Trumbly will be signing posters at the OCF, booth 818, July 12-14. Her work can also be seen currently at
Morning Glory Café, Davis Restaurant and year-round at Sweet Cheeks Winery.
‘I wanted to
bring to light
the critters and
creatures and
flowers, flora
and fauna that
are native to
the OCF site’
— SHANNA TRUMBLY
PHOTO BY TRASK BEDORTHA
“When I was little, we used to raise carrier pigeons,” she says. She, her broth-
er and sister, and her father trained them by incrementally taking them longer
distances from home, starting with across the street, and having them fl y back.
“There weren’t cell phones at the time,” she explains. “My dad was an avid
hunter and fi sherman. So he would go over to the coast and he would take the
pigeons with him, and he would write little notes and put them around their legs,
and they would fl y back to the cage. My brother and sister and I would get these
little notes.”
A pigeon appears in the painting “Home” (featured on cover), which she
describes as her personal totem piece. “Every bit of that painting has a story in
it,” she says. There’s the blushing deer, front and center. Above, a hummingbird
with a twig in its beak represents her grandmother’s spirit animal. “She is a water
witch,” Trumbly says. “She’s the one all the farmers came to to fi nd wells for
their property.” She describes how her grandmother would hold a willow branch
to the ground as she traversed a property, and when she felt a certain sensation,
would direct the farmers where to dig. The chanterelles and morels represent
family trips foraging in the woods. The bare branches of a tulip tree — a tree that
grew in the front yard of her childhood home and began to perish the same day
her mother passed — frame the deer’s face. The stories go on and on.
“I would say love is the main theme in a lot of them,” she says of her work,
describing her paintings as “little valentines.” The poster for the OCF is no dif-
ferent. Trumbly, who has been attending the Fair since she was 17 when she
worked at the Create-a-Potato booth, was nervous about painting this particular
love letter. (She rarely does commission work.) “It’s such an honor to get to do
this project,” she says, pausing. “It’s a little intimidating at fi rst. What am I going
to do? What am I going to come up with to represent the Fair?” She decided to
focus on what often is overshadowed by the dazzling kaleidoscope of costume,
music, food and arts that is the Fair — and what remains the other 362 days of
year: the native wildlife.
“I wanted to bring to light the critters and creatures and fl owers, fl ora and
fauna that are out there — that are native to the OCF site,” she says. “Every-
body realizes it’s a beautiful setting, but I think that everything kind of scatters.
There’s so much eye candy everywhere with the booths. There’s just so much
going on that those are things we just don’t think about as much.” You can see
this in the poster’s frame of tiger lilies, oxalis, trillium and wild iris. As for the
juggling rabbit, mustachioed frog, crowned snail and other characters? You’ll
just have to visit Trumbly at her OCF booth and ask her to tell you a story. ■
VOTED
V OTED BEST KOREAN FOOD BY EW READERS 2012-2013
AUTHENTIC KOREAN
& ASIAN CUISINE
VEGETARIAN OPTIONS
A A A A noodlebowlrestaurant.com
11:30AM - 9PM MONDAY - SATURDAY
eugeneweekly.com • July 3, 2013
13