Wednesdav, March 27, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY iNage f-ve W i If sItvy r h 27i ' .,74THESMCHIGA D ,L _____________°_g__ AA .W.'fl444_____ y E::Y " GiYi ~a~h{~ "' ti6" - At. J ..SV N''O aM Wilkof n show:* Cons art or untma tnattU By RON LEACHt I overheard an interesting con- versation yesterday between - Daniel DeGraaf, manager of theI Forsythe Gallery, and a youth-1 ful visitor to the Nancy Wilkoff slow. They looked sort of odd standing together, DeGraaf, a I tall, dignified, well-dressed man in his forties and this scrawny youngster resplendent in blue ; Jeans with his high school acne in full bloom. The kid appearing somewhat incredulous at Wilkoff's "con- structions" began by asking,, "Do you buy this stuff?" "Certainly, if it's good," re- plied DeGraaf with a noticeable frown. "How much does it sell for?" "Well, these pieces range in price anywhere from $135 to about $600. "No shit? Hell I make stuff. like this that's just as good and I'll sell 'em to you a lot chaper." DeGraaf muttered something inaudible from my vantage point, and returned to the safety of his office. Wilkoff'sconstructions consist of corks, pebbles, jar tops, ma- sonite disks, flashlight batteries, gears and the like, all attached to partitioned boards. She's very big on plastic washers of various dimensions that are partially dis- torted by heat. The whole con- struction then gets a heavy dose of paint, usually grey, and viola -it's art! Or is it? And if we bestow her works with the title "Art" how about similar constructions done by her pimpled critic? Or does the fact that hers are more cost- ly and hang in the Forsythe make the difference. Or is the distinction merely that Wilkoff studied with the late Margaret Evans and? Jon Naberenzy at Youngtown University? It's true that she has exhibited nationally in the Motorola National Exhibit -Chicago, "Max-24" shows at Purdue and at Ball State. But hers is the stuff that high school art classes are made of. Plenty of logic and symmetry but very little imagination. Not that, constructions can't be works of art. But one expects the artist to be in some way differ- ent from his admirers. The artist is someone either endowed with more imagination than you or 1, or someone who exhibits a unique mastery of the technical skill of his or her medium, or preferably both. I found evidence of neither in the work of Wilkoff. She seems to operate under the sole axiom that "like objects go together." So you start with a board. Five corks fit nicely in a vertical tructive 7e craft? opaque glass disks, metal con- tainers, and clear glass cylin- ders. I don't attach these items to a board, but rather stack them in a plastic rack. And there is variation from one work to the next. You see, the order in which my dirty dishes go into the sink partially determines the form of the final creation in the drying rack. Thus, with a flourish I might begin with the plates in the low- er right corner of the rack. Sauc- ers fit nicely in a perpendicular line up the side. Of course, if I started with pots, the saucers would go elsewhere. Admittedly, I wasn't born with this flair. I'm sure Wilkoff would admit the same. My early works were far less ambitious and dem- onstrated very little of the con- summate skill I have developed Area By JOAN BORUS On M a r c b 29 continuing through April 2, the Southeast- ern Michigan area will be host to a unique festival presenting a forgotten segment of America's folk heritage. The five day eth- nic festival will center upon the Georgia Sea Islands, featuring Bessie Jones and the Georgia Sea Island Singers and Guy Cara- wan. The Georgia Sea Islands are lo- cated off the Georgia and Caro- lina coast. They are populated largely by plantation slaves, who as a result of isolation from the mainland, have managed to pre- serve many aspects of the old slave culture - a regional dia- lect called "Gullah;" a large collection of folk tales, supersti- tions and cures; and a unique version of Christianity, charac- terized by a "shouting" style of singing and community worship. Indeed, both the music and the hosts 6 culture of these Islands repre- sents the closest approximation of African culture in the United States. Bessie Jones has lived on one of these islands for over 40 years. She is not only noted for her singing of blues and spirit- uals, but is also a storyteller, folk historian and teacher of children's games and chants. Accompanying Bessie will be two other members of the Georgia Sea Island Singers, one of them grandchild, representing a span of three generations. Guy Carawan, the first white person to live on the Johns Is- land is a folk musician and folk- lorist, currently teaching at Pitz- er College in California. He has written a book about the Island- ers, in addition to making a film and recording their music. The festival is co-sponsored by the Peter Mattis Memorial Fund and the Michigan Council of the y r4 a. Sea Arts. The Mattis fund was estab- lished in memory of Dr. Peter Mattis, chairman of the Com- munity Psychology Area at the university. Its goal is the ex- posure of traditional music by native performers to members of the community who otherwise would not have the opportunity to experience this kind of music firsthand. The festival is a pilot project and the response has been so overwhelming that the Fund plans to establish a region- al network of folk interest groups as well as future festivals that tap Michigan sources of folk- lore. A wide variety of events will be featured, starting on March 29 and 30, with two concerts at 8:30 p.m, at the Ark, 1421 Hill Street. Besides concerts, there will also be demonstrations of children's games, storytelling and films, among other things. The complete listing of events is as follows: ' SUNDAY, MARCH 31: 4:00 p.m. Detroit Folklore So- ciety Concert at the Ferndale Community Center (400 E. 9 Mile, Detroit) ($1.50 adults; 50c kids admission)BESSIE, GUY, AND THEGEORGIA SEA IS- LAND SINGERS. Island MONDAY, APRIL 1: 3:00 p.m. English Department at Eastern Michigan U. Pray- Harold.-Hall, Room 204, Lecture- demonstration for 900 Michigan High School Students. BESSIE AND FRIENDS. 8:00 p.m. Afro-American Stu- dies at Trotter House (1443 Wash- tenaw). Lecture - demonstration. BESSIE AND FRIENDS. TUESDAY, APRIL 2: 10:00 a.m. Ann Arbor Com- munity Center and Project Com- munity (625 N. Main St.) Chil- dren's concert with participating daycare centers. BESSIE AND music FRIENDS. 1:00 p,m. Plymouth Middle School West (Ann Arbor Trail at Plymouth Rd.) Lecture - den- onstration. B E S S IE A NtD FRIENDS. 8:00 p.m. University of Midhi- gan Folklore Society. Folk Tale Telling Workshop. BESSIE AND FRIENDS. (location to bi &n- nounced) A half-hour film on tt G60t- gia Sea Islands rade by Guy Carawar is available and ill be shown at most of the everidt. SAE TUNE-UP CLINIC FREE TUNE-UP CLASS 7:30 p.m., Wed., March 27 170 P.A. First 30 to sign up can participot& ($5 fee for non-air cond. car) ($6 fee for air cond. car) TUNE-UP CLINIC 8-5:00-Sot., March 30 AUTO LAB-NORTH CAMPUS .;i:=:.. . .yin . 4 i 4:: .: {: ,::i":'t?:4 .....r d . a i .,:: c ; ;x : -. "Hers is the stuff that high school art classes are made of. Plenty of logic and symmetry but very .WV...V4 . ..4,V.V little imagination."smmmme row up the left border. Twelve rows of match heads adorn the top two inches of the work. A fancy five-inch pinion gear fits cleanly in the lower corner. The other lower corner holdsfour size "D" batteries . . . Craftsy yes; artsy no. The one I really liked was en- titled "Napolean." It had the same grey paint and plastic washers, but right in the middle of the board was a little pile of old steak bones. Now that's art. Alas, I must admit that, being a man with a penchant for logi- cal organization, I too create constructive art. My materials are slightly different than those of Wilkoff, however. I work with since acquiring my Texas Ware. I started with pocket change construction. You know, pennies in one row and dimes in another. Five pennies equal three quar- ters and a nickel in space and many interesting things can be done if You've got a couple of bucks to work with. The question is, of course, what do all us artists do with our creations? Nancy Wilkoff displays hers at the Forsythe. I prefer to destroy ny works and store the materials in a cup- board. As for that kid at the gal- lery, he had a different ap- proach: "My mom hangs them in my baby sister's bedroom." A RTH UR PENN'S BONNIE AND CLYDE(at 6:30&10.15) 1967 Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway pair up as the egendary Depression gangsters in Penns controvdr- sial tragic-comic look at violence and the America past. ERNST LUBITSCH'S TROUBLE IN PARADISE (at 8:30) 1932 A comedy of continental manners and morals with two clever high-class thieves providing the wit polish, and charm. With Miriam Hopkins, Adolphe Menju, Kay Francis. CINEMA GUILD $1each show ARCHITECTURE AU Preservation Act I: The Kinks step to center stage Bessie Jones By JEFF SORENSEN 1Rook "revivals" have been in vogue for the past year or so. Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, the Who, the Band, the Rolling. Stones, the Beach Boys, the Byrds and the Butterfield Blues Band (to name a few) have gotten back together or have bothered to show themselves in public for the first time in ages. Rumors about possible Beatle, Crean and Buffalo Springfield re- unions spring up almost weekly. Far too often, though, these "revivals" have taken place with maxirnal hype and minimal new musical output. Lost in the shuffle has been the return of the Kinks to prominence with the release of their excel- lent new album Preservation Act J -(RCA LPL1-5002-B) and their decision to tour the U.S. later this year. After three years of mediocrity,, Preservation Act I returns the Kinks to the headwaters of their classic albuns of '68-'70: The Kinks are the Village Green Preservation Society, Arthur and Lola-when the Kinks were the' best British rock group this side of the Stones and the Beatles. Unlike the Stones or the Beat- 1Is, who have always attempted to hide their British identities be- hind American blues and R & B forms, the Kinks have always worn their British citizenship with pride. The Kinks are unique. I don't believe that the brothers Davies have ever penned or performed a tune which didn't reflect in some way the Kinks' special view of' the world, their "Kinksdom" as they call it. Kink songshare often lightand airy-so light they often seem deceptively simpleonafirst lis- tening. Their songs are often twinged with nostalgia, but at the same time they preserve a feel- ing of wry humor. They speak of holding onto things that our civilization often inclines us to forget: compassion, caring for the small things in life, defendingthe less powerful, remembrance of things past. "As long as I gaze on Water- loo Sunset, I'll be in paradise," they sang on Something Else, and they captured a feeling of security in nature that has very rarely been put on record., On Preservation Society the Kinks made their pitch for pre- serving some of the values of the past, "God save the village green," they pleaded. Every song on the new album is a polished gem. Every one sinks into a very special place in the listeners' memory if you give it the chance.- Every Kink song is like meeting someone special to you. "Sitting in the Midday Sun" harkens back memories of "Sunny Afternoon." The song, sung by the tramp figure which reappears throughout the album, is a pure delight in which the tramp says he lives his life moment by moment "looking at the world go by" and enjoys it though most people think he's a complete good-for-nothing - a unique Davies' portrait. "One of the Survivors" is the hardest rocker from theKinks in a coon's age-since '64 when "You Really Got Me" the Kinks blasted out from every Top 40 radio station. Have a flair for artistic writing:' If you are interest- ed in reviewing poetry, and musts or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance. film. arts: Contact Am Editor, c/o The Michigan Daily. SAT., SUN., & WED. AT 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9:05 THURSDAY & FRIDAY at 7 p.m. & 9 p.m. WINNER Best Foreign FILM ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION T RUFFAUT'S DAY PG 1 I i i I DRUM LESSONS Learn rock, blues, and jazz drumming as well as classical farms. Reading and rotat- ing rhythms are also discussed. FOR ENROLLMENT CALL: 764.4980 336 S. STATE ST. I 603 E. Liberty mw DIAL 665-6290 Open 12:4$. Shows at 1 I 57.9A o m. r* r *** ryt kE**yt* I Open 9:30-9 Daily Sat. until 6:30 B .- U DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN MAY GRADS! March 30th is the last day to or- I I Wednesday, March 27 Day Calendar Commission for Women Mtg.: W. Conif. Rm., noon. Ctr. Russian, L. European Studies: E. George, "Post-War Hungarian Poetry," Co~nmoin Rm., Lane Hall, noon. Anatomy: J. Ranck, "Behavioral Cor- relates of Single Neurons in Hippo. eamtus of Unrestrained Rat," 4804 Med. Sci. II, 1:10 pm. Religion, Ethics: J. Cutler. "Contact- ing One's Epirit Guides," Aud. A. An- gell Hail, 3 pm. Germahic Langs. & Lits.: W. Mauser. U of Preiburg, "Henrich Boll, Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature," Lec. Rjhi. 1. 4 pn Katz - Newcemb Lectures in Social Psyhology: H. TaOOel, U of Bristol, "In- ter-IndivIdual & Inter-Group Behav- 16r," Rackheih Amph., 4 pm. P'ysts: H. Crane, "Experiments on the Earth's Magnetic Field: Why Does It Reverse?" P-A Bldg. Colloq. Rm., 4 pm. Statistics: T. Miyawaki, "Rejection of Outliers: A Bayesian View," 1007 An- gell Hall, 4 pm. Industrial & Operations Engrg.: C. Simo., "generic Properties of the Complementarity Problem," 229 W. Eng. Bldg., 4 pm. Psych. Frlins: "Obedience;" "Inter- tviews with My Lai veterans." Aud. 3, 14LB, 4 pm. Ott. Coordination of Ancient, Mod- ern Studie;: R. Merkelbach, Univ. of kol, germany, "The Bey of Roses: A Modern Turkish Tale & Its Roots in Ancient Ritual," Aud. A, Angell Hall, 4:16 pm. English Lang. Institute: lecture, film, dover, Mass. A teaching internship, $400 plus room and board in a dorm. More details at CP&P. MBA at U of Toledo, deadlineqfor summer term is May 17, for fall quar- ter August 20. Graduate assistantships available for students over 3.0 GPA. Write Director, 2801 W. Bancroft St., Toledo 43606. For Grad students at Southern Ill U at Edwardsville, resident manager of U Apt's pays $270/mo plus housing & tui- tion. write Tower Lake area office, Box 36A, SIU, Edwardsville, 11 62025. Scholarships available for grad stu- dents at U of ND. write Dean, Grand Forks, ND 58201. der caps and gowns. Order at WINNER MOE SPORT SHOPS 711 N. University _ OF 10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS including BEST MOVIE s a little Confidence. (PG) "THE STEj There's only one place wih seven revolutionary sandwiches . . . Scotty's. Try the revolutionary great taste of the spirited Royal Scot . . . a big patty of pure beef, tomato, onion slices, & lettuce, topped with Scotty's Great-American sauce. 4 FI - - - -- J- - - . . - - a An