Meadow Broo Theatre Focus On Photography OAKLAND UNIVERSITY'S PROFESSIONAL THEATRE COMPANY STILL LIFE from page 93 Gripping Drama of Human Courage OCT 18 THROUGH NOV 12 A teenage girl's joyous love of life and indomitable spirit triumphs in a world gone mad. From her family's secret attic hiding place in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam, RATED PG BY FRANCIS young Anne fills her diary with GOODRICH hopes and dreams. Her compelling AND ALBERT story of innocence in the face of HACKETT terror has inspired generations. MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR PRE-TEENS MBT BOX OFFICE: (248) 377-3300 GROUP SALES: (248) 370-3316 www.mbtheatre.com Made possible by: AM. AMIE BANK ONE .vegmdfin. odwrdl 4forr, an, THE Observer It-centric NEWSPAPERS Michigan s Hottest Group Mel Ball ColourS Voted /1 1 Best Band by Crain s Detroit and Business Magazine (248) 851-1992 NEW IN DETROIT? k 10/27 2000 94 SHALOM DETROIT WELCOMES NEWCOMERS TO OUR JEWISH COMMUNITY Call the Women's Department at (248) 203-1494 for more information Roman Vishniac, whose HONORS from page 91 elegiac images captured pre- Shoah Jewish life, memori- Los Angeles, an award-winning photographer alized .the present for the who has chronicled the career of Mohammed Ali benefit of the future. Living for more than 30 years; Carl Cramer of in Germany in the 1930s, Birmingham, longtime mentor to Detroit-area Vishniac sensed the trouble professional photographers; Daniel Graschuck of for European Jews that lay Detroit, who has spent 32 years with the Detroit ahead. Public Schools exposing students to the field of Traveling across the ghettos photography; and Dorothy Manty of Canton, and shtetls of Eastern the archivist at the Detroit Main Library respon- Europe, Vishniac used a hid- sible for the library's photo gallery. den camera, defying local Also being recognized are Bill Rauhauser of authorities and the fierce Southfield, professor emeritus at the Center for resistance of religious corn- Creative Studies and specialist in the history of munities that feared he was photography; Edward "Robbie" Roberson of breaking the commandment Detroit, well known for documenting the history prohibiting the graven image. of the civil rights movement; Ellen Sharp of "Sometimes I think I pre- Detroit, curator of graphic arts at the DIA; and fer the storyteller in him to Robert Vigiletti of Southfield, founder of the the photographer," Elie department of photography at Detroit's Center Weisel wrote in his 1983 for Creative Studies. introduction to A Vanished Tickets for the gala are $50. Reserve tickets by World, Vishniac's famous phone: (248) 541-3527. collection. "But aren't they one and the same?" Following the midrashic tra- glitzy contemporary b'nai mitzvah. dition, artists have often used the pho- Photographers not known for Jewish tograph as text upon which to add subject matter, such as Nan Goldin and their own commentary. Richard Avedon, explored their own Sometimes photographs are com- roots with portraits of their parents, mentaries themselves. Frederic while Marc Alan Jacobs' kitschy series, Brenner, in his literate 1996 series "Jews of the Seventies," repackaged fami- Jews/America/A Representation and ly snapshots as historical documentation. more recent Exile At Home, exerts Around the same time that Vishniac tight control over his photographs, was trekking across Poland, Jewish precisely staging each one to dramatize avant garde photographers were using the often ironic paradoxes of contem- collage, performance and pastiche to porary Jewish life. revolutionize photographic technique. Brenner has generated considerable Claude Cahun (Lucy Schwob), Man controversy with his polemic portraits Ray (Emanuel Radnitsky) and Weegee like a Jewish motorcycle club and an (Arthur Fellig) each created new names American Jewish Hall of Fame. In The and made innovative pictures that Reconstructionist, sociologist Egon reflected the instability of the times. Mayer praised Brenner's work as "a Cahun's Dadaist and Surrealist work rare display of an artistic effort, which documents private performances for has tried to capture in a series of the camera. She recorded herself black-and-white photographs a process dressed as sailor, masked avenger, rag that has bedeviled some of the most doll and her own father. gifted scholarly attempts at under- Meanwhile, the work of Erwin standing the cultural dynamics of Blumenfeld, most famous for his fash- modern American Jewry." ion photography, includes a 1934 On the other hand, Brenner's images photomontage that hauntingly over- may assert that "there is no American layed an image of Adolph Hitler with Jewish life, there is only the spectacle a skull and a swastika, the photogra- of American Jewish life," Leon pher's sense of the grim future as Wieseltier wrote in The New Republic. astute as Vishniac's. "The humanism in Brenner's photo- The impulse to comprehend the graphs is, how shall I say, not real." chaos of daily life runs through much As the most accessible locus of tradi- of photography, an impulse relied tion, the family has provided Jewish upon by Jews to record so that they photographers the opportunity to don't forget explore both personal and social trans- formations. In a recent show at The — This article originally appeared Jewish Museum, "The Changing Face in CrossCurrents, the online newsletter of Family," photographs ranged from of the National Foundation formal portraits from the late 1800s to for Jewish Culture. . ❑