Eugene is known for its
countercultural lifestyle and
hippy aesthetic. Beginning in the 1960s, the ideas and viewpoints espoused by area native
Ken Kesey became established as the seminal elements of the vibrant social tapestry that continue to define Eugene. The Merry Prankster, as Kesey was known, has arguably left the most indelible imprint of any
cultural icon in his hometown. He is best known as the author of ''
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and Sometimes a Great Notion''. He was also the de facto leader of the Merry Pranksters in
Tom Wolfe's biography:
The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. In early 2010, the slogan was changed to "A Great City for the Arts & Outdoors." Eugene's
Saturday Market, open every Saturday from April through November, was founded in 1970 as the first "Saturday Market" in the United States. It is adjacent to the Lane County Farmer's Market in downtown Eugene. All vendors must create or grow all their own products. The market reappears as the "Holiday Market" between Thanksgiving and New Year's in the Lane County Events Center at the fairgrounds.
Community Eugene is noted for its "community inventiveness." Many U.S. trends in community development originated in Eugene. The University of Oregon's participatory
planning process, known as
The Oregon Experiment, was the result of student protests in the early 1970s. The book of the same name is a major document in modern enlightenment thinking in planning and architectural circles. The process, still used by the university in modified form, was created by
Christopher Alexander, whose works also directly inspired the creation of the
Wiki. Some research for the book
A Pattern Language, which inspired the
Design Patterns movement and
Extreme Programming, was done by Alexander in Eugene. Not coincidentally, those engineering movements also had origins here. Decades after its publication,
A Pattern Language is still one of the best-selling books on urban design. In the 1970s, Eugene was packed with cooperative and community projects. It still has small natural food stores in many neighborhoods, some of the oldest student cooperatives in the country, and alternative schools have been part of the school district since 1971. The old Grower's Market, downtown near the
Amtrak depot, is the only food cooperative in the US with no employees. It is possible to see Eugene's non-profit tendencies in much newer projects, such as Square One Villages and the
Center for Appropriate Transport. In 2006, an initiative began to create a tenant-run development process for downtown Eugene. In the fall of 2003, neighbors noticed "an unassuming two-acre remnant orchard tucked into the Friendly Area Neighborhood" had been put up for sale by its owner, a resident of New York City. Learning a prospective buyer had plans to build several houses on the property, they formed a non-profit organization called Madison Meadow in June 2004 in order to buy the property and "preserve it as undeveloped space in perpetuity." and by the end of 2008 they had raised enough money to buy the property. presented by the Asian Council of Eugene and Springfield, takes place in late July at Alton Baker Park. The festival was changed to an outdoor venue after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. • The
KLCC Microbrew Festival is held in February at the Lane County Fairgrounds. It provides participants with an introduction to a large range of microbrewery and craft beers, which play an important role in Pacific Northwest culture and the economy. •
Oregon Festival of American Music, or OFAM is held annually in the early summer. • The
Oregon Bach Festival is a major international festival in July, hosted by the University of Oregon. • The nonprofit
Oregon Country Fair takes place in July in nearby
Veneta. • The
Lane County Fair occurs in July at the Lane County Fairgrounds. • The annual
Eugene/Springfield Pride Festival was started in 1993, and is part of
LGBT culture in Eugene. •
Eugene Celebration is a three-day block party that usually takes place in the downtown area in August or September. The
SLUG Queen coronation in August, a pageant with a campy spin, crowns a new SLUG Queen who "rains" over the Eugene Celebration Parade and is an unofficial ambassador of Eugene.
Museums Eugene museums include the University of Oregon's
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art and
Museum of Natural and Cultural History, the
Oregon Air and Space Museum,
Lane County History Museum,
Maude Kerns Art Center,
Shelton McMurphey Johnson House, and the
Eugene Science Center.
Performing arts Eugene is home to numerous cultural organizations, including the
Eugene Symphony (whose previous music directors include
Marin Alsop,
Giancarlo Guerrero, and
Miguel Harth-Bedoya); the
Eugene Ballet, a professional full-time touring company; the Eugene Opera, the
Eugene Concert Choir, the Bushnell University Community Choir, the
Oregon Mozart Players, the
Oregon Bach Festival, the Oregon Children's Choir, the
Eugene-Springfield Youth Orchestras,
Ballet Fantastique and
Oregon Festival of American Music. Principal performing arts venues include the
Hult Center for the Performing Arts,
The John G. Shedd Institute for the Arts ("The Shedd"), the
McDonald Theatre, and
W.O.W. Hall. The University of Oregon School of Music and Dance also attracts world class performers and teaching artists throughout the year, many of whom perform at
Beall Concert Hall. The university campus also frequently hosts performances at
Matthew Knight Arena and the
Erb Memorial Union ballroom. A number of live theater groups are based in Eugene, including
Free Shakespeare in the Park, Oregon Contemporary Theatre, The Very Little Theatre, Actors Cabaret, LCC Theatre, Rose Children's Theatre, and University Theatre. Each has its own performance venue.
Music Because of its status as a
college town, Eugene has been home to many music genres, musicians and bands, ranging from
electronic dance music such as
dubstep and
drum and bass to
garage rock,
hip hop,
folk and
heavy metal. Eugene also has growing
reggae and street-performing
bluegrass and
jug band scenes. Multi-genre act the
Cherry Poppin' Daddies became a prominent figure in Eugene's music scene and became the
house band at Eugene's W.O.W. Hall. In the late 1990s, their contributions to the
swing revival movement propelled them to national stardom. Rock band
Floater originated in Eugene as did the Robert Cray blues band. Doom metal band
YOB is among the leaders of the Eugene heavy music scene. Eugene is home to "
Classical Gas" composer and two-time Grammy award winner
Mason Williams who spent his years as a youth living between his parents in
Oakridge, Oregon and Oklahoma. Mason Williams puts on a yearly Christmas show at the Hult center for performing arts with a full orchestra produced by author, audio engineer and University of Oregon professor Don Latarski.
Dick Hyman, noted jazz pianist and musical director for many of Woody Allen's films, designs and hosts the annual Now Hear This! jazz festival at the Oregon Festival of American Music (OFAM). OFAM and the
Hult Center routinely draw major jazz talent for concerts. Eugene is also home to a large
Zimbabwean music community, home to the Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center "dedicated to the music and people of
Zimbabwe". It was founded in 1990. The city of Eugene is mentioned in the Johnny Cash song "Lumberjack".
Visual arts Eugene's visual arts community is supported by over 20 private
art galleries and several organizations, including Maude Kerns Art Center, Lane Arts Council, DIVA (the Downtown Initiative for the Visual Arts) and the
Eugene Glass School. In 2015 installations from a group of Eugene-based artists known as Light At Play were showcased in several events around the world as part of the
International Year of Light, including displays at the
Smithsonian and the
National Academy of Sciences.
Film The Eugene area has been used as a filming location for several Hollywood films, most famously for 1978's ''
National Lampoon's Animal House, which was also filmed in nearby Cottage Grove. John Belushi had the idea for the film The Blues Brothers during filming of Animal House'' when he happened to meet
Curtis Salgado at what was then the Eugene Hotel.
Getting Straight, starring
Elliott Gould and
Candice Bergen, was filmed at
Lane Community College in 1969. As the campus was still under construction at the time, the "occupation scenes" were easier to shoot. The "Chicken Salad on Toast" scene in the 1970
Jack Nicholson movie
Five Easy Pieces was filmed at the
Denny's restaurant at the southern
I-5 freeway interchange near
Glenwood. Nicholson directed the 1971 film
Drive, He Said in Eugene.
How to Beat the High Cost of Living, starring
Jane Curtin,
Jessica Lange and
Susan St. James, was filmed in Eugene in the fall of 1979. Locations visible in the film include
Valley River Center (which is a driving force in the plot), Skinner Butte and
Ya-Po-Ah Terrace, the Willamette River and River Road Hardware. Several
track and field movies have used Eugene as a setting and/or a filming location.
Personal Best, starring
Mariel Hemingway, was filmed in Eugene in 1982. The film centered on a group of women who are trying to qualify for the Olympic track and field team. Two track and field movies about the life of
Steve Prefontaine,
Prefontaine and
Without Limits, were released within a year of each other in 1997–1998.
Kenny Moore, Eugene-trained Olympic runner and co-star in
Prefontaine, co-wrote the screenplay for
Without Limits.
Prefontaine was filmed in Washington because the
Without Limits production bought out
Hayward Field for the summer to prevent its competition from shooting there. Kenny Moore also wrote a biography of
Bill Bowerman, played in
Without Limits by
Donald Sutherland back in Eugene 20 years after he had appeared in
Animal House. Moore had also had a role in
Personal Best.
Stealing Time, a 2003 independent film, was partially filmed in Eugene. When the film premiered in June 2001 at the
Seattle International Film Festival, it was titled ''Rennie's Landing'' after a popular bar near the University of Oregon campus. The title was changed for its DVD release. The 2006 film
Zerophilia was partly filmed in Eugene. The 2016 film
Tracktown was about a distance runner training for the
Olympics was filmed in Eugene.
Religion Religious institutions of higher learning in Eugene include
Bushnell University and
New Hope Christian College. Bushnell University (formerly Northwest Christian University), founded in 1895, has ties with the
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). New Hope Christian College (formerly Eugene Bible College) originated with the Bible Standard Conference in 1915, which joined with Open Bible Evangelistic Association to create
Open Bible Standard Churches in 1932.
Eugene Bible College was started from this movement by Fred Hornshuh in 1925. There are two
Eastern Orthodox Church parishes in Eugene:
St John the Wonderworker Orthodox Christian Church in the Historic
Whiteaker Neighborhood and
Saint George Greek Orthodox Church. There are six Roman Catholic parishes in Eugene as well:
St. Mary Catholic Church, St. Jude Catholic Church, St. Mark Catholic Church, St. Peter Catholic Church, St. Paul Catholic Church, and St. Thomas More Catholic Church. Eugene also has a Ukrainian Catholic Church named Nativity of the Mother of God. There is a mainline Protestant contingency in the city as well—such as the largest of the
Lutheran Churches, Central Lutheran near the U of O Campus and the
Episcopal Church of the Resurrection. The Eugene area has a sizeable
LDS Church presence, with three
stakes, consisting of 23 congregations (wards and branches). The Church of Jesus Christ announced plans in April 2020 to build a temple in Eugene. The greater Eugene-Springfield area also has a
Jehovah's Witnesses presence with five Kingdom Halls, several having multiple congregations in one Kingdom Hall. The
Reconstructionist Temple Beth Israel is Eugene's largest Jewish congregation. It was also, for many decades, Eugene's only synagogue, until
Orthodox members broke away in 1992 and formed "Congregation Ahavas Torah". Eugene has a community of some 140
Sikhs, who have established a Sikh temple. The 340-member congregation of the
Unitarian Universalist Church in Eugene (UUCE) purchased the former Eugene Scottish Rite Temple in May 2010, renovated it, and began services there in September 2012. Saraha Nyingma
Buddhist Temple in Eugene opened in 2012 in the former site of the Unitarian Universalist Church. The First Congregational Church, UCC is a large progressive Christian Church with a long history of justice focused ministries and a very active membership. Three years ago, the congregation coordinated with the Connections Program of the St Vincent DePaul organization to provide transitional homes for two unhoused families on the church's property. Through life - skills support and training and a more stable housing situation these families are then able to make their way into independent living. ==Sports==