2 Thursday, June 10, 2021 GO! magazine — A&E in Northeast Oregon ‘Missing Your Face’ ■ In-person reception June 18 at Art Center East By Lisa Britton Go! Magazine LA GRANDE — Although the current exhibit at Art Center East debuted on May 7, an in-person reception is planned for June 18 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. “Missing Your Face: Masks of Location, Isolation, and Transfor- mation” features the works of two mask makers — Matt Fagan of La Grande and Tony Fuemmeler of Portland. ACE is located at 1006 Penn Ave. Art exhibits are free and open to the public. COVID restrictions apply — please social distance and wear masks when entering the building. The idea for this show started several years ago. The thought, Fuemmeler said, was to bring together two mask artists from op- posite sides of the state. The show went on the back- burner, though, until 2020 when everything came to a halt due the coronavirus pandemic. “Everyone was in various emo- tional places. There was a lot of unknown,” Fuemeller said. The spark reignited and the art- ists set to work making masks. “That kept me going through isolation,” Fagan said. The word “mask” has perme- ated our lives in the past year, but the creations by these two artists are nothing like you’d see in the grocery store. “The ‘mask maker’ hashtag was a lot more fun before COVID,” Fagan said with a laugh. Fuemmeler’s background is theatrical design, and most of his mask-making is for the theater. “The mask is not about disguise, but the literal face of the character,” he said. His work is infl uenced by the comic masks of the Italian Renais- sance, and contemporary theatrical Submitted “Tree Spirit” by Tony Fuemmeler Submitted “Shannon” by Matt Fagan “The ‘mask maker’ hashtag was a lot more fun before COVID.” — Matt Fagan, on how the word “mask” took on a new connotation in 2020 masks of the 20th century. His work for this show features a variety of three-dimensional masks, as well as two-dimensional ink prints. To create the prints, he photo- graphed a mask and then superim- posed an image. His goal, he said, was to illustrate the infl uence of places we’ve been. “I found myself fascinated with doubling the human form with a sense of place,” he said. “I was thinking how we carry place with us — what if I showed that liter- ally?” Fagan’s path to making masks was by way of something to do in Submitted Submitted “Exuberant” by Tony Fuemmeler “Space Cowboy” by Matt Fagan his spare time. He earned a bachelor’s degree in English, and a master’s in writing. But when he fi nished the program, he didn’t have much desire to write anymore. So he started painting. “It was just for me,” he said. “I just painted canvases for like 10 years.” Those paintings became deco- ration at a comic book store he co-owned in Chicago. “I used that as my gallery,” he said. Then, in 2003, he made a mask for his Halloween costume. “I really enjoyed it. It was the fi rst thing I’d made in three dimen- sion,” he said. He continued making masks. “Once a year I would make my- self a mask for Halloween,” he said. He moved to La Grande in 2014. He continued making masks, but ramped up his process to prepare for this show, which features 30 creations. A virtual tour of the show can be found at artcentereast.org. UPGRADE 215 Elm Street La Gande • (541) 963-5440 northwestfurnitureandmattress.com WEEKEND OUTLOOK FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY High 71 Low 45 High 80 Low 52 High 88 Low 55 Cloudy Clouds and sun Showers possible