INSIDE: An exhibit focuses o, survivois d . S Courtesy of Richard Kozlow eventeen paintings by Richard Kozlow, oral testimonies of the Holocaust assembled by histo- rian Sidney Bolkosky and an interactive retrieval system of those tes- timonies come together in an exhibi- tion at the Alfred Berkowitz Gallery at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. "Diversity: Victims & Survivors," running Jan. 15-Feb. 14, is the most recent in a series focused on the diverse communities served by the university. "I think the experience will be highly emotional," says Kenneth Gross, director of the Art Museum Project at the school. "The imagery is haunting, and the oral histories are moving. We're making the interviews very accessible by enabling visitors to view them by subject." The paintings, done 11 years ago, form a series entitled "Victims" and dramatize man's inhumanity to man. While they capture Holocaust atroci- ties, they also portray other devasta- tion, such as rape. "I believe blood is redder and bloodier when it is shown in black and white," says Kozlow, known for his large, colored landscapes. "The scarring newsreel images I saw as a boy during World War II never left me." The testimonies will be selected at random from specific categories. "I'm trying to include interview tapes of people from different parts of Europe, children who were hidden and survivors of Auschwitz," says Bolkosky, who has established a Web site for listening to and reading testi- monies of Holocaust victims (www.umd.umich.edu). Bolkosky has been interviewing survivors for more than 14 years. Kevin Pawlowski and Jeff Foster, two senior computer science stu- dents, are designing the interactive, touch-screen video retrieval system • that will allow gallery visitors simple and direct access to selected inter- views. They have found archival Holocaust photos to make the com- mentary more visible and jarring. The people whose work is on dis- play will discuss the exhibition dur- ing a free program starting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 11. "The intimate experiences in the context of the provocative paintings make for a very powerful experience for gallery visitors," Gross says. — Suzanne Chessler "Diversity: Victims & Survivors" will be presented Jan. 15-Feb. 14 at the Alfred Berkowitz Gallery on the third floor of the Mardigian Library on the University of Michigan-Dearborn campus, 4901 Evergreen Road, Dearborn. A free program in the gallery at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 11, will feature Richard Kozlow discussing his paintings, Dr. Sidney Bolkosky speaking about his oral histories program and Kevin Pawlowski and Jeff Foster provid- ing an overview of their interactive video-retrieval system. (313) 593-5087. 1/15 1999 Detroit Jewish News SI.