ARtS Friday, October 11,-1985 The Michigan Daily Page 5 Welles and Brynner: The passing of legends Orson Welles (1915-85) Beethoven galore The 35-member Hanover Band of London, a period music ensemble celebrat forming an all Beethoven program this Sunday, October 12 at Hill Auditoriu American tour. The program consists of the Overture to 'The Creatues of P Piano Concerto No. 3, with pianist Melvyn Tan. The concert begins at 8 p.m. Conceptual ventures HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Orson Welles, a Falstaffian genius who at 26 produced, directed and starred in the epic Citizen Kane, that indeliby et- ched his name in motion picture history, died Thursday at his home of an apparent heart attack. He was 70. Detective Russell Kuster said a chauffeur found Welles in an upstairs bedroom of his Hollywood Hills home about 10 a.m. and called police and a physician. "There is no evidence of foul play," Kuster said. "It's obvious the death was of natural causes."~ In addition to monumental achievement in Citizen Kane, con- sidered by many film critics the greatest movie ever made, Welles has ed throughout Europe, will be per- best known for his Halloween 1938 um. The orchestra is on their first radio adaptation of H.G. Wells' The rometheus,' Symphony No. 1, and War of the Worlds. tickets are $8-$19. But his trademark basso profundo, booming out the frightening tale of 0d Martians invading New Jersey, sent ch i waves of panic rolling through radio ch rolisteners from Maine to Georgia. Frightened listeners poured into the streets. Many choked express high- and delicacy, Mullen was able to ways in cars filled with family and make images out of the beauty he possessions. saw. In the publicity ensuing from The Said Mullen in 1978, "The desert is a War of the Worlds epic, Welles, dub- marvelously different land - holding bed the "boy genius" was invited to some kind of other poetry - space, Hollywood to produce and direct and a sense of survival. I believe it has movies. been very little known in art, and I A scant three years later he wrote, wish to make images of that beauty." produced, directed and starred in Mullen's late works show a fine Citizen Kane, a fact-and-fiction ac- maturity, almagamating the ex- count of the life of publisher William pressive pursuits of earlier works and Randolph Hearst. The immense suc- the conceptual ventures of the 70s. cess at such a tender age came to a Al Mullen: A Drawing Retrospec- man who only one year earlier had tive will be on exhibit at the Univer- seen his first movie set. sity of Michigan Museum of Art until In a recent interview, Welles - a October 19. Museum hours are man who lived life to the limit - had Tuesday - Friday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. this to say about death: Saturday and Sunday 1 - 5 p.m. Ad- "I rejoice in the presence of death mission is free. because I think it's what makes life brilliant and beautiful, and without it 1 the world would be ridiculous. I'm in- terested in it from every point of view. My interest has not dimmed with its approach." Yul Brynner (1920-85) NEW YORK (AP) - Yul Brynner, the man who was king for a record 4,625 performances in the Rodgers CANTERBURY HOUSE 218 N. Division at Catherine FRIDAY AFTERNOON FIRESIDE OCTOBER 11th at 4:00 P.M. FIRST-HAND INFORMATION ON NICARAGUA Two Ann Arborites, Bill Zirinsky and Brian Larkin, just returned from Managua discuss: DO THE SANDINISTAS CENSOR THE PRESS IN NICARAGUA? ARE THE CONTRAS KILLING CIVILIANS THERE? and other questions about the current situation. All are welcome. For more information call 665-0606 LAW SCHOOL CONVERSATIONS with ALLAN STILLWAGON Assistant Dean and Admissions Officer UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LAW SCHOOL Small group discussions on preparation for Law School, Law School expectations and how decisions are made TIME: 9:00-12:00 and 1:30 - 4:30 (Hourly discussions at 9, 10, 11 a. m. and :30, 2.30, 3.30p.m.) and Hammerstein musical The King and I, died Thursday after a two-year battle with lung cancer. He was 65. With him at The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center were his fourth wife, Kathy Lee, and his four children, said Josh Ellis, a family spokesman. "He faced death with a dignity and See LOSS, Page 6 By Lisa Jaffe O NE ON THE immediate pleasures of Al Mullen's drawings, now on display at the University of Michigan Museum of Art, is the dazzling variety of media, color, tone, and attack. Each piece in the show has something of its own to say, whether it's with unexpected justapositions of color or surprising transitions of surface and texture. Al Mullen taught in the School of Art for almost 30 years prior to his death in 1983. Before arriving in Ann Arbor, in 1956, Mullen trained at Cooper Union Art School in New York City; studied with Fernand Leger in Paris and Hans Hofmann in New York and Provincetown; and taught at Cooper Union, Columbia, the Brooklyn Museum Art School, and Brown University. As you enter the exhibit you are greeted by a small collection of detailed pen drawings, dating from the 1940s. These works are meticulous and tight, yet fine and tender. At times the figures appear religiously symbolic or mythic, and other times the figures seem to have grown out of a process akin to doodling. The works dated after 1949 show a true accomplishment of space, color, and architectural technique. "In Shadow," a 1954 ink on oaktag, ex- p presses a sense of open but embodied space, an airiness despite the presen- ce of often dense fields of black marks. The Chinese-like brushstrokes, thick, thin, vertical, and horizontal are feathered and spontaneous. Mullen's rendering of shape and surface is freer and more satisfying. In the late 1940s, Mullen began to use charcoal, crayons, and pastels. Working with crayons and tempera an W on paper, Mullen reveals his ex- ploration of the interaction of color within precice, geometric structures. Important as it is, color is not the whole story here. Lines at various lengths spaced at regular intervals, spring from the borders and bite into the central color fields. Muller's use of lines as a vehicle for shade and color does not become visually monotonous. From the late '60s into the early '70s Mullen's strict geometric forms are somewhat freer. Lines are not just vertical and horizontal, but cur- vilinear as well. The best of Mullen's work is a blend of Southwest landscape and geometric form. During the early '70s, Mullen formed a bond between his appreciation and fascination with the beauty of. landscape and his own profound involvement with techniques of meditation and self awareness. The deserts in the South- west, and the coastal scenery around Big Sur dominate his work in the 70s. His love of the desert is best ex- pressed in a series of desert scenes hidden on a far wall. Crisp tans, blues, grays, yellows, crimson, and silver greens are the predominant colors in the series. With great care PLACE: DATES: 310 Hutchins Hall (Law SchoolAdmissions Office) October 23, Wednesday November 5, Tuesday December 5, Thursday INTERESTED STUDENTS PLEASE SIGN UP FOR A TIME AND DATE BY CALLING OR VISITING 310 HUTCHINS HALL, TELEPHONE 764-0537 [Q o l D Support the March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION TBALK TO DRAPER Friday, October 25, 1985 University of Michigan BS/MS/PhD Candidates - join some of the nation's most respected and inventive people at developing innovative and fascinating new technologies. As a leading hands-on "working laboratory" in Technology Square, we offer a unique environment for your career to grow and develop. Positions are currently available for candidates in EE, ME, Aero-Astro, CS, Physics and other technical fields in the following areas: 45 ears behind it. VP/ 1 m I ' v t-. -LI ( Custom fitting businesses has been a Hewlett-Packard tradition for 45 years. 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