participants are introduced to the facets of zine publishing over a series of 6 weeks. Weekly sessions are held at the IPRC for 2 hours. Participants receive a historic & contemporary overview of zine publishing, receive technical instruction as to layout & production, and practice distribution and promotion. Local zinesters are invited to each class session to discuss their projects and talk about a facet of self-publishing. Each participant publishes 2-3 zines over the course of the camp.

Outreach to Volunteers of America Marie Smith Center

Starting in 2006, our outreach volunteers have been working at the Volunteers of America Marie Smith Center, an Adult Day Center for seniors, including those with memory loss and disabilities. Each week, volunteers share zines and stories with participants, logging their tales and rich histories to publish in an Anthology Zine. Their second anthology was just published in late July 2009.

Book Authorship Project

This project sought to encourage those who might feel unrespresented in the world of literature and books a chance to experience authorship first hand. We worked with street youth and students at an alternative high school on collaborative books on a subject of their choice. 2 staff from the IPRC conducted workshops weekly on the subjects of bookbinding, relief printing (linoleum block carving), and type setting (for letter press printing). In conjunction with Write Around Portland and with school staff, we also offered a creative writing session to explore the theme chosen. Youth were encouraged to maintain involvement over a 3 month period, and in completion, published a book written, illustrated, printed and bound by their own hands. Produced an edition of 25 books, distributed to individual participants, staff & administration, and the IPRC Library.

Recently presented at New Avenues for Youth and Lents Education Center (Janus Youth Programs). 1

Downtown Street Zine

The IPRC began facilitation of a zine publishing project in the Portland Metropolitan Area where street youth and homeless teens experience publishing from start to finish on a regular basis in October 2001. The zines created can be a collaborative or individual forum in which young writers and artists will have a chance to express their views and creativity uncensored by schools or agencies, and where youth interested will have a chance to act as editors, writers, artists, designers and publishers. The IPRC organizes zine workshop days at a number of agencies to provide instruction and work time.

Continually being implemented at New Avenues for Youth, Outside In, and other downtown agencies. 2

Neighborhood History Project

In culmination of 2 years of research, interviews and information collecting, the group of teenage girls who comprise Parkrose Community Builders (PCB), and their leader from Familyworks, engaged in a documentary publishing project, with the assistance of the IPRC. The IPRC worked with the youth to define their publication, gain technical skills for the production and layout of their booklet, print covers for the edition, and distribute the end product to local archives and individuals. The resulting publication was an approximately 80 page book documenting the history of the Parkrose neighborhood of Portland, as told orally by elders of the community. The publication, The Wheel Keeps Turning, was released at the annual Rossi Farms Harvest Festival, and PCB participants talked about the process of researching & publishing this neighborhood history.

*Funded in part by grants from Braemer Memorial Trust, Mrs. Moe M. Tonkin Fund of the Oregon Community Foundation, Oregon Council for Humanities, and by a donation from Art Media.
**Funded in part by the Hoover Family Foundation and PGE-Enron Community 101.

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About the IPRC

The Independent Publishing Resource Center facilitates creative expression and identity by providing individual access to the resources and tools for the creation of independently published media and art.

Since its inception in 1998 the center has been dedicated to encouraging the growth of a visual and literary publishing community by offering a space to gather and exchange information and ideas, as well as to produce work. The IPRC is an Oregon 501(c)(3) Nonprofit organization.

Please peruse the Frequently Asked Questions About The IPRC or read about the members of our Staff & Board.

IPRC Open Hours

The IPRC's open hours are:

  • Mon 12noon to 10pm
  • Tue/Wed/Thu 4pm to 10pm
  • Fri/Sat 12noon to 6pm
  • Sun 12noon to 5pm (youth only), 5pm to 8pm

A note about hours: If there is no one around by 9pm on weeknights, the volunteer staff is free to leave, so be sure to arrive by 9pm. There should be no problem getting in, as the front door is equipped with a buzzer system for post-business hours - ring Suite #218.

Independent Publishing Resource Center
Post: 917 SW Oak Street #218 Portland, Oregon 97205 USA
Tel/Fax: 503.827.0249 | Email: