Pdgt Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 10, 1972 Page. Two THE MICHIGAN DAILYltR'53% U poetry series Galway Kinnell's voice, with a controlled emotional softness, spit out the words. of his poetry last Thursday to a crowd of en- thusiastic, appreciative people. His poetry, imbedded with forecful i n a g e s, recalled mo- ments in the poet's past which included his two children, his wife, and the human body in the darkness and in reference to today's "technological Puritan- ism." The reading was the fourth in a series of twelve, co-sponsored by the University's Extension Service and English Dept. John Logan, a poet of plain language and strong feeling, will read this afternoon at 4:00 in the Multipurpose Room of the Undergraduate Library. At State and Liberty Program Information 662-6264 HELD OVER- 4TH WEEK! Open 1 p.m. daily Shows at 1:15-3:1,0- 5 p.m.-7 p.m.-9 p.m. Feature 5 minutes later Michigan Union Billiards PLAY POOL Free Instructions Half Price Pocket Billiards TODAY Thurs., Feb. 17th OPEN 10 A.M. Mon.-Sat., 1 P.M. Sun. 1 I UAC-DAYSTAR presents Delaney, Bonnie & Friends, Billy Preston I -Daily-Jim Judkis Grads display art work also IRIS BELL SAT., FEB. 19 8 p.m.-H ILL AUD. $4.50 $3.50 $2.00 IF YOU'RE NOT HIP TO BILLY PRESTON READ ON: Rolling Stone says of his new solo album: "START TO STOP, it's charisma and melisma and razzmotazz!r.. Listening to Billy Preston, you real- ly can believe once more in the saving powers of music." Ray Charles says: "If I ever leave this business, I'll leave it to Billy Preston." Billy Preston says: "I don't care if it makes the charts y'all, I only wrote it for you and me." . . -from "that's the way god planned it." By GARY HUMMEL None of the artists represented in the current Graduate Review Show (University Art Museum, Feb. 2.27) gave in to the vagaries of Conceptual Art - they didn't wrap the museum in cellophane, nor did they hoist a giant bed- spring atop the roof, a la Claes Oldenberg. Fortunately, this small exhibit isn't a collection of pallid remi- niscences or shadows pulled from last year's avante-garde grave- yard. There is also no evidence in the show of the New Realism in American art. The trompe-l'oeil and romantic exploration of the human form as a kind of inti- mate landscape has been by- passed in favor of an assimila- tion of the spirit of a few mod- ern and contemporary masters. Laurence Philips' p a in t i n g, Singing Winds, Crying Beasts shows the lively color of Matis- se's paper cutrouts and the in- sistent organic curves of Jean Arrp's. wood constructions. The work is unusual because' the art- ist has used color alone to create a :movement of fluid shapes, par- ticularly in the yellow silhouet- tes of phantom dancers which float across the bottom of the large canvas. Philips' hot primary colors, a. decorative lack of spatial depth, and -flat, half-real forms are par- ticularly well suited to the me- dium of acrylic paint. Two sculptures, Edwin Cus- ter's Five Point Module and T h a m a s Shepherd's Untitled Sculpture are fugitives from the cool world of Minimalism. The foimer, which consists, of five pieces of curved, laminated wood that rest upright on the gallery floor; look like the skeletal re- mains of a whale, or the ribs of a small sailboat. Clearly, this is not an exercise in redundant ele- niental shape, but an abstract, organic form activating space by kindling the viewers imagination. Shepherd's work, rather like a wave cut at right angles and frozen into a monolith of red granite, makes effective use of the gallery wall by reflecting the red glow of a hidden neon tube against it. The warmth of the light contrasts with the cold shiney surface of the sculpture itself. His other work, a Robert Morris square which is in the act of becoming a seamonster's tail, makes use of a neon light, to emphasize its threatening form. The organic quality of the ex- libition is also exemplified by Mac Allister's clay Snowscape, an abstract topographic mound which creates erotic lyricism by contrasting a granular glaze with a smooth iriddescent one. The ceramic pieces which try to be visual puns (the lowest form of wit) really aren't very funny and obviate the use of their particular medium. Gene Isaacson spoofs the old-fashioned saying, "Cleanliness is next to Godliness" by modeling a small bathtub with a crucifix as a showerhead. Ho-hum-no cogent' ideas, no aesthetic content. Blas- phemy can be dull, especially if its purpose is to satirize an al- ready hackneyed phrase. Perhaps David Dumo's stuffed canvas CTA Mask is more on target because like some of Claes Oldenberg works, it de- picts a subtle' metamorphosis of forms which evokes a number of different, specific images in the viewers mind. Jon Hall's dough-like ceramic spacecapsule resting on a blue velvet cushion gently pokes fun at sleek, hard-edged space ware, but its humor doesn't bludgeon the viewer. The exhibit's more sentimental graphic works, such as Morning Has Broke do not serve the causes of humor or "art of idea." The inevitable wistful faces creates a conceptual va- cuum on paper. David Bigelow's Nazgul, how- ever, is trenchant and disturbing. On close inspection, its shadowy forms become viscious insects, fighting one another, the images of unrealized evil 'and terror. The Vision, also by Bigelow, creates visual excitement by placing calm spectrums of solid color against a storm of erratic blue scratches. Possibly Thomas Shepherd's untitled graphic photograph is the most powerful expression of idea and feeling in the show. The figure of a sad young woman with a look of foreboding on her face is located above a group of grinning soldiers going off to war. The juxtaposition of images and symbols createa a feeling of genuine, relevant pathos. Here aesthetic perception and idea finally merge and give the view- er a tingle down the spine. TONIGHT ONLY JOYLESS STREET BILLY PRESTON played Madison Square Garden with the greatest back-up band in historoy: George Harrison and Ringo Star. -The Bangla Desh Concert .4 Please No Smoking in the Concert Auditorium -Daily-Jim Judkis DIAL 665-6290 "NEVER GIVE A INCH" was the motto of the Stampers of Oregon.. and live it they didi EE R-EfU micoam saw~~n The Place To Meet INTERESTING People! Bach Club Susan Alcantara-cello Deborah Berman-piano "IT'S A SIZZLER !' -Barnard, Detroit News "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST" -Time "Come on like gang-bust- ers and never let up ... in a running battle of technological, one - ups- manship . . . I doubt if you'll see anything quite as devastating." -Michigan Daily DIRTY HARRY DIAL 665-6290 I STARTS FRIDAY Please Note Schedule SHOWS AT 1:15-3:45-6:15-8:50 FEATURE AT 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:00 All they wanted was their chance to be men...and he gave it to them. i I I llf anavision® Technicolor@ From Warner Bros.,A Kinney Company ENDS TONIGHT: PAUL NEWMAN "SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION" "KAS PAR" a play by Peter Handke Feb. 11th & 12th East Quad Auditorium Admission 50c ® SAT.-9:OOP.M. "IN LIKE FLINT" BURSLEY HALL MUSIC MAN Robt. Preston 75c FEB.10, 11,12 9 P.M. STOCKWELL HALL 25c All the popcorn You can eat! I Find Out Yourself Why Everyone's Talking About- .~ A DIFFERENT KIND OF LOVE STORY f NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED ____ ___ ____ ___MON. thru FRI. F #FPTH F'OrUM 70t 8:300" 10 ANNARO SAT. &SUN. 5:300708:30.10 with GRETA GARBO in Her First Major Role DIR. G.W. PABST, 1925 Tough profiteers, destitute workers, expensive restau- rants, sparkling with light and dim-lit homes visited by hunger; noisy effervescence and silent withdrawal into sadness. SHORT: UBERFALL ARCITECTURE AUDITORIUM 75c 7 and 9 p.m. HI-Fl BUYS Don't miss the HI-Fl BUYS OPEN HOUSE To celebrate the redecoration of our stereo demonstration facil- ities we've scheduled some very special activities all next week. Plan to attend these exclusive events .. FREErKLH COMPACT CLINIC-Bring in your KLH model 11, 11W, 15, 20, 24, or 26 regardless of when or where you purchased it, and we'll test it, making minor repairs' on the turntable free MONDAY, FEB. 14 FRErESPECIAL SPEAKER COMPARISON-At 4 times throughout the day we will objectively compare the nation's current 4 best selling speakers . . the AR-4X, KLH 17, Dynaco A-25, and Small TUESDAY, FEB. ISAdvent. Your one chance to hear them under one roof! MICROPHONE SEMINAR-come in and learn ithe basics of FREE microphone selection for YOUR needs ... and see the unveiling of the new condenser microphones by an Electro-Voice factory WED., FEB. 16 representative! LIVE VS. RECORDED DEMONSTRATION-Hear a group of musi- Fcians "live"...and then close your eyes as you listen to perfect reproduction on home type stereo components. Call Ray at 769- THURS., FEB. 17 4700 to reserve a seat! i .4'* I' 4 4 I 0 POPULAR PRICES! I% ,I ENJOY DELICIOUS Deep Fried Sea Haddock EVERY FRIDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT $1.39 THE 1971-72 A new comedy r NEW PLAY by FRE COMPUTERIZED DEMONSTRATIONS OF BOSE 901's-We've pre- pared a special demonstration explaining design principles and concepts behind the Bose 901 loudspeaker . .. the most highly Directed by Harvey Medlinsky FRIDAY, FEB. 18 reviewed speaker regardless of size or price! 4 CALL 769-4700 OR KEEP WATCHING THE MICHIGAN DAILY FOR MORE DETAILS. "A DELIGHTFUL COMEDY!" (po \ WhteHA/Eu-iA n F e O'keill FounIation) -W I- M a%- M ~ m - '.WT Ar l