EVERY BOOK DISCOMED PAGES & PAGES, LTD. O 14 MILE AND HAGGERTY RDS. (NEWBERRY CENTER) 669-3388 HOU1S: 310\-SAT: 10-9 SUN: 12-5 Ci 0 VALERIE' TAYLOR FASHION RESALE Exclusively Women's Clothing and Accessories Current Fashions Sizes 2-14 1844 W. Woodward Birmingham 1 block North of 14 Mile Rd. 540-9548 "We Pay Cash for Fine Clothing and Accessories" DISTINCTIVE INTERIOR DESIGN O ROHN M. GOLDMAN, A.S.I.D. / GENE R. GALLEY, A.S.I.D. ■ 313-855-8787 6421 INKSTER RD. SUITE 204 BLOOMFIELD HILLS, MI 48301 cC ATTENTION ART COLLECTORS Get your "best price" then call us! HOURS: Mon: Sat. '12-6 BUYING COIN COLLECTIONS $ TOP DOLLAR $ 4000 Prudential Town Center Southfield, Michigan 48075 (313) 338-3232 'C Richard Charles Rare Coin Galleries Mkklga ■ s's Daly FaltrAccredited Colt Dealer •limited edition animation cels ©1991 Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. and TM Universal City Studios, Inc. Also available - Fine Art signed serigraphs or lithographs (800) 262-0353 New Arrivals Daily Cruise & Springwear I Bloom end Bloom • MARGUERITE On The Boardwalk 932-5252 • Registered Electrologists • Come and let us remove your unwanted hair problem and improve your appearance. CASH Near 12 Mile Rd. bet. Evergreen & Southfield 559-1969 Appt. Only. Ask For Shirlee or Debby FOR LIKE-NEW WOMEN'S & CHILDREN'S ) DESIGNER fashions & accessories \ The Bright Idea: 98 V Give a Gift Subscription THE JEWISH NEWS CONSIGNMENT CLOTHIERS Call today for a FREE housecall appt. or in-store appt. 347-4570 43041 W. 7 Mile • Northville -• Sybaris Exhibits American Crafts Sybaris Gallery's "Living Treasures" exhibition will run through Feb. 6. It is a tribute to Arthur Espenet Carpenter, Sheila Hicks, Melvin Lindquist, Sam Maloof, Ed Moulthrop, John Prip, June Schwarcz, Ramona Solberg, Paul Soldner, Robert Sperry, Rudolf Staffel and Lenore Tawney. Each has demonstrated the type of technical skill and creative vision that has helped bring the craft move- ment to the forefront. These are senior members of the craft movement tremendous variety of imagery marks their works, which range from purely sculptural pieces to furniture and jewelry. Their materials are clay, wood, metal and fiber. Paul Soldner has aided the development of ceramic art in this country. Mr. Soldner in- troduced American-style raku, a low-fire process, and in so doing, helped to legitimize low-fired ware. Robert Sperry has always focused on "the pot." Mr. Sperry's work has continued to grow. Rudolf Staffel has created outstanding hand- constructed and turned vases that often look half like pain- ting and sculpture. Lenore Tawney was a major force in redefining postwar weaving. By inventing the means to free weaving from the boundaries of the loom, she created fiber sculptures that hung freely in space. Sheila Hicks is known for her imaginative installations aimed at de-isolating art, us- ing local materials, especial- ly ones that have already been used. Arthur Espenet Carpen- ter's designs have become a model for the succeeding generation of woodworkers. A master of the "California roundover style," Mr. Carpenter is known for his ability to consistently pro- duce new, ingenious designs with an emphasis on form and an organic style of flow- ing lines. Sam Maloof is synonymous with chairs. A master of understated strength and consummate grace, Mr. Maloofs rocking chair series of the early '60s stretched the functional idea of furniture toward a sculptural dignity and scale, transcending style and time. Melvin Lindquist creates classically influenced vase Soidner's raku vase. forms of burl and spalted woods. Ed Moulthrop has helped to bring the woodturning field 91 to the level of an art form. Mr. Moulthrop's voluptuous vessels are noted for their im- pressive size. Ramona Solberg was one o 4 the first jewelers to use found objects in contemporary -4 jewelry and is well-known for her love of everyday items such as old-fashioned A underwear buttons and • dominoes. John Prip established a -4 metal department at the .4 School for the American Craftsman. Mr. Prip discovered the cut-and-lift process in fabrication after studying Shaker boxes. June Schwarcz, like John-9 Prip, has focused on surface 4 enrichment rather than the function of a piece. She in- vented her own electroplating process. 4 Sybaris Gallery is at 301 W. Fourth St., Royal Oak. Gallery hours are Tuesday- Saturday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Nine tzadikim do not make a minyan, but one common man joining them completes the minyan. —Nahman of Bratslav