The Michigan Daily--Tuesday, June 12, 1979--Page 11 NOGUCHI EXHIBIT A T DETROIT INSTITUTE Random, artificial finely blended By R.J. SMITH For all the perpetual change of modern art, much is still told in the way the artist relates to his influences. Im- portant choices must be made about how much to draw from what has come before, as well as about how much to leave out. Going either route; necessitates courageous decisions. For every artist who fails to rise above' derivation, there is a case of an artist who has eliminated so many possibilities for himself that he finds himself absolutely sourceless. Isamu Noguchi is the sort of artist who constantly summons up in his work a great deal of what he has learned. What "Noguchi's Imaginary Lan- dscapes," at the Detroit Institute of Ar- ts through June17, shows us most about Noguchi is his remarkable ability to simple figure rising gracefully upward with its tall, square column of alter- nating serpentine and marble brick- shaped slabs. In every part of the room, older ideas are fused with Noguchi's. The hall is filled with objects created over a span of four decades, but closely linked chronologically by their remarkable stylistic unity. There are several exceptions to this decade-spanning unity, such as the con- structivist works, the most notable of which is the sparse and delicately chilling work of cloth, string, and wood called "The World is a Foxhole." NOGUCHI'S OUTSIDE influences become more rareified with his plans and models for various contourings of land. From easily understandable works like plavrounds and parks to the statement. TAKE, FOR instance, his "This Tor- tured Earth." If it could somehow be conceived asa painting, "Earth" would retain an almost abstract ex- pressionistic nature by way of its violent gashes and rude dips. But because it is an established part of man's environment (or would be, if realized), "Earth" is also a work of art that would affect everyone, even the person who didn't know he was in the presence of "art." This duality, evident in the lan- dscapes, is found variously expressed throughout Noguchi's work. On the one hand a dreamlike, free-flowing ran- domness takes over, as can be seen in his experiments with Japanese gar- dens, or in his minimal, brilliant set designs and props for the Martha Graham Dancers; on the other hand, there is a reverence for work which displays profoundly the labor of human hands, a penchant for using shining metallic surfaces and geometricity. Such works as his massive "Cube Poised on a Point" in New York (star- tlingly - and probably not accidentally - our own cube on People's Plaza looks much like it) and "Intetra," a large stainless steel pyramidic fountain, exhibit this desire for a machine-like, or at least machine-worked, aura. Noguchi's works at both ends of this spectrum offer very deep - and very different - rewards. However, the most satisfying work, the work which can both inspire and fascinate simultaneously, is that which combines the two. Much of his Brancusi-like sculpture does this, as does his "Mud Mountain," a piece of basalt with con- trasting eroded-looking and polished textures. MOST NOTABLE for those in and around the Motor City however, this in- terplay can be, seen in the fountain at Dodge Plaza in Detroit. The fountain it- self seems very machine-oriented, with its powerful and simple geometrical form and its emphasized metallic con- struction Yet not only is the fountain a sculp- ture, it creates sculpture, reacting to such things as the weather, forming a single endlessly-varying sculpture with its water jets. For all the sensors and meters and miles of cable we know to be on the inside, what we observe when we see the water jets spouting is-an art form incredibly closely linked to its changing environment, art eerily removed from human influence. The Dodge fountain is a wondrous human- made and man-oriented symbol of heroic dimensions, as well as an ingenious exhibition of transformation and randomness in art. This integration of the random and natural with that which is human-made is perhaps the greatest theme uniting the work found in "Landscapes." It is a wide-open theme that invites great exploration, and that also opens the artist up to charges of directionlessness. However, Noguchi's "Imaginary Landscapes" clearly succeeds, because it presents us with a sampling of the work of an artist who seems never to create without a firm understanding of what he wants to do, or without a conviction in his ability to accomplish it. The large group of works is extraordinarily intriguing and moving, and of an order few living sculptors can match. AVENUE at LBERTY ST. 761-9700 Formerly.Ftth Forum Theater "One of the movie mile- stones of the decade" I -REX REED Nogucnls mask for Urpheus was used in the Martha Graham production of the modern dance work. The central tube covers the dancer's eyes, sym- bolizing the character's metaphorical blindness. forge a strong personal identity while unselfconsciously displaying ideas in- fluenced by such people as Miro, Bran- cusi, Arp and the constructivists squarely on his sleeve. Through a strong combination of sculptures, set designs, and models and plans for real and proposed land works, "Imaginary Landscapes" presents Noguchi as an artist for whom development means broadening approaches as much as it does refining a personal style. THE LARGE room full of sculpture that is the first part of the exhibit im- mediately confronts the viewer with the broadness of Noguchi's powers. There are several stand-up works of in- terlocking pieces, made in the forties, which summon up the work of the surrealists in their vaguely animal-like forms and their mysteriously intrusive presences. There is the marvelous "Spirit in Flight," evocative both in' title and in form of much of Brancusi's work. Noguchi, who apprenticed to Brancusi for several years, follows Brancusi theme of the thin, elegantly: sculptor's famed (and as yet unbuilt) "Sculpture To Be Seen From Mars," Noguchi's individual drive becomes more prominent. Decades before Earthworks were planned and created en mass by sixties' artists, Noguchi had pioneered the notion of the sculpted earth. And if his landscaping projects seem to have little direct connection to the Earthworks movement, Noguchi's remarkable at- tempts to make man's total environ- ment a work of art are undeniable. Traces of those who influenced his sculpture still persist; his "Contoured Playground For New York" appears to be a three-dimensional conception of Miro's biomorphs, and much of the equipment he has designed for his playgrounds seems highly construc- tivist (not to mention unsafe). But what far and away dominates is Noguchi's own imaginativeness, an imaginativeness that masterfully achieves both a sort of symbolic, organi- cally mysterious expressiveness as well as a practical, -universa TONIGHT AT ONT Wed.-Sun. 4th CHIIEPTIER - for more info call 994-5350 - - - - - - - -