RTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, September 22, 1987 Two new exhibits fill 'U' Pae 7 galleries "36th Annual Exhi- bition of W o m e n Painters," R a c k h a m Galleries, Third Floor The 36th Annual Exhibition of the Ann Arbor Women Painters is hidden away in Rackham's third floor gallery. Judging by the guest log, however, quite a few people have managed to find it. That's food; the exhibit is interesting and it deserves to be seen. This year's show features 60 pieces by 40 artists. These are ,mainly watercolors and oils, but work in screenprint, pastel, ink, 'acrylic, and photography is also on display. Of all the paintings, two are most immediately striking. "Jungle Dream," a vivid piece by Maureen "Hoffman, is the winner of one of the exhibition's Merit awards. "Wicker Garden" by Jane Coates is also very well-executed. Coates },currently has work on display at the Ann Arbor Art Association. Her style is pleasing and distinctive. All the paintings exhibited are in competition and for sale. This year's juror is William Lewis, a professor of art at the University. Lewis says he based his selections on "quality in composition and content, successfully expressed." Bearing this in mind, some of Lewis' selections seem arbitrary. Honorable mention was awarded to some rather prosaic pieces while more unusual work was ignored. "Liberty After the Rain," Barbara MacKeller's watercolor of traffic on East Liberty, was uncited. "Primitive Music," Benita Goodman's Dada-influenced collage, was also passed over. The main criticism of the Rackham exhibit is that few, if any, of the paintings shown are extremely innovative or startling. The artists have, by and large, chosen to pursue well- traveled paths. Their work is good but traditional. This does not negate the value of the show, however, and anyone interested in local talent should stop by Rackham Galleries this month, weekdays 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. or Saturdays 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. The exhibit will move to the University Hospital Galleries October 5th through the 30th. -Avra Kouffman "Native Americans of the Northwest Terri- tories," University Museum of Art Throughout the rest of September and until the 11th of October, the University's Museum of Art is sponsoring a visual history lesson of the Native Americans of the Northwest Territories, with works dated from 3,500 B.C. to 1985 A.D. The exhibit, honoring the Bicentennial of the Constitution and Michigan's Sesquicentennial, features the works of individuals from the Chippewa, Winnebago, Eastern Sioux, Potawatomi, and Ottawa tribes. The works, totaling close to eighty objects, are divided into five categories, according to the purposes they served for the Indian tribes. Each honors the culture of the tribes from which they were made. The oldest category, the lithic tools, contains stone implements including birdstones from the Late Archiac period 1500-1000 B.C. The fine details demonstrate the accuracy needed to make the tools functional. The other four categories represent works of later times than the lithic tools. Instead they stress the sign of the times when the objects were created. In the ceramic and bark containers category, the ceramic bowls presented from 100 B.C. to 1600 A.D. stress the Indians' need to create functional objects. The variety of design on the bowls, ranging from crude stick marks to intricate bird designs, stress the individual's use of creativity. The bark containers exhibited, however, were created after the tribes' contact with European settlers and traders. The European influence is represented by the fact that these containers, made of birch bark and decorated with moose hair, porcupine quills, and natural dyes began to be made for trade instead of for personal containers. The bandolier bags from the Chippewa and Winnebago tribes represent the greatest influence of the European Settlement in the exhibit. These bags were originally created with animal skins and decorated with porcupine quills. The exhibit contains one such bag, dated from the early 1800s. The other seven bags, however, were created after European contact, and are decorated with imported glass beads and cotton and wool. The pipe bowls show the sense of tradition and continuity that also marked the American Indian history. All 12 pipe bowls are typical of the middlel9th century design and construction of black stone, pewter, and lead. The importance of the pipe bowls is shown by the 1837 peace medal displayed that is illustrated with a handshake,. the tomahawk, and the peace pipe. The two contemporary drawings by George Morrison and Lowe portray the Indian concern for the spiritual environment, thus stressing the continuity of the American Indian tradition. Photographs that are displayed above the artworks are a reminder that there are people behind these historical artworks. In conjunction with the exhibit, various programs featuring local Native American culture will be presented at the museum. On October 4, atl p.m., Jerry Hopeless, a champion Alogonquin traditional dance and craftsman, will present oral history stories. The White Eye Drum Group will also be featured. -Marie Wesaw 'Condom Sense' delivers mes sage By Lisa Pollack The 25-minute film Condom Sense, being shown tonight in conjunction with Safer S e x Awareness Day, has been billed by various press releases as a "wildly funny and enormously entertaining film." That may be an exaggeration. What this 1981 film does offer is a wildly original and enormously informative presentation of the misconceptions and facts surrounding condom use. As an educational film, it works. Condom Sense, however, is certainly not going to be winning any awards for its style, direction, ,.. _ . k .; R;: <; : - -. A:;+Itl writing, or acting. Lead actor Michael Pritchard - a cross between a shaggy Gomer Pyle and columnist Bob Greene - plays at least seven different roles. One is a giant penis. Get the idea? The theme song - "I don't want no baby now/Keep using that condom sense" - is crooned to music reminiscent of what happens when you push the auto-percussion button on a do-it-yourself home synthesizer. The awkward script is uttered with a minimum o f eloquence. A typical exchange (no set-up necessary): Connie Sense: (Before having sex) "Condom, think." Condo the Magnificent: "But I can't think about anything but you, Connie." Connie Sense: "Condo, think about a small latex object that goes on your penis." And so on. But truthfully, it seems rather low to artistically evaluate a film that in such a small space manages to dispense so much solid information about how and why condoms are used. The writers obviously put some time into THE Uof M PUBLIC SERVICE INTERN PROGRAM MASS MEETING: Summer A Sept. 23,6:00 pm for All Inder- /A% \ devising a wealth of "condom rationalizations" like the following. "Condoms are as natural a s showering with a ring on your finger." "If it's okay to dance close with See FILM Page 8 Rackham Auditorium Application Deadline: October 1 graduates CareerPlanning & Placement AUnit of Student Services Starship guitarist Craig Chaquico (left): "I use condoms." U .CLASSIFIED ADS 764-0557 3 TICKETS ROOMMATES ROOMMATES If you're going to a Campus Computing Site, don't leave home without one of these: NEEDED OHIO STATE FOOTBALL TICKETS!I Offerin Top!C Dollar Prices. Call Michelle 995-9610. 'REM TICKETS: Main floor! Call 761- 8772.Ask for Roger, evenings. WANTED: U of M football tickets. 668- 6282. FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to share roomy one bedroom apartment. Reasonable rent. Call Melanie 769-8 161 Mon - Thurs or (5170 879-4258 weekends. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED IMMEDIATELY:Low rent-$205+util. Excellent location. S. Univ. Share with 3 friendly girls. Cal1668-2429 anytime.If not homejleave name FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED - 2 bdrm. apt. Excellent location very reasonable rent, great roommates. Call ยง96-2448. 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