4 MIXED MEDIUM OCTOBER 13�20, 2021 THE ARTS AROUND EASTERN OREGON ‘Homecoming’ exhibition opens Nightingale Gallery season Go! staff L A GRANDE — The Nightingale Gal- lery at Eastern Oregon University opens its 2021-22 exhibition season with “Homecoming,” an exhibit that welcomes EOU alumni — or at least their creative works — back to campus. “Homecoming” presents a selection of work by 17 EOU art alumni and runs Oct. 8 through Nov. 5. The gallery is located in Loso Hall. The work on exhibit encompasses a variety of media including drawing, painting, mixed media and sculpture. The artists represent a span of more than 20 years of art program graduates. One artist is Josh McDonald, a 2014 graduate and native of Powell Butte. McDonald’s paintings combine abstrac- tion and symbolism to create a narrative described through geometric forms and inspired by early modern art movements such as cubism. His works are high in contrast and depth, shadow and light, and presented with a limited color palette. McDonald uses oil and cold wax medium to build up the surface of his paintings NIGHTINGALE GALLERY Loso Hall, EOU La Grande 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday and then drags a comb through the paint in angular lines. This interrupts the initial paint application and breaks through the hard edge to obtain a softness and a mix- ture of unique blends and texture. McDonald, who now makes his home in Seattle, works for the Greg Kucera Gallery and has an active studio practice with several recent group exhibitions featuring his paintings at SEASON Gallery and J. Rhinehart Gallery in Seattle. McDonald’s solo exhibition “Carry Me Through the Field” opened this October at Seattle’s SOIL Gallery. Meredith Matthews, a 2020 graduate, will present her mixed media installation “i am not what i might be.” Using bird feathers, faux fur, painted duralar, bones and other materials, she attempts to capture the landscape of her lived expe- rience with chronic pain. The processes of the external, natural world — sedi- mentation, metamorphosis, sublimation, moulting, decay — become signifi ers, descriptors for this internal world. Matthews is a lifelong resident of the Grande Ronde Valley and is pursu- ing a master’s degree in fi lm at Queen’s University Belfast, Northern Ireland. She is currently working on fi nishing her fi rst short fi lm, “Blood and Memory.” Other exhibiting artists include Bill At- wood (2006), Kevin Boylan (2003), Mariah Boyle (2009), Addie DeLong (2014), Annie Eskelin (2004), Devin Farrand (2009), Mad- eline Ford (2016), Genevieve Gaudreau (2016), Auburn Isaak (2012), Audrey Lind (2019) Meredith, Andrew Myers (1995), Dawn Norman (2006), Hannah Smith (2020) and Henrik Soerensen (2013). “These artists present us with a varied collection of works exploring everything from abstraction and intimacy to feel- ings of loss and the intersection between production and aesthetics,” said Cory Peeke, Nightingale Gallery director. “The art department is pleased to have such a diversity of thoughtful and visually skilled artists out in the world represent- •• •• •• •• •• •• •• • Josh McDonald/Contributed image This work, oil and cold wax on panel, was created by Josh McDonald and titled “Through the Touch of the Full Moon’s Light.” ing the strengths of our program and this university. We are even more pleased they have chosen to come home to where they began their careers to share their creative work with our current students and the regional community.” Gallery hours are 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public is welcome; masks are required. For more information visit www.eou.edu/art or follow Nightingale Gallery on Instagram and Facebook.