arts & life Past Becomes Present A new art exhibit at the Holocaust Memorial Center casts the Holocaust in a modern light. Hans Molzberger created Maypole 1945 from patinated steel from a burned-out house, an excavated German helmet, guns, German World War II parts and concrete blocks from the Salzwedel area. Mass marches during the Nazi regime took place on May 1 in all German cities. "My Maypole 1945 shows how it ended," says the artist. +plus "Never Let It Rest: Sojourns in the Shadowlands" runs through May 3 at the Holocaust Memorial Center, Farmington Hills. $5-$8; free for center members, uniform service personnel with ID and library/ archive visitors. (248) 553- 2400; holocaustcenter.org . I Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer p sinter Michael Roque Collins and three- dimensional artist Hans Molzberger knew each other's work long before they became colleagues and friends. Collins, who grew up along the American Gulf Coast, creates post- Symbolistic images, both powerful and terrifying, and often related to the discrimination he has observed in the heartland. 2006 and traveled to areas associ- ated with Holocaust atrocities and subsequent memorials of loss at Auschwitz, Buchenwald and Neuengamme. Both traveled to Michigan to introduce the exhibit when it opened Jan. 11 and hope to return to lead workshops. "This will be the third time we've had the paintings together with the sculptures," says Molzberger, who had a solo exhibit at the Holocaust Museum Houston. Collins will show his own projects and two col- Michael Roque Collins created the 2009 oil on black-and-white photograph 20th Century Totems after he and Molzberger visited Buchenwald. Molzberger, who grew up in Germany, develops installations, often punctuating the absence of Jews in the small towns surround- ing his home. Both teach at Houston Baptist University, but met each other through their activities in the arts community in America and Europe. Collins' recommendation brought Molzberger to Texas. Their common concerns led to a joint venture, an exhibit capturing sites and emotions memorializing the Holocaust and its aftermath. "Never Let It Rest: Sojourns in the Shadowlands," consists of some 40 independent and shared pieces. It will be on view through May 3 at the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills. The multimedia display includes paintings, photography, sculpture, ceramics, found objects and sound elements. There is mention of the small town of Salzwedel in the Saxony-Anhalt region of Germany, where there was a concentration camp. The two artists, neither Jewish, began planning their display in laborations there next fall. An early work by Collins, Divisions of the Soil — included in this exhibit — was motivated by a visit to areas close to the artist's home that exposed racist feelings, expressed through comments and graffiti. Collins reacted with the oil-on-linen piece, detailing an imaginary landscape compromised by buckling land. Similarly, Molzberger began his Holocaust constructions after the unification of Germany. "I had read [teenage Holocaust victim] David Rubinowicz's diary and decided to bicycle from Berlin to the village where David and his family lived," recalls Molzberger, who himself had an uncle kept as a political prisoner in a concentra- tion camp. "I did research there and made a project that was shown in the 1990s. When the city of Salzwedel did an art exhibit about the concentration camp there, I was invited to participate:' Tunnel, one of Molzberger's larger pieces, is made of a ceramic and patinated steel frame holding a Editor's Picks gravel base and lets exhibit visitors hear their own footsteps as they walk through the installation. The shape of the tunnel roof recalls the roofs of many railcars used by Nazis to transport victims. Walking on Ashes is an exam- ple of the artists' collaboration. It is made of canvas, acrylic/oil, photo collage, steel, bronze and raku with a sound component. This installation offers a vista where each side shows different subjects; one side has an image of a rail, and the other shows a paint- ing over photo collage of shoes left behind by victims and gives way to a smoke-filled sky. Molzberger, a self-taught artist who leads professional residencies in Germany, has visited Israel and talked to survivors. One survivor, from Houston, became a close friend and the subject of a project about the man's life, now traveling the United States and Germany. Both artists lecture and con- duct workshops. And a book of Collins' work, From Ruins to Resurrection: Sacred Landscapes of Michael Roque Collins, will be available at the center while the exhibit is on view. "We think of our art as an active agent for dealing with violence in culture says Collins, who has received more than 50 juried awards, including one from the National Endowment for the Arts. "The art becomes a release for the horrific acts, a way of profess- ing that the visual scars are left and suggesting contemplative medita- tion:' ❑ Life In Lodz Planning a visit to Toronto? A new exhibit features photos by photojournalist Henryk Ross, who, with his wife, were among a small percentage of Lodz Ghetto survivors. After liberation, he excavated negatives of photos he had taken and hidden at great personal risk. More than 200 of his glimpses of life under Nazi rule in Poland - "Memory Unearthed: The Lodz Ghetto Photographs of Henryk Ross" - will be on view Jan. 31-June 14 at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto. (877) 225-4246; ago.net . ❑ FANTASTIQUE! Twenty-year-old Italian pianist Beatrice Rana makes her Detroit debut, and conductor Jun Markl leads Berlioz' Symphonie Fantastique with the DSO. Jan. 22; Jan. 24-25. $15 and up. Max M. Fisher Music Center, Detroit. (313) 576-5111; dso.org . CONJURER Beginning as an apprentice Lynne Konstantin magician at Arts & Life age 4 to his grandfather, Editor Max Katz, Ricky Jay is one of the world's great conjurers. In PBS' American Masters - Ricky Jay: Deceptive Practice, see clips and interviews with friends and colleagues from Steve Martin and David Mamet to Dinah Shore.10:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 23, on Channel 56. DPTV.org . HILLS ARE ALIVE With local talent! Community theater Sky's the Limit Productions brings the Sound of Music (by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, whose grandfather was Jewish) to the Berman Center for Performing Arts, West Bloomfield. Jan. 24- 25; Jan. 29; Jan. 30-Feb. 1. $17. (248) 661-1900; theberman.org . HEAVENLY BODIES Voted "Sexiest Astrophysicist Alive" by People magazine, Neil DeGrasse Tyson makes science fun for experts and laypeople (kids, too). Host of the TV miniseries Cosmos: A Spacetime Legacy - a respin of Carl Sagan's classic series - the director of the Hayden Planetarium at NYC's American Museum of Natural History speaks Wednesday, Jan. 28, at the Detroit Opera House. $66 and up. (313) 237-SING; michiganopera.org . ❑ January 22 • 2015 33