Strengthening The Community One Child At A Time eIN Fine Arts SCULPTURE page 92 Orchards Children's Services is a leader among Michigan's child welfare agencies, providing specialized care in addition to recreational and educational services for children in Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties. Orchards provides the highest quality services designed to strengthen family stability, build supportive communities and address current and emerging family needs. Orchards offers the most appropriate and prompt permanency plan for those children separated from their families, as well as support for reunification or acceptance into a new family. • Foster Care Services • At-Home Respite Services • Adoption Services • Managed Care Services • Outpatient Clinical Services • Community Services (&) Orchards Children's Services Oakland County 30215 Southfield Rd. Southfield, MI 48076 (810) 433-8600 Wayne County Top Left: Raymond Nasher shares his sculpture. Macomb County 7700 Second Avenue 42140 Van Dyke Road Detroit, MI 48202 Sterling Heights, MI 48134 (313) 874-9506 (810) 997-3886 Top Right: Auguste Rodin: Age of Bronze, plaster, circa 1876. Bottom Left: Alberto Giacometti: Bust of Diego, painted bronze, 1954. • Bottom Right: Magdalena Abakanowicz, Bronze Crowd, bronze, 1990-91. WHERE TO GO! WHAT TO DO! WHOM TO SEE! Find out in this week's JN Entertainment section. "I remember opening night, sitting between Mr. Rabin and the mayor of Tel Aviv. The next evening, Mrs. Rabin had a dinner party for us at their home." Nasher, often a visitor to Detroit because Comeri- ca has its headquarters in the city, is familiar with the Detroit Institute of Arts, another temporary show- place for his works. In New York for the Guggenheim opening, Nash- er was pleased the way visitors could see each sculp- ture individually and then in relationship to the rest because of the views along the ramps. "I have a totally different impression of the works at the museum than I have at my home," said Nash- er, who has served as United States representative to the United Nations, a member of the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities and chair- man of the White House Conference on Internation- al Cooperation. "In Texas, we use the outdoor sculptures to relate to the environment," he said, "and they become al- most living things among the trees and the shrubbery and the flowers." ❑ 'Er A Century of Sculpture: The Nasher Collection will be on view at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City through June 1. For information, call (212) 423-3840.