Page 10-The Michigan Daily- Friday, November 8, 1991 Eskimo artists chill by Aaron Hamburger Arriving a half an hour early to a performance at the Power Center does not have to be a nerdy thing to do. Aimless awkwardness can be tossed aside while strolling through the print gallery in the front of the auf ditorium. This month, the gallery features a unique collection of prints by contemporary Eskimo artists. Never mind the fact that you probably can't pronounce any of the artists' names - the works are generally fresh and exciting. The artists use simple but observant forms and a small range of colors to describe Eskimo life. Timeless themes of nature, life and love occur in the works, While some of the prints are a little too "cute" and border on the banal, several of the works use simple, direct images to depict important ele- ments of the artists' lives. One of the most exciting pieces is Kananginak Pootoogook's "Young Raven," which seems to be little more than one powerful, massive black shape. Pootoogook shows a more delicate, refined side to his work in "Special Bird" with his intricate, lace-like patterns which depict a bird's feathers. Kauavau Munamee's "Tender Enfoldment" shows an ultramarine blue bird enveloping its child with its wing. Munamee's subtle coloring. and sandy texture on the birds' wings helps to overcome the maudlin tendencies of the subject matter. The most energetic print on display is "Woman Speak of Spring, Fishing" by Kenojvak Ashevak. The piece portrays a group of swelling curving forms of women, fish and birds, symbols of the vitality of life. Ashevak creates a sense of noisy activity in the work by focusing on the, mouths of the animals, and particularly on the chattering teeth in the, mouths of the women. If you're on your way to a performance at the Power Center, or even if you just want to browse, these prints are worth a look. The ESKIMO ART SHOW is on display at the Power Center Print, Gallery through November. ;a > . a. . BOOKS Continued from page 8 women, but not an inevitable part. Le Guin takes a very strong stand for a woman's need for abortion as a valid option: "...the preservation of life seems to be rather a slogan than a genuine goal of the anti-abortion forces; what they want is control. Control over behavior: power over women. Women in the anti-choice movement want to share in male power over women, and do so by denying their own womanhood, their own rights and responsibili- ties." These essays provide a fascinat- ing glimpse of the mind that created Ged, the Wizard of Earthsea, and other memorable characters from a successful career as a science fiction writer. Well grounded in her work as a fiction writer, Le Guin energe- tically questions all manner of "1 1 Bagels and Donuts I 1 Delivered fresh to your door weekly. 1 Buy a 1 month subscription and 1 receive the fifth week free, or 1 save 10%. 1 To place your orders call 1 764-3996 et1- Get a 1991 commemorative I 1 football T-Shirt for only $6 Iih S with any purchase, while supplies last. 1,- - - -- - --- - - literary assumptions, such as they distinction between prose and poetry: "The borderline between prose and poetry is one of those fog,- shrouded literary minefields where the wary explorer gets blown to bits before ever seeing anything clearly. It is full of barbed wire and the stumps of dead opinions." She doesn't hesitate to explore those opinions, however: "'All the same, all the same, there is a difference... isn't there? In the work, not the worker,' says Shelley. 'The distinction between poets and proses writers,' he says in the Defense of Poetry, 'is a vulgar error.' Now there's a man who swatted Philoso- phy Teachers like flies." The poetry of Le Guin's prose is more compelling than her experi- ments with poetry, mixed in with the essays. The rambling phrases are a sort of travel diary of crosw country trips with her family, sometimes little more than playing with unusual place-names. "Jackrab- bits go lolloping off like wallabiesl with magnificent blacktipped cars./ Gabbs Luning. There's a name for you!" In the end, Le Gum seems to call on women to speak out in their own works. For, as she says, obedience and submission are silent. "I want to hear you," she told the class of '86 at 'Bryn Mawr. "speak out with a woman's tongue. Come out and tell us what time of night it 1! Don't let us sink back into silenoo. If we don't tell our truth, who will?" -Liz Patton -- Vw 0I I I RICKIE LEE JONES POP POP FEATURING: UP FROM THE SKIES. COMIN' BACK TO ME *"I'LL BE SEEING YOU. SECOND TIME AROUND t; ,a Rp;a DON'T MISS RICKIE LEE JONES AT THE MICHIGAN THEATER WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 I T I Rickie Lee Jones Flying Cowboys Featuring Satellites -Dont Let The Sun Catch You Critn I I - I ON SALE NOW! COMPACT DISC 10.99__ CASSETTE F