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| Mythical Masks by M. Nelson & L. Bowers at
the Hult Center in Eugene, Oregon |
My friend
Caroline Hatton, a children’s writer and frequent contributor to this blog,
took the photos in this post in November 2025 when she went to a Eugene Symphony concert. "We arrived early and I love looking at the masks in the performing arts center. So I zipped around snapping pictures! This is a permanent display, so it is available year round as long as the building stands."
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| Mask display at the Hult Center. |
If you
like masks or if you enjoy seeing how differently different artists can respond
to the same challenge, you might like the permanent display at the performing
arts center in Eugene, Oregon. Rows of masks by many creators line the walls of
the stair landings to the mezzanine and balcony.
The Hult Center opened in
1982, the first performing arts center in the United States built without state
or federal funding—with community funding only. It is the home of four resident
companies (ballet and concert). Its roofline evokes the nearby Cascades Mountains
and its beams of Douglas fir, the local forests. Blue stair railings symbolize
local rivers. Public art graces interior spaces: statues, paintings, and sculptures,
including masks, the focus of this blog post.
Each artist
created a series of about six to nine masks, which are variations on a theme
under a single title. My photos show only two or three examples of each
artist’s works. The above photo shows some of the
Masks by Laura Wuori.
a

Above: some
of the Raku Life Masks by Dan Corbin.
Above: some
of the Clay Masks by Claire Barr.
Above: some
of the Chorus by Anita Griffith, the most hilarious series!
Above: some
of the Masks by Eric Gronborg.
Above: some
of the Stylized Masks by Susan St. Michael.
Above: some
of the Faces by Mike Imes.
Just when
I thought I had photographed samples of every mask artist’s work on display, I
would come around a corner and discover another series, and another one.
Above is my
favorite, one of the
Mythical Masks by M. Nelson & L. Bowers,
because the mouth is genius: echoing the lines and angles of the overall star
design perfectly, and unmistakably shouting for joy, despite its unnatural
shape.