*1 Page 10--The Michigan Daily -Wednesday, October 25, 1989 Reflective Lens peers into past BY CYNTHIA PLATTE CONSIDERING the everyday pres- ence of photography in our family albums, magazines, and advertising, it's astonishing that the medium has only existed for 150 years. We're so accustomed to pictures that you can forget that they are a form of art, too. You don't need Introductory Photography or your own dark room, however, to be struck by the power of an image. The Reflective Lens: 150 years of Photography, sponsored by the University Museum of Art, surveys photographic history from its earli- est works to the present. The Mu- seum has dipped into its permanent collection for a revealing exhibit of black and white photography. More than 100 photographs are arranged in the West Gallery in an order that moves your eye along a historical path, connecting images together as you walk through the show. Museum Director Graham Smith describes the large gallery as having a kind of core in the center of the room that contains some of the ear- liest pictures, dated mid-19th cen- tury. Of special historical value are "Bust of Patroclos" (1844) and "Part of Queen's College, Oxford" (1843) by William Henry Fox Talbot, who created the first negative on paper. "Other photographs radiate out from this inner core," explains Smith. "The first wall displays 19th century pictorials, then the works move into urban landscapes and the more modem world." Innovative shots of traffic, archi- tecture, and warehouses represent the shift in subject matter for photogra- phers of this century. Another grouping marks the venture into more abstract landscapes and surreal- istic works. Here hangs "Dali Atomicus," a great picture of Sal- vador Dali leaping through the air with some of his feline friends, cap- tured by Phillipe Halsman in 1948. The exhibit continues connecting re- lated subject matter until reaching the '80s. For photography buffs, Reflec- tive Lens will reinforce an educated appreciation with its encompassing look at the development of the field. Novices will have to remain content with their personal reactions to the works, as there are no explanatory labels by the photographs. Fortu- nately, though, guided tours are available. THE REFLECTIVE LENS: 150 YEARS OF PHOTOGRAPHY runs through December 17 in the Univer- William Henry Fox Talbot's "Bust of Patroclus" (1844) is one of the histor- ically significant photographs featured in The Reflective Lens: 150 Years of Photography. Blast by the past Trumpeter Kid Sheik of thehtraditional Preservation Hall Jazz Band will lead the band in playing what the crowd wants at 7:30 p.m. in the Power Center tonight. Eclipse Jazz is sponsoring this performance by one of three bands of the New Orleans Preservation Hall; no bandmember is under 50 years, but Geritol is nowhere to be found. Tickets are available at the Michigan Union Box Office, PJ's Used Records, and Schoolkids' Records. The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC Thurs. Oct. 26 Guest Saxophone Recital by Claude Delangle (Paris Conservatory) with Odile Delangle, piano Recital Hall, School of Music, 8 PM (following 6 PM master class to which public is invited) University Choir Jerry Blackstone, conductor Brahms: 0 Heiland reiss die Himmel auf Vaughn Williams: Three Shakespeare Songs Schubert: Mirjam's Siegesang Kodaly: Laudes organi Hill, 8 PM All events free unless specified. Wheelchair accessible. For up-to-date program information on School of Music events call the 24-Hour Music Hotline--763-4726 sity of Michigan of Art. The Mu- seum is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Thy tours will be offered the 5th, 12th, and 19th of November from 2-3 p.m. Louder Than Love Soundgarden A&M Records Hey, what's that you've got there? Oh my God, no! Not the new Soundgarden album! Don't play it now. Please! My brain is still reel- ing from the last release, Ultramega OK. I've had a hard day and I can't take that screaming, thrashing metal- punk noise right now. Let's just lis- ten to something mellow like Zep- pelin or Black Sabbath. Wait! Aren't you listening to me? Not only is it loud but it says right there on the cover that the album contains ex- plicit lyrics. Stop that! Are you try- ing to kill me? Oh, God! What is that sound?! There must be a fleet of helicopters and a screaming maniac outside. What? It's just the first song, "Ugly Truth?" I thought heavy metal was just hard and fast. I like it better that way - a quick, painless death. This droning, wailing and beating is such slow torture. I can't take it! Ah, a moment of silence. I knew it couldn't last. Shit, did he just say he's going to kill my mother? Make him stop it. I like my mother! Oh, my head! Does Chris Cornell ever stop screaming? Just what is he screeching now, anyway? "I wanna be in control of everything"? "I wanna be king"? God, he can have my room, my car, even my damn dog if he will just stop this madman wailing! Make him stop! Oh, I see. You're enjoying this. Well, "Loud Love" does have sort of a nice ring to it. Kind of your better- than-basic, guitars-gone-crazy grunge rock. But this stuff still scares me. And I know bassist Hiro Ya- mamoto, guitarist Kim Thayil and drummer Matt Cameron are around here somewhere because no record on any stereo sounds that loud and thrashy. You've got them hidden in this house and any second they are going to jump out of a closet to hurl me even deeper into this heavy metal-acid nightmare. Why don't I just leave if I can't take it? Well, this stuff is infectuous. Take "I Awake." I mean, it's "Dazed and Confused" gone com- pletely out of control. If anyone screeched, "Remember, I love you" as manically as Cornell is doing, I don't think I could possibly forget, no matter how hard I tried. But then again, would I want to? And don't you think "No Wrong, No Right" sounds like the Cure in real pain this time? Perhaps Cornell's nightmares are worse than mine or Robert Smith's. Well, I can see "Big Dumb Sex" was the inspiration for the explic* lyrics warning. The thing is, I'm beginning to believe it was neces- sary for Cornell to say "fuck" 36 times. What's happening to me? I can't even see clearly anymore! Just brightly colored shapeless forms and Cornell's long hair moving closer and closer until... What? the album's over? Yeah, it does seem sort of quiet in here. Listen, vh don't you play it again. And thiW time really turn it up. -Kristin Palm R Read Jim Poniewozik Every Want to Know Where, Your Liberal Arts Degree Can Lead? Your bachelor's degree, combined with a Master's from the Annenberg School of Communications, can take you into a management career in mass media, telecommunications, public policy, corporate communications, and more. Here's what some recent graduates of Annenberg's M.A. program are doing: Eli Lilly and Company A Research Based Pharmaceutical Manufacturer 2 Will be on Campus Thursday, October 26, 1989 at the Chemistry Building Presenting an Information Session on Scientific Careers in the Pharmaceutical Industry for Students Majoring in Chemistry and Related Disciplines. U Paramount Pictures Vice-President, TV Programming Walt Disney Co. Director, Consumer Marketing The Disney Channel MGM/UA Director, European Sales & Marketing International Home Video J. Walter Thompson Sr. Account Supervisor Capital Cities/ABC Research Manager Black Entertainment Television Vice President, Operations Goldman, Sachs & Co. Manager, Telecomunications Pacific Telesis Director, Strategic Analysis National Cable TV Association Director, State & Local Regulatory Issues Office of Technology Assessment Research Analyst American Diabetes Association Public Affairs Director Price Waterhouse Senior Telecommunications Consultant 'I If you are interested in a career in communications, come to a talk and Q & A session about professional opportunities and graduate programs you can consider. Speakers from the Annenberg School of Communications, University of Southern California, Los Angeles. Martin Kierszenbaum, Michigan '88, currently completing the Master's degree at Annenberg while working in the International Publicity Department of Warner Bros. Records, will also speak. %. . . , , , . . ._/ F . i As the world gets smaller, opportunity gets larger with the IIT MBA. Technology is at the heart of America's competitiveness. This helps explain why many iT educated managers reach top management positions fast. Implement innovation with the IIT Full-Time MBA. fiT offers uniquely focused specializations in: Operations and Technologv i T r,