Variety By KAREN BORNSTEIN To collect the most recent works of seven different artists is exciting, fulfilling, and quite a lot of fun. But to take these creations, as unique as the artists themselves, and organize and present them in such a manner that ea work shimmers, and your eye can flow smoothly from one captivating piece to the other rather than confusedly dart back and forth amongst a hodgepodge of wonder, is something terribly dif- ficult. Yet, upon the rare occasion this is achieved, the result becomes an exhibit that is a veritable work of art in and of Qerd~i n nnt itself. This month the Alice Simsar Gallery is proof that these occasions do exist, through a beautiful display of "New Works by Gallery Artists." the exhibit features the latest work of Hannelore Baron, Stanley Boxer, Joyce Kozloff, Billy Lee, Ellen Stavinsky, Cornelia von Mengershausen, and Adja Yunkers. Because the works cover a wide range of media, it is amazing that they work together so well, each acting as a transitional device for the next. Lee, a U-M School of Art faculty member, exhibits the two largest works in the show. These complex construc- tions of black wood inlaid with machined aluminum are carefully calculated to create the effect of a three-dimensional grid. The aluminum regions, shining with intensity, refract light and continually glow, changing with the slightest variation in shadows or movements. Through these constructions, Lee suc- The Michigan Daily-Friday, August 4, 1978-PageS5 reigns at Simsar Gallery f Daily Photo by JOHN KN( An exhibit of "New Works by Gallery Artists" is running this month at the Alice Sinssar Gallery. The exhibit includes work by seven artists. cessfully explores the possibilities of chance within a physical territory that is controlled and finite. THE GEOMETRIC precision of Lee's work easily drifts over into the lithographs of Kozloff, who works in New York and emphasizes design and pattern in her vividly colored pieces. Intricate color or dot-filled lines twist and interlock, forming a variety of geometric shapes that interlock as well upon the recognition of newly-defined spaces. Kozloff's delightful lithographs, so closely resembling brightly colored mosaic tiles, are inspired by sources REC ORDS ranging from Mexican borders to Islamic design books. The works of Stavinsky, who is also from New York, seem to pulsate with the excitement of being freshly created, and the method of creation seems con- stantly re-occurring before your eyes. These are extremely intimate and per- sonal pieces, made-of the artist's own lossely bound handmade paper, which resembles a thick gauze. The intense life of these works is generated by her putting different pieces of paper, soft and fuzzy like the most fragile of fabrics, against one another or com- bining these masses with stitches of golden thread. The result is a set of works that is oddly sensual - soft, yet jagged and coarse. BARON, WHO WAS born in Germany and has exhibited extensively in New York, creates small and delicate collages in mixed media. The collages rest upon a background of fine cloth. Needle-thin ink outlines surround the area on which cut portions have been attached, while thinned red pigment bleeds through sections of cloth. Despite the small, self-contained scale and the fine quality of materials, a disturbing element of chaos and nightmarish confusion seems to per- sistently stream through Adja Yunkers' works. These pieces continue to demon- strate his exploration of the layering and backward/forward play of prin- tmaking media. This is evident in an embossed lithograph of brown and cream-colored tones, entitled "Icon." Of another character is Baxter, who uses physical figures of humans, plants and animals to create drawings of dreamy fantasy. Within these works the large shapes, penciled lines and rich pastel colors flow together musically, like the rippling water they are often meant to represent. IF THIS EXHIBIT is a work of art it- self, however, there must be one area, one aspect that helps make it the won- derful display of creativity that it is, and this is the work of Cornelia von Mengershausen. Von Mengershausen has had her works shown at the Simsar Gallery over a number of years, and these works reflect her preoccupation with the possibilities of the American desert landscape. They are crepted from vast, resonating spaces of earth-tone color, overlayed with shade upon shade to suggest the softest and deepest shadows, the cliffs, or the canyons. These works are constructed with such attuned sensitivity and tenderness that the richest and boldest of statements seem to be made, statemen- ts that further enhance the beautiful works that surround them and that help to define the gallery as the work of art this exhibit has made it. --.c California Jam II Various artists Colambia PC2 35389 What would attract 250,000 people to a racetrack infield for eleven straight hours on a warm California spring day? The answer is not the Second Coming, but "California Jam II," a mammoth rock concert-publicity stunt which oc- cupied the Ontario Motor Speedway last March. Despite the size of the event, this con- cert had little in common with its forebears at Woodstock and Monterey, two "happenings" that marked a dynamically growing awareness in the '60s of the fearsome power of rock and roll. This double alum' ,released by Columbia, features cstly.Confumbia ban- ds, and the renditions of the largely recent hits are anything but landmarks. MUCH OF THE music is too slow (Heart's "Little Queen" and "Love Alive") or sloppily performed (Aerosmith's "Same Old Song and Dance"). Ted Nugent gets a chance to inflict his ear-shattering rock on the masses, with a monotonous "Free For All" and a surprisingly well-recorded "Snakeskin Cowboy." Carlos Santana's guitar shines like burnished silver in his two Latin-rock numbers, "Dance Sister Dance" and "Jugando." Although. California Jam II isn't garishly commercial enough to offend anyone's tastes, it's just about com- pletely useless. -Tim Yagle We never hove to cover onything up UM Stylists at the UNION The Saline Area Players are accepting applications far: Artistic Director "INHERIT THE WIND" Artistic Director Musical Director "MAME" Choreography Dates: November 2, 3, 4-March 1, 2, 3 Call: 429-9118 or 429-5133 after 5 pm or write: P.O. Box 334, Saline, Ml, 48176. DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS AND "_ SUPPORTING MATERIALS--AUGUST 11 . I It .... J44________________________ ----mmos ,..