BR EITL1NG
1884
and projects to strengthen and en-
rich Jewish religious, education-
al and cultural life worldwide. Her
work involves analyzing the art
and symbolism of old tombstones.
From her careful analysis of the
inscriptions on the stones, in-
cluding name, age, status in the
community, as well as the type of
stone or marble, stylistic treat-
ment and engraved symbols—to-
gether with community records
and other historical documents—
Dr. Weinstein has been able to ob-
tain an indelible picture of Jewish
community life.
In keeping with the liberal pol-
icy of the Protestant Nether-
lands—which had recently freed
itself from Catholic Spain—the
Sephardim were welcomed as
Jews. They were given religious
protections and soon were able to
acquire Dutch citizenship. Some
monuments even reflect the
Christian influence of the day,
adapted of course to Jewish needs,
such as burning pyres represent-
ing the horrors of the Inquisition
in which many of the deceased's
relatives had perished. Others,
according to Dr. Weinstein, con-
tain Renaissance and Baroque
reworking of classical and Chris-
tian motifs, such as scenes on the
graves of women who died in
childbirth, modeled after repre-
sentations of the birth of Hercules
or of John the Baptist.
Another significant character-
istic, Dr. Weinstein pointed out,
was the common use of Spanish
or Portuguese surnames along
with the Hebrew on the tomb-
stones. This policy, she explained,
reflected a common practice of the
day: the use of Hispanic names in
order to conduct commercial
transactions with family mem-
bers who, despite the Inquisition,
had remained in Spain or Portu-
gal, as Catholics.
Map Exhibit
On Display
"Visual Geography," a nationally
touring exhibit on the history of
cartography, sponsored by the
U.S. Geological Survey and the
National Geographic Society, is
at the Detroit Public Library,
Main Library through Aug. 9. The
exhibit is on the third floor of the
library, located at 5201 Woodward
Avenue in the University Cultural
Center.
'Visual geography' follows the
story of map making through the
millennia, across the globe and
beyond the solar system. It in-
cludes some of the world's most
beautiful and enduring maps—a
map in Columbus' hand, the map
that was carried to the moon, the
first map to show America—and
it examines the urge to map, to
measure our world, and to record
it graphically.
Also on display will be the Ima-
gin Map Center, a user-friendly
database of computer-generated
digital maps created by the Michi-
gan Department of Natural Re-
sources' Michigan Resource
Information System. The Detroit
Public Library is one of four li-
braries in the state to have this
constantly updated and revised
database that provides maps of
major watersheds, county base
maps, cemetery locations, leg-
islative district maps, maps of en-
vironmentally sensitive areas of
the state, and more, free of charge.
POTTERY ♦ PAINTINGS ♦ JEWELRY ♦ FURNITURE
UNIQUE ACCESSORIES FOR THE HOME
'‘
32800 FRANKLIN ROAD • FRANKLIN, MI 48025
TUESDAY - FRIDAY 10 A.M. - 5 P.M.
SATURDAY: 11 A.M. - 5 P.M.
Paint Creek
Plans Exhibit
The Paint Creek Center for the
Arts seeks entries from Michigan
artists for the 9th annual Cele-
brate Michigan Artists exhibition,
Aug. 18 - Sept. 22. All Michigan
artists 18 and older are eligible
for this fine-art competition.
The first prize is $1000, and the
winning entry will be reproduced
as a fine-arts poster.
Two and three-dimensional
works in all media are eligible.
Preliminary selection will be done
by 35 mm slides. All slide entries
must be received at the PCCA by
5 p.m. on Saturday, June 17. En-
try fee is $15.
For an application form, send
a self-addressed stamped enve-
lope to Celebrate Michigan
Artists, Paint Creek Center for
the Arts, 407 Pine Street,
Rochester, MI 48307. For infor-
mation, call (810) 651-4110, Tues-
day through Saturday, 10 a.m. -
5 p.m.
`Our Town'
Art Exhibit
Artists across the state are invit-
ed to submit their work for jury-
ing for the 10th annual Our
Town, an art exhibition and sale,
to be held Oct. 18-22, at the Com-
munity House in Birmingham.
All entries, in the form of col-
or slides, must be postmarked by
July 31. Artists who have not al-
ready received a Call to Entry
Form may ask for one by calling
the Community House, 810-644-
5832; or by writing: The Com-
munity House, 380 S. Bates,
Birmingham, MI 48009.
Artists may submit their in-
terpretations of "Our Town," any
hometown and its meaning to
them. Works may pertain to any
subject-, there will no longer be cat-
egories as in past years. Art work
may be two-or three-dimension-
al, prepared in any medium,
ready for presentation, and must
not have been previously shown
in Our Town exhibitions.
All works of art must be
marked for sale. The artists re-
ceive 65 percent of the selling
price, with the rest benefitting
the Community House.
MESA ARTS
GALLERY COLLECTION
(810) 851-9949
Artistic Chairs
CHRONOMAT
At a time when instruments unerr-
ingly cope with Mach 1 flight data,
continued improvements to the
mechanical chronograph simply
underscore that there's more to
time than technology. A move-
ment's intricate beauty or a hand-
polished case's lustrous gleam do
put technological progress in a
broader perspective.
Like the Concord, the world's first
but surely not last supersonic trans-
port, CHRONOMATS draw time and
space ever closer with aesthetic
excellence as well as outstanding
technical performance.
KARAGOSIAN & SONS
For any occasion...
Whimsical and Completely
Functional. Hand-made chairs.
2266 Orchard Lake Rd.
Sylvan Lake MI. 48320
29203 Northwestern Hwy.
Southfield (810) 356-5454
(corner of orchard lk. rd.
and middlebelt rd.)
(810) 682-8573
hours: mon.-tues.-wed. 9-6; thurs. 9-8;
fri. 9-6; sat. 9-5
INSTRUMENTS
FOR PROFESSIONALS
SUMMER
GROUP
EXHIBITIONS
Yoshitoshi
DAVID KLEIN GALLERY
163 Townsend, Birmingham
Telephone 810.433.3700
Fax 810.433.3702
100 Views of the Moon
"The Moon at Ogurusu
in Yamashiro"
©1886, woodblock print.
•
515 S. Lafayette At 6th, Royal Oak, Hours: 11:00-5:00 Tuesday - Saturday Or By Appointment
(810) 548-7919
U,
0")
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