Page 18-Wednesday, July 25, 1979-The Michigan Daily The Artists: Ceramist develops and tests pieces in his { ontinued from Page 17) Ann Arbor is a good place for an artist to live and work, according to Remsen. "The people are sophisticated and know what they want," he said. "The best thing about it (Ann Arbor) is as an ar- tist you can't rest on your laurels . .. you have to keep working on what you do," Remsen continued. He said the dozens of local professional potters keep the field competitive and active. "Everyone is feeding off of everything else," and , "regional style" has developed, he added. Like Remsen most of the practicing artisans in the city got their start in the street fair here, he said. His beautiful andpractical pieces are the result of his undergraduate training in primitive technologies and an interest in clay work, he said. Both subjects, he explained, reflect "a preoc- cupation with having an understanding of im- mediate forces. . . putting things together. . . and seeing what makes things tick." While most of his high-fired ceramics are thrown on a traditional potters' wheel Remsen also molds some pieces using a "slab" method. Only "pre- industrial techniques" are used in his production pottery, he said. According to the nine year veteran exhibitor, the own kitchen Ann Arbor art fair is generally lucrative for the ar- tists who produce a "marketable item." He said he earns about 20 per cent of his yearly income at the city fair. Remsen's booth on East University, in front of Randall Laboratories, is filled with many forms of his work. He said the typical reaction of fair-goers to his collection at the Summer Art Festival is, "Oh, what a lot of different things." "I try to master a whole variety of decorative techniques to keep myself from getting too bored," he said. One of the large bowls was marbled on the inside with swirls of deep red and white. The ideas for his showpieces come from his produciton work, Remsen said. When a new variation or experiment, or- even an accident "comes off particularly well" it can be incorporated into a special work. He said his production oriented studio serves as a laboratory where his ideas evolve and mutate into his ceramic pieces. A squirrel wandered down the sunstreaked steps to the artist's basement studio. The two had ob- viously met before. "I'm afraid he'll come down here and eat my clay," Remsen said. "Why don't you come upstairs, Buddy," he asked. The animal fell for the bribe and followed him up- stairs for a peanut. Daily Photo by Remsen Stitchery expert uses ancient craft to aid homeland By PATRICIA HAGEN Someday, Robia Shafie wants to go "back home" to Palestine. Until that day, the stitchery expert plans to use the profits from her first exhibition of intricate embroidery to help the people of her homeland in the Middle East where she learned the beautiful craft. Because of her husband's prompting, Shafie said she decided to exhibit the 90 assorted pieces of her work ac- cumulated in the 15 years she has been practicing the tedious silk thread craft. "I thought I should get it out for this good cause," she explained. At the Summer Arts Festival, spon- sored by the University Artists and Craftsmen Guild, Shafie will share a booth with her Palestinian friend Suad Amiri. The profits earned on their work will be donated to the Palestine Aid Society, Shafie said. The dark-haired artist looked over the suitcase packed full of her work. "This is my first year entering it (the art fair)," she said softly. "I hope it will work out all right." Shafie came to Ann Arbor in 1966 when her husband enrolled in the University to work on his Ph.D. The next year, during the Six Days War, Israel gained control of the land Shafie calls home. Because the Shafies left Palestine before the 1967 conflict, the government of Israel will not allow them to return to live with their family, Shafie explained. "The people here are very nice," she said in her suburban Ann Arbor living room, "but there's nothing like home." Palestine still exists in the hearts and minds of her people who lived in the area near the West Bank of the Jordan River, she said. The brightly colored needlework she creates is a beautiful and practical craft that has been passed on "for years and generations" in her homeland, Shafie said. She continued, "Back home you learn it," in a stichery course taught in the public schools. "These are the dresses worn in the villages," she said with a glance at a brown caftan-like dress with richly con- trasting gold and red embroidery around the hems and neckline. Shafie fingered the burlap fabric of one of the purses she planned to exhibit. "After we use the rice we take the bag and embroider on it. You have to economize and use the things around you." In addition to her training in Palestine, Shafie has attended some art courses and workshops at the Univer- sity and Eastern Michigan University. Currently she is studying elementary education at EMU and hopes to earn her degree in about a year. Her closely stitched designs take a long time to complete. But some ar- ticles go relatively quickly, a book bag takes "only" about 45 hours to com- plete, she said. "These are my favroties," she said picking up two intricately stitched pillow covers. With an appraising glan- ce at the tedious workmanship, Shafie admitted, "They take forever." Preparing for the art fair has been very time consuming, Shafie said, and pricing the various pieces has been especially difficult. "What is your time worth?" she asked, looking over the work that had taken her years to do. HOLD PING UP HALF TE SKY: a tribute to women in film This Fall, Cinema 2 will present an exploration of the roles and influences of Women in film, both behind the camera and on the screen. Shajie ..e... Cinema it is a non-profit organiza- tion providing Ann Arbor with the best in alternative cinema. For program information, call the University of Michigan operator- 764-1817. speakers/films check our FALL schedule A "0 ooks £ Periodicals Chinese Papercuts *Cards Visit our booth on State near William for the finest books and periodicals on crafts, alter- native energy and architecture and moreI 3361 S. State Street 663-0215 U ~, i f "a""""v 5: Rb' OPF