Page 8- Th M in Daily -Thursday, February5 Artists show bold Perceoptions BY RONA SHERAMY COLORFUL collages of magazine clips; intricate designs in beaded jewelry; bold depictions of racist police: The Fifth Annual Black Student Artists' Exhibit, Perceptions and Expressions 1990, is a unique combination of such varying art forms. The exhibit, sponsored by Union Arts and Programming and Minority Student Services, does not present a uniform artistic style or a defined cultural message. Rather, it presents the unique perspectives and techniques that distinguish individual artists. Stephanie Rankin's collages provide entertaining vi- sual summaries of paparazzi. Rankin arranges geometric magazine cut-outs into compact documents of pop cul- ture. Photographs of the Beastie Boys, Robert Palmer, and David Bowie spring at the viewer from all angles, as do bold headlines and Tiger Beat-style clippings. Rankin's slick, sharp style complements her trendy sub- ject matter, as works titled Purple Confusion and Shout to the Top entertain the eye like an MTV video. Perception and Expression 1990 also presents an artform not commonly showcased in exhibits - the craft of jewelry design. Holly Mitchell's intricately beaded necklaces and squares show a sensitivity to color, pattern and technique. Mitchell works with various fibers and materials to create unique and unconventional pieces. She selects different color gradations of glass beads, and mounts them on metal and leather bases. One necklace combines pastel-colored beads with aqua-col- ored wool. Another necklace displays beaded leather squares hanging from a black leather strip. These intri- cate jewelry pieces are not mere accessories to clothing; they are small-scale works of art. , The Black Student Artists' Exhibit does not only presenet placid, decorative "expressions," but disturbing social "perceptions," as well. Ron Krowdy's series, "Police Brutality and the Black Experience," jolts the viewer's sensibilities. Krowdy's poster-sized computer graphics deliver powerful visual and political messages. His illustrations combine the intense energy of a Mar- vel comic with the exaggerated style of a political car- toon. The "bad guys - the white police officers - are obviously bad. They are characterized by sneering expressions, oversized bodies, government-sanctioned weapons and black uniforms. Krowdy says his works were inspired partly by the rap groups N.W.A. and Public Enemy. Rap lyrics nar- rate the computer images and assert the artist's opinion: white police officers are part of a racist power structure which discriminates against Black people. Part I of the series, "thinkin' every nigger is selling narcotics," de- picts white officers arresting Black youths. Part II, "Black police showin' out for the white cop," shows a hulking white officer overshadowing a cowering Black policeman. Part III, "the reasons are several, most of them federal," portrays a white policeman shooting a Black member of a neighborhood watch. Krowdy's per- ception and expression is strikingly clear; his message is undiluted. "Police Brutality and the Black Experience" exposes false accusations, demeaning treatment and un- warranted violence. Krowdy's forceful messages were shaped also by per- sonal confrontations with white police officers. He de- scribes how in Ann Arbor, he and a friend were "stopped for no reason whatsoever," frisked, and searched. Krowdy explains that the police system, and on a larger scale, the government system, "has a pattern of looking for drug dealers." For example, they are suspicious of jeeps with tinted windows and they are especially suspi- cious of Blacks. Krowdy does not criticize all police- men, but is concerned more with the authority structure they represent. This white-dominated system invites er- ror and misuse because it relies upon assumptions and stereotypes. Even if suspected Blacks are not arrested, Krowdy continues, they are wrongfully frisked, searched, and embarrassed. He admits, "I don't have the answers but (my pictures) make people think about it." PERCEPTIONS AND EXPRESSIONS is on display in the Michigan Union Art Lounge through February 23. Various Artists Groove Yard Mango/Island Marketed as a world music com- pilation covering the last 17 years, this only has only one noteworthy track that isn't reggae - King Sunny Ad6's sizzling "Ja Funmi." Having said that, Groove Yard is a fairly tough and rootsy selection compared to most self-congratulatory major label compilations. Serious reggae fans will have most of these songs already but for those who want to move beyond Marley's Le- gend into real roots rock territory, this is a very good place to start. Burning Spear's "Marcus Garvey" shows what a soulful singer Win- ston Rodney is; Max Romeo's "War ina Babylon," Junior Murvin's "Police and Thieves" (covered by The Clash on their life-changing Perry-produced debut LP) and his own "Roast Fish and Cornbread" display genius producer Lee "Scratch" Perry's nimble fingers at the studio controls. Jacob Miller's excellent portrayal of Rasta life, "Tenement Yard," hits home as powerfully as Bob Marley's "Trenchtown Rock." Steel Pulse's "Ku Klux Klan" reminds one of the brilliance of the prophetic Hands- worth Revolution LP. But this album is worth buying, even if only for one song. "Sonny's Lettah" by Black British dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson is a letter from a young Jamaican in Brixton prison to his mother in the Caribbean. It tells how Sonny's brother is picked up by the police under the Sus Law; this old vagrancy act allowed the police to detain someone merely on suspicion to commit a crime, and was used to harrass Blacks and Asians in Bri- tain's inner cities. Sonny tells how singing duties with a voice that has less soul than Debbie Gibson would have if she were raised by nuns in Oslo. Loki also sings on the other cover, Frank Sinatra's ode to colo- nialism "On the Road to Mandalay." What makes this song truly out- standing is that they have sampled some of the horn and string fills from the original version, uniting two generations of pop craftsman- ship. Even if it's a joke, this music is pretty ill. Its insanity is the prod- uct of a culture that has lost control. TV no longer produces automatons that want to be Bobby or Cindy Brady, but rather deranged cretins who realize that they can't. r--- Express yourself in Daily Arts Call 763-0379- I Burning Spear is really caught up in the "movement of Jah people." In other words, Winston Rodney is aware that there's more to reggae than Legend and UB40. V V MCKNIGHT Continued from page 7 atic. McKnight says, "One of the problems of this age is that we are too often inclined to read representa- tionally - one Black person be- comes the emblem for entire social A Space Odyssey, IN 70mm DOLBY STEREO Tonight 7:15 TT NEW Y oRK DAILYNEWS Tonight 9:45 groups - this is an inadequate way to read literature." And if much of his work leaves the reader with the impression that his writing is largely autobiographi- cal, it's an impression that McK- night wants to give: "I am always hopeful that my stories have an au- tobiographical feel to them. I want my readers to feel that they are real whether they are or not... I would never write about a place in which I hadn't lived." Having once believed that the novel is an impossibly difficult nar- rative form to master, McKnight has just completed his first novel, I Get On The Bus, to be published in May by Little, Brown. He says now that "though a short story is a natural way of telling a story - we all sit around bars and tell short stories and we don't sit around and speak in novels - in the short story form the language requires a poetic precision that no one could sustain in the novel." One can only hope that in this less poetically precise prose McKnight will remain, as Margaret Atwood wrote, "A writer very much worth watching." REGINALD McKNIGHT will read in the Michigan Union Anderson Room at 5 p.m. tonight. URANUS Continued from page 7 The Moons pay their respects to the bedrock of American music, the blues, in the strikingly original "Big Boned Women Blues." The typical twelve bar I-IV-V progression crum- bles into metallic shards, while Yg- drasil yelps lines like, "I went down to the beach to watch the ships/ But all I could see was this big boned woman's hips/ Those big boned women, all they want to do is eat your chips." One of the album's two covers is another blues tune, "One Room Country Shack." The differ- ence is that this is a mockery of tra- dition. The music is conventional blues, but bassist Loki takes over his brother tries to prevent his arrest, how he's beaten up by two of Her Majesty's constabulary, and how Sonny fights back, killing one of the cops. Frightening and chilling to the bone, it's a rare and powerful piece of "political" music. Of course, many of you will think poli- tics and music are two independent spheres that should be kept apart. In that case, you should tell that to the ghosts of Paul Robeson, Woody Guthrie and Phil Ochs, and those Zulu jive musicians in Soweto. "Sonny's Lettah" and most of Groove Yard only confirms the dearth of soulful, substantive and ur- gent reggae recorded since the above tracks were laid down in the late '70s and early '80s. -Nabeel Zuberi' Electronic Getting Away With It 12" Factory U.K. Electronic is Bernard Sumner (New Order), Neil Tennant (Pet Shop Boys) and Johnny Marr (The Smiths and The The). Written by all three, "Getting Away With It" is exquisite. Very conscious about beats-per-minute, it has the same at- tention to dance pleasure aslntro- spective or the sublime Technique. Sumner takes lead vocals with Ten- nant backing him up at oppurtune moments. You do initially feel that the song should have been recorded with Tennant on lead vocals too, but Sumner gets away with that mixture of ornery bastard and vulnerable jilted lover he's perfected on New Order's material. Listening to the beautiful melody and Marr's Andalusian-tinged guitar makes you lament the end of his as- sociation with Morrissey all the more. The "Nude Remix" transforms the song into Chicago house circa 1986 with Italian house piano fills adding some texture. "Getting Away With It" was a sizable hit in the U.K.; fitting, when one considers that The Smiths, Pet Shop Boys; and New Order were the most impor- tant pop groups of the decade. -Nabeel Zuberi OSCAR Continued from Page 1 Two surprise absentees from the Best Picture list are Glory and Crimes and Misdemeanors, but both produced performances nomi- nated for Best Supporting Actor. Denzel Washington (Glory) and Martin Landau (Crimes...) will go up against Danny Aiello of Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing, Dan Aykroyd (Driving Miss Daisy), and two-time Oscar winner Marlon Brando for A Dry White Season. The last time Brando won, in 1972 fot The Godfather, he refused to accept the award. Enemies, A Love Story, a com- edy about a man who marries three survivors of the Holocaust, produced two nominees for the Best Support, ing Actress honors. 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