Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vvednesday, July 16, 1975 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 16, 1975 The Street Fair: South'U' dons its summer finest By PAULINE LUBENS the bulk of the participants Weavers, photographers, paint- come from other parts of the ers, potters and a variety of country. other artists will line South Unm-Brunvand maintains that the extravaganza is "not an ama- versity and half of East Univer- teur show - these are profes- sity under the shade of their sional arts and crafts people. white-canopied ten-by-ten booths This is how they make their as the 16th annual Ann Arbor living." Street Fair swings into gear to- day. THESE participants are ap- After a painstaking four or parently the cream of a crop of five hours of hammering and nearly 1,000 applicants .who are nailing, they can now settle filtered through a juried selec- back and take care of business. tion system employed since 1963. They will show and sell their.- The potential exhibitors sub- artwork each day and evening mit slides of their work to the until Saturday at 5 p.m. when selection committee and the they will close shop and go screening process begins there. home or move on to another After an artist is juried in one art fair. year he or she may detour the system the following year and THE CITY will obligingly de- be automatically invited back. tour traffic around the fair to Since 1959 the Ann Arbor make room for the crowds of Street Fair has drawn patrons patrons who come to touch, into the streets under .the hot look, accept and reject. sun to mingle, enjoy the re- According to Richard Brun- freshments from the food stands vand, coordinator of this year's and to poke through the wares Street Fair, 20 per cent of the of both artists and businesses. 325 artists hail from Ann Arbor or elsewhere in the state, but THE AFFAIR was originally THE TEN BY TEN white canopied booths line South and East University, their shelves brim- ming with a myriad of artwork. The patrons come to poke through the wares of artists whose mediums range from glass blowing to weaving. STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 SO. UNIVERSITY HOME COOKING IS OUR SPECIALTY Breakfast All Day Specials This Week 3 Eggs, Hash Browns, Beef Stroganoff Toast & Jelly-$1.05 Chinese Pepper Steak Ham or Bacon or Home-made Beef Stew Sausage withr 3 Eggs, Goulash Hash Browns, Toast & g99 Rolls Jelly-$1.40 Home-made Soups (Beef, Barlev, 3 Eggs, Rib Eye Steak, Clam Chowder, etc.) Toast & Jelly--$1.90 Chili Veqetable Tempura Toas & JI~y-1.90 (served otter 2 p.m.) FAST AND FRIENDLY SERVICE BY MR. AND MRS. LEE SUMMER HOURS " * IMONDAY-SATURDAY 8-8 SUNDAY 9-2 769-2288 1313 SO UNIVERSITY STEVE'S LUNCH conceived by the South Univer- sity Businessmen's Association to coincide with the annual Ann Arbor's Summer Bargain Days. Brunvand hails the, conception as "an attempt to create a quality showing of summer crafts." He insists the stress on quality and aesthetics remain top priority. This emphasis is embodied in a warning Brunvand issues the artists: "If you return year after year with the same stuff, you'll soon be out of the show. You must show that you are "WE COOPERATE whole- heartedly with the other art growing with different tech- niques and art forms." TO INSURE this, juries tour the booths daily during the fair to evaluate each artist's per- formance. In his eight years of involve- ment, he claims he has watched it grow "from a quaint art fair to the fair it is now with a thou- sand applicants." "We have been swallowed up by our own success and now bear the brunt of the criticism that we are growing too large." This criticism prompted the de- velopment of the present jury system. "We decided not to grow in size but to grow in quality," Brunvand says. fairs but we do not want to lose sight of our philosophy," he adds. Consequently, the Street Fair has remained independent of the coinciding fairs.. Its booths have kept their $25' price tags while still managing to finance the en- tire event aided only by contri- butions from the South Univer- sity Merchants Association. The only problem the coordin- ators of the Street Fair have found is the appearance of "poachers." These are people who are not official participants in the Street Fair but set up their own booths either on the Diag or other areas. WHILE WILLING to under- stand the financial problems these free exhibitors may have, Brunvand maintains that their numbers are growing out of hand and may force an end to the Street Fair in lieu of city and University policies against selling on certain property with- out a license. The officials of the Fair have thus far declined to employ po- lice but have preferred to mere- ly "politely" ask the extra ex- hibitors to leave. The Ann Arbor Street Fair comes and gose like any other special event. As woodcarver Carl Wesen- burg, a participant in fifteen of the sixteen Street Fairs says, "Everyone's tired by the end, but by fall or winter the ex- citement starts all over and we're quite ready by this time." He concludes, "There's a great fellowship. I look forward to it each year-we all do." ART, FAIR SPECIALS t IVOUAC JEANS ...... $4.99 (reg.s10) WESTERN SHIRTS $4.99 (reg. $10) OVERALLS-PAINTER PANTS CAMPING EQUIPMENT *NAME BRANDS BIVOUAC LISTEN TO WUOM 91.7 FM THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN d On your transistor 0 in your car e in your home THE FINEST IN STEREO MUSIC, NEWS, COMMENT AND SPORTS Paid for by "The Friends of WUOM/WVGR" WATERBEDS Hare's Ear SOFT-FURNITURE. Lap ;Seam Watermattresses ALL SIZES, INCLUDING KING, SAME PRICE! ALSO: Art Fair Special on HAND TIED MOROCCAN RUGS