Page 6-Tuesday, May 15, 1979-The Michigan Daily 'Taking It' manages via politics By JOSHUA PECK arrangements of the way men and Maybe the sixties aren't irresurrec- women relate to each other, with their tably dead after all, parents and other older influences, and True, yesteryear's politically in- intrasexually. clined students are gone, and public WHEN, IN the late sixties, male issues that excite the community's in- radical leftists were first confronted terest are fewer and farther between. with feminist ideas, many initially But there is another side to political ac- found them to be undeserving of atten- tivism that has floundered less (and tion, compared to the immense task of, perhaps even flourished) with the say, dismantling the running dog passing of that glorious decade, Tom military industrial complex (whew!) Hayden's new allegiance to Jerry But Hoffman and the rest eventually Brown, and Angela Davis' descent into swung around to a point of view obscurity notwithstanding. I refer to somewhat more liberated than this the radical personal changes on which early, crude one. It came to seem grander, societal ones are built; new ridiculous to imagine n newod ner wherein the old roles of oppressor and oppressed had not been vanquished, but merely filled by new characters, i.e., men in the former role and women in the latter. Gradually, the notion of sexual equality worked its way into radical rhetoric, The Counterculture, of course, spawned art, both from its political and personal arms. Much of it was crude and unsubtle, and divorced itself from traditional roots. The garish murals that screamingly decorate the northern and western sides of the University's Library for Afro-American Studies are a good example. Utterly untutored use of color and form in the (art?) works thrust the message - in this case, black fury and hatred - all the more menacingly into the foreground. THE THEATRE Company of Ann Taking It From the Top! Theatre Company of Ann Arbor Canterbury Loft May 12-13 EliseBryant Tom Kuma Stella Mifsad Stephanie Ozer Deb Shelden Christopher Wakefield Theatre Company ofAnn Arbor, directors andproducers Arbor is also a cultural offspring of the activist years, and, like the Libary's ar- tist, has eschewed some of the traditional tools and methods of its art. There is nothing even remotely Stanislavskian about the -six actors' ap- proach to their latest offering, Taking It From the Top! It is scarcely a concern that any kind of fabricated charac- terization be sustained. The performers are at all times either speaking their own words, undisguised, or broadly posturing as someone else, with little internalization to speak of. Taking It consists of three playlets, each with its own focus and direction. The first, "Introspections," puts each of the six actors on display to deliver a little narrative about some life ex- perience that affected him/her par- ticularly profoundly. Elise speaks of the joy and relief that holidays brought her in the ghetto, Stephanie mulls over the sad strength of Jewish motherhood, as she saw it in her mother (and her mother's circle) in her native Bronx, and Chris gives a brief discourse on his struggle with competitiveness, both on the playing field and in the classroom. The second playlet, "At Second Sight,'' is an embarrassingly simple message from the cast's three women to their mothers - "Mom, I'm sorry I didn't understand how oppressed you were when I was little, but now I do, an- I identify with you and I love you." The women take quite a while to say this, though, stopping along the way to reflect on all manner of feminist questions. The basic point of these side issues is that women ought really to resist societal insistence on abandon- ment of sisterhood, and to treat other women as "comrades, co-creators, and co-inspirators." The men finish up with "Man-i-fest," a refreshing and amusingly harsh treatment of stereotypically male roles. "Man-i-fest" uses frenetic and furious running in place as a metaphor for the reality of masculine existence. Men in the audience are incited to discard competition,-as a lifestyle in favor of open emotions, comraderie and brotherhood. Curiously, the actors looked somewhat uncomfortable when the script, such as it was, called on them to embrace each other. But then, given the environment males have been forced to live in up until now, that discomfort may have been in the eye of the beholder. At any rate, political fervor is a welcome source for new ideas in theater. TCAA will fit the bill quite ,nicely, crudeness and all. Artist Chuang a bang By SARAH CASSILL The paintings of Chuang Che show us the artist's vision of the world, landscapes of Nature, and depictions of her force. Bold brushwork, textures and unique color development characterize these creations, now on display at DeGraaf Forsythe Galleries in the Nickels Arcade. Chuang's work embodies contrast: the contrast of soft color washes gashed with black brushstrokes; the contrast of empty space with furious activity. Many of the his paintings suggest the elements colliding in a genesis of energy evoking fire and smoke, clouds and lighting, and yin and yang. Texture enriches Chuang's images. Trusting his medium to create shapes, he lets the paint run and drip. At times, the depth of the texture suggests that he must have thrown down his brush and worked the paint with his hands. color takes on new versatility-there are blacks with intaglio depth, backgrounds with the tex- ture of a printmaker's soft ground. He creates an effect similar to that of a potters glaze by mingling colors and employing cracked surfaces. This is. notable in Landscape 1978 no. 98, wherein washes of pink and blue merge to pond green in a skillfully crafted evolution of color. CHUANG TITLES all his abstract contemplations on nature "Landscapes." Though he is influenced by traditional Chinese techniques, he goes beyond traditional forms to create modern images of nature. Landscape 1979 no. 26, a trip- tych of large canvasses reminiscent of silkscreens, exemplifies this. Chuang's technique echoes Chinese painting whose "empty" spaces signify as much as do its figures. The eye travels from a wash to forms, back to nothingness. Space and shapes resist definition; they may be air, water, stone, even flesh. Strong brush work accents the painting. Chuang displays a strong feeling for nature atits most basic, a fascination with the elements, their changes, and what their union creates. His paintings brim with movement-all directions akilter, diagonals that lead the eye on, more diagonals that interrupt, then disappear into washes. We see mountains and storm shapes; we sense wind blowing, eruption, collision. There is, in fact, a multitudeof things to experience in these paintings. You are urged to experience them.