ARTS The Michigan Daily Friday, September 9, 1983 Page 7 Museum exhibits Kamrowski By Suzanne Ramljak A ARBOR IS harboring a treasure. Gems, waiting to dazzle the receptive eye, glow and effervesce in an exhibit at the University Museum of Art entitled Gerome Kamrowski: A Retrospective Exhibit. It is a rich display of a vital artistic career. It is appropriate that Kamrowski's first retrospective exhibit be held at the University since he served as a faculty member at the School of Art for 37 years before retiring this year. He is the most distinguished of Ann Arbor's artists with an international reputation and many credits to his name. Kamrowski has found the university mileu, distant from the vogue and commercial hype of art centers and art dealers, very congenial to his personal developement and creative ex- ploration. The exhibit documents 50 years of Kamrowski's artistic growth and transformation. Beginning his career in the '30s, Kamrowski was a member of the American Abstract Ar- tists Group, working and studying in New York and Chicago. Surrealism became a major influence on his works of the '40s. "Surrealism allowed for certain developements and freedoms...instead of repeating the stereotypic modes of previous styles...it was primarily op- timistic," says Kamrowski. "In Surrealist work the idea was to ap- proach the work without moral or aesthetic considerations so there was a sense of adventure and surprise in the works," he explains. The works of this period bear the mark of this creative freedom and ad- venture. These paintings are filled with seething shapes and sensuous con- figurations. They evoke both the microscopic world of cells and fibers and the cosmic world of stellar ex- plosions and invisible forces. They are glimpses into hidden regions, dynamic and spacious terrains, familiar yet exotic. In viewing these works one en- ters an' enchanted garden nourished and invigorated by Kamrowski's generous and poetic spirit. Evocative titles such as "Visceral Flowers", "Sensations", and "Embalmed Universe" accompany these works. The works of the '50s and '60s show a new emphasis on pigment and surface texture. Whereas his earlier pictures had visual depth yet were physically flat, these later works live in three dimensions, projecting outward into the viewers space. These works are more abstract with fewer recognizable shapes. Kamrowski describes the ap- proach here as "letting the material it- self, and the play of the material, suggest the image." Kamrowski's preoccupations with the dynamic properties of materials led him, in the late '50s, to organize the Hylozoist Group of Michigan Artists. Hylozoism has as its basic premise the doctrine that "matter is animated: that matter and life are inseparable." In light of this doctrine these textural, material-based works can be read as representations of the active, evolving qualities of matter. Kamrowski continued exploring the expressive possibilities of various materials into the '70s and '80s. One finds styrofoam, wood, enamel, marble dust, metal shavings, beads and other substances integrated into his geographical imagery. His interests also led him beyond the painted image into experiments with painted geodesic domes and wind menageries. In a less philosophical vein Kamrowski also created wildly decorated, genital-bedecked beaded beasts. Commenting that "Everyone takes life so seriously," he offers these beasts as caricatures of pop culture and certain overplayed aspects of the sexual revolution. The exhibit gathers works represen- ting each of Kamrowski's artistic developments. Moving through the exhibit you traverse a variety of lan- dscapes encountering throbbing jungles, arching stalagtites, psychedelic creatures, various planetary surfaces, oozing gardens and seas of currents and tentacles. It is a pleasure to get lost in the topography of these other-worldly terrains. The exhibit will continue through October 16 and has its official opening this evening with a reception at 8 p.m. Kamrowski's 'Automorphic Ostrasized Eulogists (1940)' is an example of his surrealist period. Prince Charles. Not fro mEngland Attnion Artists You Can Enter Your Art Priced at $15 or Less in the Starving Artists Sale Canterbury Loft will present a Starving Artists Sale September 15-17 to give students a chance to purchase inexpensive locally produced artwork for their rooms. Student and community artists who have items which could be priced at $15 or less can enter the sale by calling Canterbury Loft at 665-0606 as soon as possible. There is a $5 registration fee and all proceeds go to the individual artist. You must call to register by 5 P.M.,TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 BRIDES-TO-BE, INC. § PRESENTS § A GALA BRIDAL PARTY AND FASHION SHOWf § § Bridal Party, Bridal Fashions, and Live Entertainment ! Here's the Bridal Show that's a must if you insist on the perfect § wedding. Thought-starters, ideas, and exhibits from fashions (from § Brides Showcase Bridal Salon and President's Tuxedo) to photo- graphy. Everything you need ... and want. § Spectacular Designs by § BRIDES SHOWCASE BRIDAL SALON § and § PRESIDENT'S TUXEDO !. § OVER $1,000 INDOOR PRIZES! § Sunday, September 11th - 2:00 P.M. §Sheraton University Inn § 3200 Boardwalk, Ann Arbor § Tickets: $Iin advance or $2 at the door For further information &nd reservations: 761-9149 (b c4r If you can read this message, please beware. What you are hearing on Black pop radio stations at this moment has nothing to do with the following an- nouncements: on September 9, at Todd's in Detroit, Prince Charles and the City Beat Band will perform. To be honest, Prince Charles does not play pop music; rather, he emits a series of concrete projectiles in the direction of your eardrums. Needless 'to say, his latest album is called Stone Killers. However, the music he makes is dly Apart of the story. He's a rough and tumble guy, this Prince. An admitted felon, gang mem- ber, and one-time resident of Bad, Bad Roxbury. Roxbury is in Boston. However, I am told that if you perchan- ce wanted to visit this part of the town, you should carry a small ther- monuclear device in your pocket. Growing up in this environment had a great effect on the Prince Chuck, and his songs (lyrics and music) try to reflect life with multiple club wounds. 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