THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'Mikado Tonight mlmwmmp PAID ADVERTISEMENT Bigelow Explains Disarmament Protest Cinena 'ud4 PRESENTS. although they need not be. When capitalism goes abroad it sets up feudal empires. Then the demo- cratic nation has to come in and defend the feudal system." "The tragedy is that our qov- ernment was designed to protect individuals against government abuse. And now it is performing those abuses. Institutions have al- ways thought that man was dis- pensable. I think he is not." LAST MINUTE--Preparations are in the final stage for the opening of the Gilbert and Sullivan Society season with "Mikado" at 8:30 p.m. today at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. When the curtain rises all will be transported to the land of Japan in the city of Titipu where the antics of an errant Prince make all almost lose their heads over love. ALBERT BIGELOW . on disarmament ETCHING EXHIBITION: - Joachim, Stechow View Rembrandt's Influence 2 4 4 4...' Thursday and Friday Cinema Guild, heartened by last semes-l ter's response, is presenting an- other documentary program. The Hunters gives an intimate glimpse into the lives of the Bushmen of Southwest Africa, a people still living in the Stonej Age. To survive in the barren Kalahari Desert has meant anj adaptation in which the men hunt animals with a keenness that engages all their powers and impresses the civilized on- looker as an uncanny and fasci- nating skill. We live for thirteen days with the tribe as they hunt down the giraffe whose death insures their existence. Pro- duced by the Peabody Museum, this color film won the Robert Flaherty Award in 1958 and the Grand Prize at Florence in 1959. It is not often realized that Robert Flaherty was himself a' Michigander, born at Iron Mountain and educated here. The wilderness exerted such a powerful attraction on him that for many years he lived as a hunter and explorer in upper Canada. His interest in people who lived in a constant battle with nature made him wish to document their lives, which he felt were heroic and grand in a world that was increasingly mechanized. Revillon Freres, the French fur concern, which the French fur concern, which he knew from his own opera- tions, was persuaded to back a film of Eskimo life. Nanook of the North, In 1922, made Fla- herty internationally famous. But Flaherty could not work well within the commercial framework of the movie indus- try, and his subsequent, works were few: Moana, Man of Aran, The Land, and Louisiana Story, issued scatteringly over the next quarter of a century, estab- lished his eminence as "the fa- ther of the documentary." Man of Aran, his first sound' film, recounts the lives of the people on a windswept group of islands off the coast of Ireland, the same people whom Synge immortalized in Riders to the Sea and other works. Flaherty's is the film equivalent of Synge's verbal poetry. The storm scenes have never been equalled. Fla- herty, who refused to work with uncongenial subjects, found in these islands, where seaweed is saved for soil, a perfect outlet for his poetic primitivism; and' many consider this his finest film. It has not been -shown in Ann' Arbor since the Flaherty Festival of eight or nine years ago. We hope that the wide audi- ence that we are trying to reach will not be put off by a conde- scension of the word "primi- tviism." It appears to have con- notations of escapism and un- reality. But the metaphysic of primitivism involves the at- tempt of the human heart .to believe in heroism when the epics of our society no longer carry conviction. Who can say this is unreal? Great and semi- nal works of art have precisely this oneiric appeal, a belief that outreaches understanding. In contrast to Flaherty, a dedicated person, Alfred Hitch- cock has a huge popular public, since his fame is broadcast throughout the land by the ap- paratus of commerce. An excel- lent technician who has become quite bored with his technique, Hitchcock must not 'be ap- praised by the flabby works of his recent years, which do not . shrink from any device of cheap trickery. The critics who ac- claimed him for his master of suspense in the 1930's-he never then resorted to horror devices -would have been astounded by a glimpse Into the future, the lifelessness of The Wrong Man, the silliness of To Catch a Thief, the gimmickism of The Rear Window, and the crude- ness of Psycho. But it must be admitted that even so recent a film as North By Northwest re- deenled itself by the scene on the super - highway. Vintage Hitchcock should be exciting to the person who has thought that the watered-down beer of this recent output represented good' suspense films. The Lady Vanishes shows Hitchcock's tal- ents at their peak; but The 39 Steps, which we are showing this weekend, is almost equally good. The average citizen who gets strangely mixed -up with. a ruthless gang is an idea that greatly interests the contempo- rary audience. This film shows that Hitchcock's reputation had once a .real basis. On the same program is another of Disney's beautifully photographed nature shorts, Bear Country. We warn the viewer that the vulgarity of the comment and the music may be an offsetting factor. like a brushtroke, in his etchings, he said. Joachim traced the "deep- ening of tones and texture" from Rembrandt's picture of his mother, through that of the "Great Jewish Bride," "Doctor Faustus," "Doctor, Toylinks," to the "Older Lutmar" "one of the finest works in the exhibition." Simpler Attitude A working towards a "simple broader attitude," and psycholo- gical interpretation can be defined in Rembrandt's work. Joachim said. He traced the treatment of the presentation of Christ in the temple theme toward several dif- ferent interpretations in the art- ists' work. At the beginning, the picture has a complex arrangement, and is a straight etching, he explained. Six years later, Rembrandt again treated this theme, this time with more tone, and a diagonal ar- rangement; the best treatment of the theme is in the "presentation" done in the "dark manner," in the museum's exhibit, in which there is an interplay of etching and drypoint, an enrichment of sub- Ject and concentration, and a great warmth and tone, Joachim said. Rembrand't use of drypoint reached its apex in the "Three Crosses" of 1653, in which the whole plate was done in drypoint, which Joachim called an "incred- ible undertaking." In the artist's last years, he did not etch, he concluded. Opposing Treatments Prof. Stechow pointed out two opposing treatments of nature in Rembrandt's works -- one type, which was dramatic and imagina- tive, "expressing the turmoils of the soul," and the other, in which nature is accepted as a "guide, not as a means of expressing his own turbulent spirit." The etchings belong to the works of this second group. They have a "less spontaneous, more formal quality than the drawings," Prof. Stechow said. Portrait Placement Zagas also used the portrait-like placement of the main object in a landscape foreground, which Rembrandt followed, he said. Later in his work Rembrandt placed his subjects farther back, Pfor. Stec- how,. said. The rectangular landscapes, he said, are "held back" from too great an expansion by the bowl- like curve of the lines. The influence of Rembrandt can be traced in "outright imitations, high quality freer assimilation, and association ofnRembrants ideas by independent artists," Prof. Stechow said. In the first group fall two artists who were students of the master, and have achieved little individual fame. These painters copied the motifs of the Rembrandt works, he noted. Rysdale Like Rembrandt j Jacob Van Rysdale, was con- nected with Rembrandt by his use of subject matter andI interpreta-I tion, and his formal organization. The use of dramatic foregrounds is found in his work, also as well as landscapes with city above the horizon line, after Rembrandt, rather than below it. as was the usual in Dutch painting, Prof. Stechow added. In the nineteenth century, use of drypoint, and of dramatic "por- trait" foreground, and a vague resemblance to the clarity and neatness of the early Rembrandt etchings was found. HAROLD JOACHIM . on technique WOLVER INE CLUtB OHIO STATE TRIP NOVEMBER 18-20. For information or reservations call NO 5-8215 between 3 and 5 P.M. or NO 5-8367 any time Read DailyClassf DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER presents SETC. and POETRY Friday 8 P.M. Ann Arbor Public Library Open to DAC member.s Memberships at $2 (students $1) sold at the door. rm <-o o=om s m s m s m FACULTY-STUDENT COFFEE HOUR with the Political Science Department. All students are welcome with special I !Ill