i li s ta rnia C/) u_i ohn Lennon drew as he composed, fast and furiously when the in- spiration hit. What most people don't know is that the rock w roll icon indulged his lesser-known tal- ent prodigiously in the last decade of his life. What most people don't know is that John Lennon, Beatle ex- traordinaire, wanted to be an artist. It never happened — at least not in the eyes of the art world which, for the most part, ignored Lennon's foray into the visual realm during his lifetime. Not only that, but his first gallery show, at a London venue in 1970, attracted the dubious attention of Scotland Yard. The British police confiscated several erotic drawings that Lennon had created us- ing his wife, Yoko Ono, as a model. The works were labeled obscene and removed from the gallery walls after a day and a half. Lennon may have hid his discourage- ments well at the time, but he rarely showed his works publicly again. Never- theless, at the time of his death on Dec. 8, 1980, he had hoped to stage another ex- hibition. In a posthumous fulfillment of her late husband's goal, Ono is doing just that. 'The Artwork of John Lennon" makes its Ann Arbor premiere next week it's a trav- eling exhibition that includes 45 serigraphs taken from Lennon's sketchbooks and a generous dose of harmless sentimentali- ty U-1 CC LLI 84 Most of the works depict life in the Lennon-Ono household, an intimate por- trait of Lennon's relationship with his wife, son Sean and his ideals. Originally com- posed with pen, pencil and sumi ink, Lennon's sketches are "like a diary," notes Lynne Clifford, quoting an oft-used de- scription by Ono. Clifford directs the Manhattan-based Bag One Arts, the company Ono formed to exhibit and sell reproductions of her hus- band's drawings. Bag One itself is a ref- erence to the series of 14 sketches that John presented to his wife as a wedding gift and that document their heavily pub- licized marriage and honeymoon. (These were also the works that Lennon exhibit- ed in 1970.) Lennon had been drawing since his childhood and attended the Liverpool Art Institute from 1957 to 1960; Ono has sketches he did as a 9-year-old boy, Clif- ford says, adding that Lennon had always considered himself an artist 'The guitars," he once told an interviewer, "came second." And artist Ono, a member of the avant- garde Fluxus movement during the '60s, "nurtured that quality in him," Clifford says. Lennon's works, printed in series of 300, have been traveling the country for near- ly two years, and at least 50 percent are John Lennons art shines on in Ann Arbor. LIZ STEVENS SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS already sold out. "John is an icon. He was a Renaissance man; he was a philosopher," says Larry Schwartz, a former Detroiter, who pro- motes the Lennon exhibits through his California-based Lasco Productions. "When you see John's work, you see John." Which is undoubtedly what draws so many people to the event. To his fans, Lennon represented a kind of unquash- able optimism about the future, a sense of hope even in the face of tragedy. "It's re- ally an emotional ride for people," Schwartz says. 'They come and they cry." And, of course, they buy. Taking home a piece of the Lennon collection costs at