0 0 0 0i ... .........................::. :...::::}v.->:-: >:d}r;:}}:}: }:}.t, : :":::::::. :........ .... .tt:":::::.... .r::. "::::, t,::.;:.........:..;....,............:....y: 5}:{"o-}"":"{:-:;:;"}::::{::::.::{.:...x;:r.}"{">}::::":",::a:::.; .r .. <'rr..v ..4 v:"...x.n\ %}$v'"i:}:r" ... }'.....: ":: r, riĀ°:, .................. ............... n......... ................t....}.. :.... vv: "w:: w: ut........: ".:......:::.{ti"}:":::}:4}f..v.:.. ..... ..... Row s ... ............... fv......................nv::::::::n".v:::: ..............t r...t..................... ................... t....r:.t?"::::nv t":.vty},{{"}:v.t.. tv.. v.... t..........t................. v ... .}:tr: r,::::::4...t. r... .........v... .. ... ... .. n.... r....n ..............: ... w: vnw: .. .v.... ....... v.";::r::..::h ................ }.'{{v.A:: v::r .. {"n"..::: v",, v.. r.....trr :\u't:... ............ t .r .................... .{ .....v . ......v..t.................... .....t. nt........ ....{...................t................ n ................ n ...: v.. k ,.} ....t}...v ....................h.r......ri.t............................,n.................::.v:::::::.;.v,.,.,..t}...............................................................:......h.. .{:.;.,.n.v.::.:::}x,":::".v:N:::r:::r:.:t".r,:.-. {iti;.."vw:::::::r::}::::r.:.....:.... '4...4.,.n.:..!., h{.:{-0."...v.".v..>.{x.,f,".y{"}T.",h.titir:{{M1V:ttht rrri Left - Blue tinted sweatshirt by Jag. Dark blue denims by Compliments. Right - Blue, striped cotton shirt and Beige pleated pants. All available at Bivouac. Aqua cotton jacket by Liz Claiborne. Red cotton sweater and white pleated walking shorts. All from Crowley's Famil photos P Darcy Drew Greene: Now S Then Blixt Gallery 229 Nickels Arcade March 25-April 30 By Deborah Lewis O NE HAS TO ADMIRE the Blixt Gallery. It is a thriving establish- ment while exhibiting but a single art medium - photography. Though photography as a fine art has been ac- cepted in ever-widening circles in recent decades, there is a surprisingly low number of pure photography galleries. In just the past year, Blixt has brought the Ann Arbor area top-notch exhibits such as Free Press photographer David Turnley's documentation of a dyingcommunity in "Poletown" and Lucien Clerque's "Nudes" and "Picasso Portraits., Both of these shows come to mind as being particularly captivating, possessing both personal and universal appeal. Unfortunately, Darcy Drew Greene's "Now and Then" exhibition, showing March 25 thru April 30, hits the veiwer neither in the head nor the heart- Greene's juxtaposition of past and present is a transient vision which is poignantly personal, often interesting, but contains the inherent emotional and cerebral depth of a petrie dish. Greene presents her efforts matted in pairs. One smaller print represents a past instance, entitled "Then," and the larger photo depicts "Now." The exhibitors, however, failed to edit out Greene's more mediocre work. The show covets a few treasures, while the majority chip away at the intended ef- feet. Blixt's press release states that Greene's "attempt to recapture or recreate can be rewarding or bitter- sweet - change is inherent in the nature of all things." The majority of the show fails to display such a change. "The Trolley Car" is one of the exhibit's most touching works. The smaller photograph of the set shows a young man on a night train, passively staring into the camera, his head tilted to one side like a toy dog in the back window of a Nova. From 1976 to 1982 this fellow becomes a father of two. The larger picture has the kids on his lap, each looking in a different direction; the father, as well, gazes out to the sun- ny cityscape. The change is from resigned desolation in New York to a brighter, prouder environment in Boston six years later. This is one of the most inspiring works in what I call Greene's show-em-without-kids-then- with-em series. Another fine example in this category is "The Bisses." 1976: A young couple is hugging in the sunshine as if they hadn't a care in the world. In the com- plementary shot, the updated couple along with their two children huddle together for shelter against the rain. They still don't look worried. The mother's forehead is crinkled, her eyes are almost as wide as her smile. What tightens the shot is the daughter under the umbrella, vigilantly wiping tears from her face. It is all well and good to see that the Bisses, like many other couples in the exhibit, have produced offspring. Any well-maintained family album will display the same sort of reproduction and growth that Greene's work conveys; she fails to let the nonplussed viewer in on the significance of "Now and Then." "Two Cousins" shows two young girls first sitting atop luggage under an exit sign in Dublin, Ireland, then riding their banana-seat bikes in a Chicago alley four years later. The girls move through time and country while main- taining their pastimes. This tops the some-things-stay-the-same series. "The Breakfast" shows a husband/ father reading a newspaper at the same breakfast table in both 1976 and 1982. In both photographs the people around him are blurred while he remains static behind the news. Another stand-out is "Grandma Greene and Christina," a successful documentation of the relationship bet- ween a grandmother and grandchild at the beach and later at the young woman's confirmation. As a whole, however, "Now and Then" is a dull show. Greene's style is on an adamantly personal level that could be - but isn't - augmented by an element of common appeal and under- standing. k S"eutar ~Xtinrii "S, De Dil th re ov ml se GI C 315 SERV MON ,%on . . ...... . White, cotton shirt and faded jeans by Closed. Denim vest . with snaps by Dweedo. All from Bivouac. d J N 61 G d Y OZ N Z! Sweater and blue cotton pants. All from J. Riggins. 8 Weekend/April 8,1983 Now and Then: The Trolley Car t mou