Left to right, from opposite page: Frank Stella: "Warka II," from the "Polish Village" Series, 1974, wood, felt and canvas collage on board. Jim Dine: "The Heart at Sea (in a Non-Secular Way)," 1981, acrylic on canvas with conch shells and wood strip. Saul Steinberg: "Speech 2," 1969, ink, watercolor, pastel, collage. features the work of many contemporary Jewish artists. emerita at the University of Michigan. "His work was not specifically Jewish. Instead, he drew the iconography, such as identity papers, of the dis- placed person." Steinberg, who was born to a Jewish family in Romania, earned a doctoral degree in architecture in Italy, where he published his first cartoons. The artist's early drawings in the United States were done for the New Yorker. "Steinberg was fascinated by the ways in which each of us gains official reality only through our presence in official documentation — passports, identity cards, tax reports, licenses," Kirkpatrick says. "Fake rubber stamps had served the artist well in successfully 'reactivating' an expired passport to help in his escape from Mussolini's Italy, an experi- ence that continued to inspire him. Bogus rubber stamps validate key areas of Speech 2's space and personage, suggesting that the entire work repre- sents a special kind of identity document." More Jewish Artists Joseph Hirsch, immersed in the expression of urban and social realism, focused on everyday life. His exhibit piece, Deposition, done in oils on canvas, was painted during the Vietnam War. "Hirsch depicts a comrade in the role of the grieving Mary, holding the lifeless body of a soldier who seems paradigmatic of all young men sacrificed on the altar of war," explains Dora Apel, the W. Hawkins Ferry chair in modern and contemporary art history at Wayne State University "The central image is rooted in the Social Realism of art before World War II but also is con- nected to the existential doubt and implicit search for universal meaning in postwar Abstract Expressionism." Philip Pearlstein's Female Model Reclining on Red and Black American Bedspread typifies his depictions of graceless nude figures in stark settings. Because the head is not shown, the artist takes away from the individuality of his subject. Louise Nevelson's Black Zag I, completed in 1968 using wood and Formica as part of a sculptural series of wall reliefs, has many compartments filled with small forms that were either made or pur- chased. The black pieces inside a black holding area raise questions about the connection between parts to the structural whole. Roy Lichtenstein's Modular Painting with Four Panels, No. 7 exemplifies his Pop Art imagery that uses industrial printing techniques. His dot pat- terns, reminiscent of comic books, also suggest Art Deco design. Art Partnership The entire Cranbrook exhibit readily can be accessed through a hard-cover catalogue of images and essays —Three Decades of Contemporary Art: The Dr. John & Rose M. Shuey Collection. After the exhibit is taken down, the museum regularly will display indi- vidual works from it. In the catalogue, Rose Shuey comments on whether the collection always was enlarged by agree- ment with her late husband. "Sometimes we had little contentions as to which piece we should buy, and we didn't buy any," she explains. "Other times, and I am talking about the two works by Frank Stella from the "Imaginary Places" series in particular, he bought his, and I bought mine. Now that's collecting!" 0 "Three Decades of Contemporary Art: The Dr. John & Rose M. Shuey Collection" will be on display through April 7 at the Cranbrook Art Museum, 39221 Woodward, Bloomfield Hills. Hours are 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesdays-Sundays with an extension to 9 p.m. on Fridays. $5 adults/$3 children 6-17, seniors and full-time students; free for members and children 5 and under. (248) 645-3323. . ,tk! 2/22 2002 73