PAM CUT Co:Laboratory Youth & Family Programs

PAM CUT // Center for an Untold Tomorrow, 934 SW Salmon St., Portland, OR 97205

mapPAM CUT // Center for an Untold Tomorrow, 934 SW Salmon St., Portland, OR 97205

About

PAM CUT Co:Laboratory Youth & Family Programs include hands-on activities such as stop-motion animation, digital animation, world-building, DJing, and creating comics and zines. The programs also include UnStuck Workshops, WonderLab Family Workshops, Youth Art Unbound, and PAM CUT’s school break camps. PAM CUT’s Summer Camp 2026 is described as the hub for media arts magic.

• Ages: 7–15 years old
• Schedule: Summer Camp 2026 runs June 8, 2026 – August 21, 2026, with specific offerings including Frame by Frame // A Dream-Inspired Stop Motion Animation Camp (ages 8–10) from June 22–26, 2026; Grant Writing for Interdisciplinary Media Makers on June 16, 2026; Developing your TV Series & Other Story Ideas on June 23, 2026; and Stop Motion Magic // Exploring Basic Animation Skills (ages 8–10) from June 29, 2026 – July 2, 2026
• Price: Admission: Free Members; $27.50 Adults; $24.50 Seniors 65+; $22.50 Students; Free Children 17 and under.

WonderLab Family Workshops turn family time into creative play, where participants 7 and older explore art, storytelling, and collaboration through hands-on projects. Youth Art Unbound is a year-round media arts program for youth ages 11–15 that invites young creators to experiment, collaborate, and build confidence through hands-on artmaking. PAM CUT’s school break camps bring youth ages 8–10 and 11–15 together to create, collaborate, and form friendships while exploring tech, new media, and storytelling.

Founded in 1892, the Portland Art Museum (PAM) in Portland, Oregon is the only major art museum between Seattle and San Francisco. Connecting audiences through the arts and engaging with the stories and ideas shaping the present day, the Museum’s programming reflects the passions, values, and creativity of its community. PAM is internationally recognized for its special exhibitions and encyclopedic collection. The Portland Art Museum recognizes and honors the Indigenous peoples of this region on whose ancestral lands the museum now stands, including the Willamette Tumwater, Clackamas, Kathlemet, Molalla, Multnomah and Watlala Chinook Peoples and the Tualatin Kalapuya who today are part of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, along with many other Native communities who made their homes along the Columbia River, and notes that Portland today is a community of many diverse Native peoples who continue to live and work there.

Last updated June 28, 2026.

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