Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'Saturday, October 17, 1970; Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'Saturday, October 17, 1970 art M Of Chinese anti quity SATURDAY & SUNDAY MATINEES ONLY 1:00 P.M. (over at 2:45) 3:00 P:M. (over at 4:45) theatre cleared between shows ALL SEATS 75c THE STARS OF BORNIRE SHINE EVEN BRIGHTER f , PALOMAR PICTURES INTERNATIONAL v or. PRESENTS TECHNICOLOR CRC not continuous with "VIRGIN AND GYPSY" O IFTH F~orum PIPTH AVENUE AT tLtERTY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INFORMATION 769-9700 1.so BILLY JD, S Killer Band TUESDAY NIGHT 1 0 P.M.-Closing OLD HEIDELBERG 211 N. Main 663-7758 National General Theatres FOHVILLGE 375 No. MAPLE RD. .7694300 ENDS TUESDAY Mon.-Fri.-7:00-9:15 Sat. -Sun.-2 :00 4:30-7:00-9:15 Barbra Yves Streisand / Montand On A ClearP A AL 662 t 4 At State &s Lberty Sts. VANAVER 1 1# "A bathtub full of laughs" "One of the most tal- ented and lively per- formers around today." TUESDAY CHRISTOPHER DELOACH Colophon by Ta Chung-kuang Try Daily Classifieds ! f 14SI Hill $MET 701451 s s i # 3 I OPEN 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. Feature 20 min. later By SEWALL OERTLING The Chinese paintings from the Earl Morse Collection, now on display at the University Art Museum on the second floor, might not meet one's initial expectations of Chinese paint- ing; True, there are mountains and streams in profusion. Se- icluded buildings and diminutive people dot the countryside. However, one might complain that these pictures lack the misty atmosphere, the limitless distance, and the empty spaces that for many suggest the mys- tery of The Chinese intuition of nature. Instead of this somewhat ro- mantic impression of the inatu- ral world, the paintings in the exhibit, as one can gather from the titles, seem more concerned with a stylistic reinterpretation of earlier artists. It is obvious too that the technique of paint- ing is . a repetitious series of short ink strokes, and the de- velopment of space is often al- most childishly naive. According to Wang Hui, (1632-1717) the artist around whom the show centers, all of these observa- tions. would be correct defini- tions of style. Stop in front of "Landscape in the Style of Wu Chen." In Western terms the picture might be described as pointillistic or impressionistic, since form is defined by a series of dots and short strokes. However, where our aesthetic would have one admire the painting from a dis- tance so that individual brush- strokes blend into one another, the Chinese connoisseur de- mands a critical examination of Doctor Ross in benefit Doctor Ross, one of the hits of this past summer's Blues; Festival and full time factory worker .at General Motors, will play a benefit concert at 8 p.m. this evening in the Union Ball- room. Tickets, at the door, are two dollars and proceeds will a i d t h e Students to Support the Auto Workers. the individual stroke. The amazing variety of ink value and shapes of these dots, or tien, give an exciting visual tex- ture to the picture. The manipu- lation and massing of these same basic units, the single brush mark, infuses the picture with a rhythmic yet controlled order. "Landscape in the Style of Huang Kung-wang," would be impressive from its size alone. The scene encompasses a moun- tain valley with hills rising to either side, and to the rear a massive central peak. The «,x- ecution is similar to the paint- ing described above, but nere Wang Hui's abstract definition of space is clear. Atmospheric perspective is denied by the massing of intense black strokes on the mountain top, logically the most distant point in the painting. The high viewpoint al- lows the artist to arrange the mountains just as a modern painter arranges abstract shapes on his canvas. For Wang Hui, a landscape is a symbolic paint- ing which refers to real land- scapes by analogy, not compar- ison. He seeks excellence in technique not in representation. "Landscapes after Sung and Yuan masters," i s an album with individual leaves painted in the styles of past masters. As the inscription on the first leaf of the album "Pursuit of Antiquity" suggests, the stylistic definition of these masters in one of. Wang Hui's chief con- cerns, and the accumulated tra- ditions pf the thousand years I preceding the seventeenth cen- century constitute the orthodox concept of antiquity. The names Wu Chen and Huang Kung- wang which were encountered in the two previous pictures are a part of this tradition. For Wang Hui, the act of painting could only be conceived of in the terms of a restatement of the sacrosanct styles of earlier masters. These styles are partially de- finable by subtle changes in the single strokes which constitute the picture. Thus you might im- press a friend by approaching number 16G (one of the leafs) and announcing these are "Mi" dots." "Mi for Mi Fei, the par- ticular master in question here. You will either astonish your companion, or point to the wrongtpicture. No matter, there are dots in all of them. Wang Hui realized, of course, that here was more to painting than mere imitation. He sought to make the older styles a ve- hicle for his personal expression, and by understanding and ex- tracting the artistry from each antique painter, to move closer to the heart of his craft. Our artist might have held a dialogue with his European con- temporaries. The seventeenth century complexes of Versailles and St. Peter's were, in their own way, transformations of a classical tradition. However, the orthodoxy which in the West was expressed in architecture, 11 A movieaU An u anasMoi apple pie, Daddyb Scotch-on-die rocks and little M ieb hang-ups. I wt 'Landscape in the style of Huang Kung-wang' by Wang Hui sculpture, and figure painting took the form of the landscape in China. As Prof. Richard Ed- wards, Chairman of the History of Art department has suggest- ed, ". . . what the heirs of Greece accomplished with the human figure, China accom- plished with the landscape." These ideas are brought to- gether in a long handscroll by a contemporary of Wang Hui, Wang Yuan-ch'i (1642-1715). (The Wang Chu'uan Villa) Re- peating a theme and composi- tion inherited from the eighth century, Yuan-ch'i personalizes the antique through distinctive brush strokes and colors. If Wang Hui and his contempor- aries engaged in the pursuit of antiquity, they were just as in- terested in its recreation. F - The Overland Stage " The Love Pickle -premiere " A Slight Ache -Pinter Friday, Oct. 16 Sat., Oct. 11 East Quad Aud. 8:00 P.M. $1.00 The Michigan Daily, edited and man- M agec by students at the Universitv of Micnigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, 2 PERFORM Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip-! tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. DIAL 8-6416 / ASS ! TONIGHT at 8:00! DANCES SUNDAY 2:30 AND 8:00! JosO hE Lvinepnsents "The people newt door" 2ND starring Eli Wallach WEEK. Julie Harris R Hal Holbrook Deborah Winters STARTS THURSDAY JOSEPH E LE NE presents fSOLDIER R BLUE TECHNICOLORS PANAVISION4 AN AVCO EMBASSY RELEASE "STAGGERINGLY POWERFUL" "INSIGNIFICANT, LIBERATING, AND HONEST" ' "A MOVIE OF GREAT ART AND COURAGE." -N.Y. Times 4 ... .... k7 DIAL 5-6290 VMa - Io ML~l- ni KEN RUSSELL'S film of D. H. LAWRENCES IN LOVE"? COLOR by DeLuxe United Artists and - THE ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! "BIEST PICTURE"! n TRANSCENDENTIAL MEDITATION As Taught By MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI A I I bia mad I I I I I I