ARTS The Michigan Doily Alternative Thursday, April 19, 1990 presses on at DIA Page 5 Documentarist Wiseman reveals the unseen by Greg Baise IF you had been in the Detroit area in the Fall of 1971, you would have been one of a hundred people who, after laying down their $10 for sub- scription services, would have re- cieved a packet in the mail bearing a bison logo that would soon become familiar. That logo is the symbol for the Alternative Press, a Michigan-based publishing endeavor operated by Ken Mikolowoski, Lecturer in Creative Writing at the Residential College, and his wife Ann, a professional artist. Art Poetry Melodrama: 20 Years of the Alternative Press, shown through May 6 at the Detroit Institute of Arts, shows all of the poetry broadsheets, postcards and original artwork created by both lo- cal and national poets and artists that the Mikolowskis have been printing and distributing throughout the past 20 years. Ken says, "The Alternative Press is just Ann and I. We set the type, we do the printing, we do the distribution, we lick the stamps, we sweep the floor. We're the entire Al- ternative Press." The Mikolowskis bought their printing press in 1969 for $125. They taught themselves how to use it and began to print the work of their friends in the Detroit cultural community, people such as Faye Kicknosway, John Sinclair and Don- ald "Snec" McCaig. Along with these local poets, writers of national stature were featured, like Allen Ginsberg, Ted Berrigan and Robert Creeley. "One of the reasons you start a press is so you can publish you and your friends' work, because you believe in their work," Ken said. "So I started the Press to publish my friends' work. Those were my friends, the people that I was close to." One theme which dominates the aesthetics of the Alternative Press is the incorporation of poetry and art into everyday life. Mikolowski sees his efforts with the press as working against the fact that people don't usually read poetry. He explains, "When we started the press one of our ideas was to make poetry func- tional. We never wanted to do a magazine. We particularly wanted to do a single poem format of broad- sides, postcards, bookmarks and bumper stickers. Something that would be useful. And if we made it look attractive and put it on nice pa- per and put some art with it and then gave it to someone, maybe they wouldn't ignore it." Ken said he and his wife wanted to make poetry financially as well as aesthetically accessible. Early print- ings were given away for free at both local and out-of-state bookstores. The materials were also distributed by hand to pedestrians in downtown Detroit. The Alternative Press started do- ing subscription mailing after that. At first the mailings were seasonal, until an envelope labeled "Fall ? 1972" appeared in subscribers' mail- Ken Mikolowski boxes during the summer of 1974. Now they are doing an annual mail- ing. The DIA exhibit displays the contents of all 16 issues. Besides all the poetry broadsides and aphoristic bookmarks (like Deb- orah Richardson's black on black "Death means never having to say you're sorry"), examples of each of the Press' "multiple originals" are shown. A multiple original is cre- ated by an artist or a poet, who is given 500 cards with which to work. The artist then transforms each card into a unique work of art: a mixed media composition, a neo-Dada col- lage, a poem. Then one of the 500 is put into the mailing. As Robert Creeley so poignantly put it on one of his upcoming multiple original poems, "One/ To a customer." The first original multiples were actually multiple originals, in that they were all the same. Dayton Spence, a Detroit artist, contributed 500 Wounded Teabags, all alike, to Issue number 3. Faye Kicknosway, a Detroit poet who now teaches at the University of Hawaii, has just fin- ished her third set of 500 handwritten poems, all different. The next issue of the Alternative Press will feature Robert Creeley's set of 500 poems, as well as Kic- knosway's set. Also, during the last day of the exhibition, Robert Cree- ley will read from his work at the DIA through the LINES poetry pro- gram. Ken commented on the poet's dedication to the uniqueness of the project: "He kept no copies. He hand-wrote, signed and numbered all of these poems, and the only copy of that poem that exists is on that postcard." One item on the immedi- ate alternative agenda: the Mikolowskis plan to print a Cree- ley poem for distribution during the final day of the exhibit, in conjunc- tion with the reading. The art and the poetry are obvi- ous in the exhibition. But where is the melodrama of the exhibit's title? "It's the overall tone of our press," explains Ken. "The accent is on the melodrama: 'When will the next is- sue be out?' 'How are we going to pay for this?' 'How are we going to buy paper?' Who knows? We're go- ing to survive. We do it somehow." ART POETRY MELODRAMA is being shown at the DIA through May 6. Admission to the exhibit is free. The reading on May 6, with Robert Creeley and Victor Ilernan- dez Cruz, is $3. THE documentary film has re- ceived a lot of attention recently, most of it due to the brouhaha sur- rounding Roger and Me. But to what extent was that film a true documentary, with the emphasis on document? Michael Moore made his own biases about his subject not simply evident, but a focal part of the film: he is a crusader with a camera on his shoulder. Meanwhile, Frederick Wiseman has been quietly making documen- taries over the past couple of decades, getting into legal disputes along the way but always main- taining the position of the voyeur. His films do-have messages, indeed strong ones, but they are there for the viewer to extract from the footage. His most recent project, the six- hour Near Death, is having its Midwest premiere at the Michigan Theater this Sunday. The New York Times' Janet Maslin wrote of the film, "Those who see it will be irrevocably altered by the experi- ence." Wiseman says he tried to remain "totally" non-intrusive in his filming of terminally ill pa- tients, their families and doctors in Boston's Beth Israel Hospital, an approach he says he implemented "just by hanging around" his sub- jects. "In the case of Near Death, I shot 80 hours of film over a period of six weeks. I don't have any idea what the structure is going to be in by Alyssa Katz advance and I work out the struc- ture in the editing. No lights are used and the equipment is all hand- held." He adds, "It very rare that anybody objects or looks into the camera." Wiseman has what might be termed a minimalist method. His films comprise nothing more than the shots he has selected and then edited together straightforwardly; he never uses any narration or dub- bing. His notorious Titicut Follies (1967), which will be shown tonight by Hill Street Cinema, takes a similarly intense and un- abashed (though shorter) look at conditions in a mental hospital in Massachusetts. We see naked men thrown into cold solitary cells, the hostility of the caretakers toward their wards, the nasal force-feeding of an unresponsive patient, the burial of a resident with only hos- See WISEMAN, page 8 Rifle Sport does its thing well by Rob Flaggert RUTHLESS Records recording artists and Minneapolis' premier loud boys Rifle Sport scope down Club Heidelberg tonight for an all- out noise strafe with local toup6e rockers Wig. Dragging their eclectic butts across the country, these mid- western big guns promise anything but a settling night down at 215 North Main. Formed in 1987, Rifle Sport have carved themselves so deeply into their niche that they seem un- able to climb out, which really isn't so surprising for a band that has been together for so long. Not like they'd want or need to. Voiceman J. Christopher fronts the noisecrafters, using his voice as yet another loud instrument. The result is not so rmuch-singing as shrieking, with an aggressiveness on the level of John Brannon's (Laughing Hyenas), though certainly not as intense. The rest is within that undefinably un- comfortable area between The Birth- day Party and Soul Asylum - more musical than Butthole Surfers, but with the same staying power and magneticism; less cohesive than Bitch Magnet, but wielding the same cutting Mission of Burma guitar and blasting cap drums. Guitarist Gerard Boissy gets it done live, cranking up the amps and kicking out the jams (though he seems a bit stifled in the studio). Drummer Todd Trainer and bassist Pete "Flour" Conway are the back- bone of the band, their blood and guts rhythm literally setting the stage upon which Christopher and Boissy play, sometimes ferociously and always confrontationally. Musi- cally these two are nothing if not prolific. Both play in the Chicago- based, amphetamined "dancey" band Breaking Circus, and Flour has re- cently released a second solo album. Most widely known for their stomp cross-country after the first long-player White Made in France - actually their third slab from Steve Albini's Ruthless label - these four gunners from the heart of our itchy-fingered bible belt have re- cently pressed their second album, Live at the 7th St. Entry. White shows all of this band's innovation and talent, but carries little of its power. Live, on the other hand, nails them down at their best. En- ergy runneth over, brimming about this searing vinyl like some sort of demonic aura. It certainly does, as Byron Coley once noted, make "you wonder why they bothered blowin' dough in the studio" when they could be blowin' ear drums and amps on stage. RIFLE SPORT plays tonight at 9 p.m. at Club Heidelberg, with WIG opening. I. Today's Weather If you're reading this in the morning, it's sunny, windy and heading for the mid-60s. If you're a late starter you've missed the sun and are just in time for tonight's rain. Cookie Lovers Delight! Put the Bite on our No Cholesterol, High Fiber, Low Fat Cookies, in as- sorted flavors. Send $2.00 for your 2 oz. Sample. 545 N. State St. #4 Ann Arbor, Mi 48104 I - U. Read and Db e4 //.i ii.mii/ /" / "i "////////""i/i i/// i/ i /" //iii/ i / "///""///// i / " iam *I } : * U' R 30---- U22" Ifyor a'sto yug o moe : rngi n o aFE ISECINofyu : ufe adw'lchc orbrks o fea th smetme Jstmknaintmnt :A nd i ounedi, eca rpac ou Uf :*lri ny 0mnts " er ae oe hnnainlcan o*N R O U copt ginttergan detsigbdes MOMA " ,* 4 Classic designer clothing for men and women. Bring your valid college ID and receive an additional 15 % off the ticketed price. T i TITh rIVwT