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Fascinating of Folks Delavan 2021
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FASCINATING FOLKS OF DELAVAN 2021
Mountaineer loved God, family and the outdoors
Matthew Bunker remembered as ‘one of a kind’ By Megan Burbank SEATTLE TIMES
atthew Bunker knew he wanted to join the military from an early age. When his father, Joe Bunker, a veteran and commercial pilot, was tasked with running an Air Force recruiting booth at the Experimental Aircraft Association, he took his son along with him to the event in Oshkosh. Matthew, who grew up in Delavan, wasn’t interested in airplanes, said Joe Bunker, but while exploring the space as his dad worked, the boy stumbled upon the Wisconsin National Guard recruiting booth. “Dad, Dad, I gotta show you something!” Joe Bunker recalled his son saying. It was one day before Matthew Bunker’s eighth birthday. As a boy, Matthew Bunker “was into the woods, the outdoors and the army,” his father said. As an adult, he would go on to attend the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, serve in the army and become an accomplished outdoorsman. Bunker’s military service took him to the Pacific Northwest, and the Seattle resident who had grown up emulating renowned explorers Roald Amundsen, David Livingstone and John Fremont spent much of his free time exploring the outdoors. Bunker died in the summer of 2020 while skiing on Mount Rainier. He was 28. Bunker left the Army as a captain in 2018 after fulfilling his five-year service obligation because he wanted to “pursue a lifelong dream of being an explorer,” he wrote on his photography website. And he did. He scaled mountains throughout the Pacific Northwest, went trail running and mountain biking, and often captured his outdoor adventures – and the friends who came with him – in sensitively crafted, beautifully framed photographs. It was while descending Thumb Rock along Mount Rainier’s Liberty Ridge route, at about 10,400 feet in elevation, that Matthew Bunker went missing on June 26, 2020. On June 29, 2020, the National Park Service confirmed that Bunker’s body had been found in a crevasse at the base of Liberty Ridge. His family got the news when they were headed to their cabin, a place that was dear to Matthew. Along with his father, Joe Bunker, he is survived by his mother, Carolyn Bunker; two sisters, Catherine and Callie; and a close-knit community of family and friends. According to Joe Bunker, Matthew prized only two things above the outdoors: “He loved his family more and he loved God more.” Joe Bunker said he and his wife worked hard to instill Christian values in their children, but that he only recently learned of some of the ways Matthew had epitomized those teachings. Bunker said that in the days following Matthew’s death, he had heard new stories about his son’s generosity and strong moral compass. “We’ve learned rather quietly that Matthew just sent a very generous check to
M
At left: A West Point graduate, Matthew Bunker was an avid outdoors enthusiast, and a talented photographer who documented his adventures in the Pacific Northwest. Above: When his military service brought him to the northwest, Matthew Bunker described the transition as a joyful one on his website: “I finally had the opportunity to realize my childhood dream of exploring the mountains.” This photo of him was taken on the summit of Mt. Rainier. Below: Matthew Bunker, 28, was an accomplished mountaineer who hiked, skied and biked. He is shown here in British Columbia. Below: Matthew Bunker, 28, was an accomplished mountaineer who hiked, skied and biked. He is shown here in British Columbia. COURTESY JOE AND CAROLYN BUNKER Fascinating Folks
the endowment fund of Delavan Christian School,” where he and his sisters had attended, for students who could not afford tuition. When Matthew found out that a college friend of his sister’s was struggling to pay her tuition, said Joe Bunker, he wrote the student a check. When, after his sister’s wedding, an acquaintance Matthew Bunker was driving to the airport entered the car with a coffee cup taken from an Airbnb rental, Bunker refused to start the car until it was returned. “We had no idea,” his father said. “We had no idea he was being that bold in his Christian walk.” Throughout Bunker’s time at West Point and in the Northwest, he kept in touch with his family. His father said Bunker would often call his parents on weekend evenings as he was driving home from whatever mountain he’d been climbing that day. And he loved to climb. When his military service brought him to the Northwest, he described the transition as a joyful one: “I finally had the opportunity to realize my childhood dream of exploring the mountains,” Bunker wrote on his website. “My love for the Cascades and the wet rainy winters grew fast. Over the next four years nearly every weekend that wasn’t occupied on training missions I was in the woods,” he wrote. A celebration of Bunker’s life was held at Delavan Christian Reformed Church July 7, 2020. Bunker’s sister, Catherine Machen, spoke during the service. “There was so much about Matthew that I wanted to share with everyone I knew,” Machen said. “Matthew is strong, athletic, handsome, he’s smart, he went to West Point, he’s disciplined, he’s a talented
photographer and painter, he’s a gifted writer. He had the goofiest sense of humor and could always bring a smile to your face. He loved the Lord. Matthew was one of a kind.” Machen read from a letter Matthew had sent to a friend of theirs: “Lately, the theme of waiting and trusting in God has been occurring often in my life,” he had written. “I’m not the biggest fan of waiting or uncertainty (not that anyone is) but I’m trying to become more patient. To entirely trust God, not just
while crossing the valley of death, but in the feasts and on the mountaintops as well. To not rush through life, to enjoy it, but not waste it or squander it.” A second celebration of life was held Sept. 3, 2020, for his Washington state friends, including a memorial followed by a bring-your-own picnic lunch near Mount Rainier National Park. This story is reprinted with permission from The Seattle Times where Megan Burbank is a features reporter. She can be reached at mburbank@seattletimes.com.
FASCINATING FOLKS OF DELAVAN 2021
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Winn works on a statue inside his Avenue Artworks studio in Delavan.
Patience&Precision JASON ARNDT Fascinating Folks
LOCAL ARTIST MAKES METALLIC IMPRESSION
By Jason Arndt STAFF WRITER
hroughout Noel Winn’s artistic career, the Avenue Artworks owner has generated multiple pieces of art, ranging from large bronze statues to miniature pewter castings and precious metal
castings. Winn, born and raised in Delavan, said he drew inspiration from his late father, Skip, who had a strong community reputation as a sculptor. “He was already involved with art and was a talented sculptor and printmaker,” said Winn, who recalled watching his father create art in multiple media. “He was a professional artist, that was his job, so I was raised with sculpting clay and have always been exposed to art work. I have seen him make artwork and I hoped I could do that some day at that skill level.” The older Winn, who owned Avenue Artworks until 1996, when he passed away, also showed Noel an artist can excel. According to Noel, his father had a
partnership with Harley Davidson, which bought Skip’s motorcycle statues every year. “He proved that it could work and that you could make it as an artist,” he said. Artistic journey Winn graduated from Delavan-Darien High School in 2000 and decided to spend the next couple years exploring North America, including Canada and Mexico. But he opted to return home. “I wanted to come back to the Midwest. I liked the Delavan area, my connections were here, my friends were here. So I came back here, got married and had some kids.” Winn then worked for a company in Milwaukee as a sculptor making belt buckles and ornaments. The Milwaukee-based company, he said, had a connection with Harley Davidson. “They were connected with Harley Davidson and I made stuff for their gift shop,” he said. “I did that for eight years working there and then I worked freelance.” In the meantime, he worked on several
projects, including one lasting eight years. The eight-year project involved crafting intricate chess pieces under a microscope. The chess pieces took considerable patience and precision, Winn said. “I worked on that for eight years,” he said. “It has all kinds of detail and probably the most I have ever done.” But, according to Winn, while the finished work showed precise detail, it took more than just talent. “Talent is important and half of that is patience, too. That is the secret ingredient to actually making cool pieces. If you aren’t patient with it, you have nothing.” Defining a clear vision, especially before starting a project, is another instrument to Winn’s success. “You just picture it in your mind and you keep going,” he said. “When I see something that I want to make in my head, I can make it exactly how I want it.” Reviving tradition Avenue Artworks, originally on Walworth Avenue in Delavan, closed its doors in 1996 when Skip Winn passed away.
“His studio stuff got put into storage, all of his equipment and tools,” Noel Winn said. Then, after looking through the items, Winn brought them in and used some of the tools for his eventual business. Winn, however, didn’t initially envision bringing back the Avenue Artworks name. “I have always tried to think of a name for my business. What can I call it?” Winn asked himself. “Then it just dawned on me, why don’t I just call it Avenue Artworks because that is what his business was?” In 2008, Winn reopened the doors of Avenue Artworks, but on High Street in Delavan. “I thought it would make him proud to carry on the art business,” Winn said. Since then, Winn has specialized in traditional, realistic artwork, jewelry, mold-building, bronze sculpting and precious metal casting. “Sculpting has been a passion of mine my entire life,” Winn’s company Facebook page states. “I am proud to have my own ARTIST • CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
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FASCINATING FOLKS OF DELAVAN 2021
ARTIST
• CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3
business which I can create custom pieces of art for the public.” Public exposure While Winn conducts the bulk of his business online using Etsy, a global online marketplace offering unique items, he is involved in some community and business partnerships. Community partnerships include selling his stock items at the weekly Lake Geneva Farmer’s Market. Additionally, the Delavan Downtown Business Association commissioned Winn to design a Christmas ornament in 2019 and 2020. In 2020, Winn’s designs commemorated the 76th Anniversary of D-Day and the 101st Anniversary of the 19th amendment allowing women to vote. Winn started the 2020 Christmas ornament project last August, creating multiple sketches, clay renderings and prototypes before making molds and casting them in pewter, according to the Visit Delavan blog. “In total, I’d say this piece took roughly 35 hours to create start to finish,” Winn said. Winn developed different designs before the Delavan Downtown Business
Association decided on Christmas tree below a banner reading “Delavan.” “I want to do that more and I like those kind of projects because it is such a good position for an artist,” said Winn. As for business partnerships, Winn recently created a custom tapper for Elkhorn-based Duesterbeck’s Brewing Company, which used the rooster emblem for its Roosterbeck Ale. Favoring realism Winn told the Visit Delavan blog he has always had an affinity for realism and working with faces. “I’ve really made it all. Bottle openers, jewelry, chess sets, and even sinks, Winn said. “I really enjoy realism and working with faces.” Winn, meanwhile, told this newspaper his realistic artwork typically avoids whimsical or abstract appearance. “If someone says ‘I want a bust of my grandfather,’ I am going to make it and it is going to really look like him,” he said. “It will be realistic in that sense and not abstract at all.” For more information, visit Avenue Artworks on Facebook or at AvenueArtworks.com.
Noel Winn spent eight years creating an intricate chess set and needed use a microscope to refine details of each piece. At left: Winn has created multiple pieces of artwork, including bronze statues, with this one featuring a jazz musician. JASON ARNDT Fascinating Folks
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Winn, Avenue Artworks owner, looks through a microscope to craft a detailed piece of art. JASON ARNDT Fascinating Folks
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FASCINATING FOLKS OF DELAVAN 2021
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DELAVAN NATIVE CONTINUES TO PURSUE ACTING DREAM By Paige Zezulka CONTRIBUTOR
A Midwest born and raised actor has turned the concrete jungle into his very own stage. When someone wants something enough, they will climb mountains to reach their dreams. For 29-year-old actor, Michael Fell, he didn’t do much trekking, instead he ventured his way through the skyscraper landscape of New York City by using his creativity as his pulse. Dropping everything and moving into the big city is already a risk to take. But to do so with a dream of becoming a theatrical actor, adds more weight to one’s shoulders. What could make something already so challenging more difficult, someone might ask- A world pandemic leaving millions of artists in a “blank void.” “I knew I needed to get very far away from my small town. I never felt comfortable there. So, I was like, what about the biggest city in the country?” said Fell. The young actor, who is from Delavan, arrived in New York City on a May afternoon in the year of 2016. Crammed into a two-person U-Haul, him and his two friends made their way across the George Washington Bridge starving for the endless amounts of possibilities their new home would offer. Fell discovered his passion for acting at the University of Minnesota, in Minneapolis where he graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in the Actor Training Program at the Gutherie Theater. He was among 20 out of the 1,000 students accepted in the program. It was a vigorous program consisting of eight to 12-hour days, six days a week, for four years with endless amounts of classes and rehearsals. Many people dropped out over time, though Fell managed to succeed with his heart set on a dream. The actor explained why he chose this career path. “What really did it was a sense of community that I found when I started working in theater,” he said. Fell, being a gay man, had always struggled with the idea of how others would perceive him and how the world would react. It didn’t help growing up in a small town, where the population is barely 8,000 people. Fast forward five years, Fell now resides in Harlem, Manhattan feeling completely immersed within the diverse community he now calls his home. He finally found his place and his freedom in New York, surrounded by nearly 8.39 million people. Theatrical acting is Fell’s preferred style. He tends to focus on this type of acting because of its way of bringing raw emotions to life. “It’s very compelling to me. I really enjoy the energy that exists when somebody is preforming in front of a live audience that is responsive, adaptive, can hear you, [and] you can hear them. The dynamics of that kind of energy are
Michael Fell, who is from Delavan, now lives in New York City and is striving to become an actor. He was recently featured in a profile piece for The Clarion, a student based newspaper for Madision Area Technical College. it, Fell shares his journey including the struggles he faces while reaching his dreams. PAIGE ZEZULKA Fascinating Folks
really, really intoxicating to me,” he said. Fell has learned other kinds of acting to, such as film. Film is more tactical based, involving many challenging aspects that try to create a more realistic way of storytelling. Due to the nature of the medium, the films are created with more detail-oriented strategies that appear simple on television but are complex behind the scenes. With the experience of both styles, Fell said it’s fun to jump back and forth between them. “They are different muscles but it’s the same kind of activity between the two,” he said. Fell made the choice to continue his career based on theatrical acting. “(It’s) not like a living decision, it’s more of a pure passionate choice,” because he’s realized it doesn’t pay much. Financial troubles are only some of the difficulties Fell faces with being an actor. Even before the pandemic, it was hard to land auditions. His agent had dropped him, and that’s when he realized, in order to be an actor, he had to learn how to not be one. He made ends meet through a variety of odd jobs such as catering, being a scavenger hunt and game host, personal assistant, house manager, did voice over
work for audio books, and most recently a COVID-19 compliance offer. You name it; he has done it all. Fell said it can be frustrating at times, but talked about the importance to “be able to have a hobby and find peace and joy in other activities,” when you are “not doing the thing you set out and studied for years to do.” Since COVID-19, Fell explained, there’s a void he is experiencing in his acting career. Fortunately, as an artist, his sense of creativity has not halted an inch even during a pandemic. It has actually created many new opportunities. He has been making a lot of film sketches, written two pieces and filmed them and is now learning how to edit his work. He also recently launched a comedy podcast and continues to incorporate the digital world into his pieces. As the world is changing, so is Fell and the theater industry in general. In a country where diversity, evolution and progress are key, the industry is in need to refocus their purpose on their community rather than for profit explained the actor. “I think that moving forward, we have to make art that is more here to the people and to the environment in which it is being viewed because that is the
unique advantage of the form,” said Fell, “This is the time where theater makers and producers need to dramatically rethink how they want to structure and program what they make. And I hope they take a smaller scale approach to it and a more curing approach.” The actor has sacrificed a great length to follow his dreams. Even though it may be a tough act to follow regardless of a worldwide pandemic, his heart is set on center stage. “In art and in theater there is no road map. Everyone is going to get to where they go in a completely different way. So, you have to trust that it’s going to happen when it happens, and how it happens. It’s not going to be the way you expect or even the way you want most of the time.” Paige Zezulka is a staff writer/copy editor for The Clarion, a student based newspaper at Madison Area Technical College.
On the cover: The Big Al Wetzel Band performs in Delavan’s Phoenix Park Band Shell last summer. DAVE DRESDOW PHOTO
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Delavan-Darien School District honors top 10 By Michael S. Hoey CORRESPONDENT
The Delavan-Darien School District honored the district’s academic top 10 students for the Class of 2021 at a banquet at Lake Lawn Resort on April 28. Typically, the Southern Lakes Conference hosts a banquet for all the schools in the conference, but that was canceled for the second year in a row due to the pandemic. High school principal Jim Karedes thanked the school board for hosting the event on its own after several principals in the SLC had reservations about getting all the schools together as is traditionally done. He thanked District Administrator Jill Sorbie specifically for making DDHS the only school in the SLC so far to host such an event. Karedes also thanked the board for approving in-person learning this school year. He said the district has offered faceto-face learning every day this year with no shutdowns related to the pandemic. It was also important to Karedes that the district was willing to host events such as the top 10 event, especially since athletics have been allowed to compete this year. “This is a big deal,” he said. “The people in this room are the top 10 of your class.” Karedes said they did not get to that honor in just the last six months, year or even four years. He said it began when each of the kids was 3-to 4-years old and their parents were reading to them. He credited parents for the 18 years of success these kids have experienced. Students then were encouraged to stand up and introduce their banquet guests and a buffet meal was provided. While enjoying the meal, Karedes asked
The Delavan-Darien School District recently recognized the Class of 2021’s Top 10students in a banquet at Lake Lawn Resort. DDHS principal Jim Karedes (on left), and District Administrator Jill Sorbie (on right), are joined by the students honored, from the left: (front) Charlotte Van Dan, Breanna Yartey, Sophia Roth, Faith Rothkopf, Collette Riviere; (back) Amir Castillo Cano, Michael Cobb, Luke Freitag, Cameron Patterson and Kyle Janssen. MIKE HOEY Fascinating Folks
each table to complete a series of questions, some for the students and some for the parents. The questions were a fun way for everyone to get to know one another, like “If your child was a song, a book, a movie, or an animal, what would they be and why?” Another question asked what the most embarrassing thing the student has done or the parent had done to the student. The students were presented with individual plaques and a plaque recognizing all of them will be hung at the high school. All of the students were grateful the district
recognized them. “I’m really thankful to our district for doing this. It’s a huge honor and them recognizing that means a lot to us,” Luke Freitag said. “It’s nice and it shows that the care about their students. A lot of athletic things got to happen this year, so it’s nice to see that they recognize the academic side,” Breanna Yartey said. “It’s huge,” Kyle Janssen said, comparing it to the high school also hosting a prom when many other schools will not. “They are
doing something different and trying to give back to the kids – I thought that was really great and I appreciate it a lot, especially with everything we have had to go through in the last year.” Another common theme was crediting parents and teachers for their success. “Number one, it was my parents,” Janssen said of who he credited with his success. “They have always been there for me and helped me set goals.” Janssen said his teachers have always been there for him and answered any questions he had. “My parents got me started at a young age with academics and reading – I remember doing flask cards with them,” Yartey said. Yartey said she has had many teachers advocate for her and help her grow as a student. Freitag said he was not the best reader when he was young so his father Matt often read to him and helped him with his homework. He said his teachers were always very personable and close with him, which helped him learn. Yartey said D-DHS offered her the rigorous courses that have prepared her for the challenges of the future. She plans to attend the University of Chicago and become an obstetrics/gynecology doctor. Freitag said DDHS provided him the Advanced Placement classes he needed, the right teachers to guide him and the resources he needed to be successful. “They have done more than enough to prepare me for the next steps,” he said. Freitag plans on attending the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater to study sports management.
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