The Michgan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, October 14, 1993 - 5 Alexa Lee's atypical gallery By ANDREW SCHAFER The new Alexa Lee Gallery in the Nickels Arcade may at first appear to be your average, everyday art gallery. With its track lighting, painted purple hardwood floor and "modem" art, it is what one might expect to find walking into a swank Fifth Avenue gallery, with trendy people sipping espresso and trilling their R's. However, Aexa Lee is not your everyday art dealer. While her gallery focuses on contemporary art and is far from the feel of amuseum, Lee herself is intent on staying away from the image that art galleries typically have. "There's something for everyone here," Lee said, "ibere are name artists for colectors, as well as a variety for people who just want to look and learn about it." After years working in various contexts in the visual arts, including working for a fabric-printing company in Seattle and functioning as gallery/artistic director for the Ann Arbor Art Associatin, Lee is seeing a long dream of hers come to fruition. "I always wanted to have my own art business - I looked into doing my own thing." Herown thingincludednotjustagallery,butmuseum- quality framing facilities as well. "It's very difficult to have a gallery that just survives on art sales. We want to sell art, and support the artists, but we also have to look into other things to survive." The choice to house the gallery in the Nickels Arcade was due somewhat to necessity. After looking into the ideaofopening agalleryonMainStreetorintheKerrytown area, Lee found that "none of the landlords or building owners were cooperasive at all. Nobody seemed inter- ested in an art gallery. I was really having ahard time and was getting very discouraged." Fate intervened, though, and dropped Lee into the Arcade, in the space above the post office that, during the '60s and '70s, housed the famous Forsyth gallery. At 1600 square feet, it is the largest space in the Arcade. Lee is committed to carrying a variety of art, encom- passing media, primarily from the Midwest. "It's getting more and more important to support your local art com- munity," she said."It's interesting what happens in the big urban areas like New York and LA, butin a lot of ways it's hard to relate to because it's such a different environ- ment. There are so many talented people in the Midwest." Her current exhibit includes work by a sculptor from Chicago, printmakers from Michigan and Minnesota and apainter from Detroit. "The first show will be rather dark and expressionistic and somewhat political." However, she quickly adds, "There will be a lot of pretty pictures, Among her future shows, she plans to concentrate on Collage and Mixed Media, Kinetic Sculpture (a particu- lar fancy of hers), Performance Art and Art and Technol- ogy. She is wary of being stuck in any pigeonhole, and is committed to encompassing a broad range of artistic expression. "I'm looking for quality work in all media from professiml artists with experience," Lee said. "To me it's a myth that the gallery has to be a place where you only come to buy something. Here is more a place where you can learn more about contemporary art and interact with it like you can't in a museum." Gallery owner Alexa Lee believes that a gallery should not just be a place for shopping, but for learning as well. The irand Opening Reception oftheAxa L7 Gallery will be Friday from 6-8 p.m. r r r Au cinema, American action comes up short against French passion By MICHAEL BARNES The gulf between American and *French culture can be measured by the disparity between the flashy plas- tic neon decor of a fast food joint versus the smoky touch ofaToulouse- Lautrec poster in a Paris caft. It is the difference between effervescent, newly transparent sodaversus ablood red Sauvignon. If film monitors the pulse of a nation, and it does, there is a new litmus test seeped in the test- osterone that separates Big Mac from 'croissant culteur. The French leading male is a man of passion possessed with keen verbal dexterity while his American counterpart broods off to the side - strong, silent, violent. "Jules et Jim" directed byFrangois Truffaut, is a ripe study of a Frenchman's exquisite passion. The film is an exploration of a tangled romance between two best friends, Jules and Jim, and a Parisian woman named Catherine. What makes the film interesting is not the plot, which is long and boring, but rather its por- trait of two passionate men skilled in the art of verbal gymnastics. The dia- logue is lyrical and poetic as the two men discuss the "scornful lips" and "tranquil smile" of Catherine. Jules, in one of the more poignant scenes in which he and Jim sit around and dis- cuss the various outrageous slings and arrows of love's misfortune, de- cides oxymoronically that the "the yearnings of two hearts create such heavenly pain." Hum? It's clear to the audience that these women are blessed with a kind of verbal finesse. Meta- physics, impotent nymphomaniacs, Shakespeare as well as Buddhist lust are other topics for conversation. For an American male, "Jules et Jim" is a foreign experience, some- thing akin to a passionate Pearl Har- bor - there are love bombs sinking ships everywhere. The male ingredi- ent in the American movie diet is some kind of variation on muted brawn. Our film history is replete with meat and potatoes men, real ass- kickers that don't talk much. John Wayne is a classic example. Carey Grant was suave and classy but more adept with a cigarette than his tongue. Marlon Brando in "On the Water- front" and Jimmy Dean in "Rebel withoutaCause"proved that the lead- ing man is still tough with a smoke and menacing with a glare. With the advent of DeNiro, the anti-hero as leadingmanbecameincreasingly vio- lent and verbally fractured. Today's movie icon isthe violentmutestrapped with abell ofagun. Schwarenegger, Stallone and Eastwood have reduced verbal capacity to primal grunts and neo-cavespeak. Thus Franco-American morpho- logical and physical abilities are in- versely related. Physical splendorhas diminished at the expense of verbal finesse for the French leading man. Jules and Jim are scrawny little pukes that could never hold their own in a bar brawl. For Americans, it is the opposite. Physiques rule over pho- netics. Woody Allen is a notable ex- ception, but with his big glasses and excessive whinings he is way too neu- rotic to be cool. Any guy that says the word "love" (let alone soliloquizes about it) is a big loser in Hollywood. Of course, there are starry-eyed American romantics that watch these French movies and drool over the passionate verbal symphony of angst andlust. The Beatles might have been referring to American cinema when they said happiness is awarm gun but what about those guys that like Alan Alda movies and are sick of being strong and silent? Whatabout women whose idea of romance isn't Beavis and Butt-Head, and the impassioned souls that read "Hamlet" but whose only big screen option is Bruce Willis speeding around in a boat? What is the fate of the American romantic? At one point during "Jules et Jim." Jimmakesanallusion toDon Quixote and SanchoPanza, two literary giants that represent the American romantic's doomed fate. Quixote and his pudgy scribe Pancho were lonely fools looking forheroics ina scourged Spanish wasteland. Their modern day American counterparts are similarly isolated at the local mall, surrounded by arcades and window displays, searching for love in plastic manne- quins that don't talk back. " "Where Angels Fear to Tread" soars with little notice By JOHANNA FLIES Take an E.M. Forsternovel.Throw in sweeping vistas of the Italian coun- tryside, a beautiful soundtrack rich with violins and arias, authentic scen- ery ofsupbaked villages aad st ge. villas and some of the most over- looked, under-praised actors outside 'f the United States. What do you get? Surprisingly enough, it is not an offering from the highly-touted Mer- chant-Ivory team whose films "Howards End," "A Room With a View" and "Maurice" gave them a monopoly on Forster material. In- stead, "Where Angels Fear to Tread" from director Charles Sturridge is a challenge to this monopoly in the nost effective and impressive way. At the end of the 19th century, the recently widowed, middle-aged Lilia Herriton (Helen Mirren) is shipped off to Italy by her husband's family for a three month vacation. When she unexpectedly marries a 21-year-old dentist's son, (Giovanni Guidelli) the family is properly shocked. When she gives birth to the Italian's son and inconveniently dies, the shock is even *reater and the family is reluctantly dragged into a plot to get the "beastly baby" and bring it back to England. In another strong role, Rupert Graves ("A Room With a View") is Philip Herriton, Lilia's brother-in-law and the arhetype well-off-but-bored- English man. He affects a stiff upper- crustiness that is well suited to his droll, arrogant pronouncements. When he arrives in Italy to get the baby, however, Philip is transformed. Surrounded by the charmof this coun- try, Philip understands the hypocrisy and repressive tendencies of English society and embraces the vitality of a peoplebe comes to love. Graves' sin- cerity and wit make him sympathetic as he captures both the excitement of a man eager to explore a new culture and the vulnerability of one who real- izes that he's been stifled by his own. Helena BonhamCarter, alsoavet- eran to Forster adaptations, is the se- rene Caroline Abbot, Lilia's travel companion. As much effected by Italy as Philip, Caroline is nonetheless trapped by the rules of propriety in- grained in her as an English woman. NEW VIDEO * NEW VIDEO * NEW VIDEO "LEGAL" MARIJUANA . IN HOLLAND 11E ARE NOT CRIMINALS" T7 OUT"I MOA U mu"Off sma1 0iu i yg., aue A LEM. UIMSA. AV A TUWASM - UWA0 ~V MnoAW tUS LUMh.VOCE TNUOP"N M SW UUIIm rlemor VU aMMo wImNAACE DtWWVrmmwmt wuw am OMM z OuC9a' RIIOIU qms -n-T NEW 1V4IDEO aNsW IDEO W VIDEk"Ox14 Bonham Carter humanizes Caroline and is masterful in revealing the tor- turous conflict between her desires and duties. Even when dealing with the weighty subjects of women'soppres- sion in the family, sexual repression and the hypocrisy of England's high society, this film manages to main- tain a very humorous tone thanks largely to Judy Davis' portrayal of Harriett Herriton, Philip's sister. Her snide sarcasm and contemptfornearly everyone and everything speaks mountains in explaining Philip's at- traction to the freedom and sensuality s . aids awareness week learn and line october 18 - 24, 1993 supported by the City of Ann Arbor & The University of Michigan of Italy. Harriett is snooty, pushy, over-sensitive and overbearing, and Davis steals every scene she is in. DirectorSturridgeisadeptin guid- ing his actors in performances that could have become soap opera cari- catures. Unfortunately overshadowed by therelease of "HowardsEnd,"this film missed out on much deserved praise, while audiencesmissed outon not only a visually stunning drama but a visually stunning Italian named Gino, as well. TREAD is available at Liberty Street Video. ...for weekends/hoidays/ birthdays/weddings or just mom's home cooking. Call us for special USA fares. Great intemational fares are also available. Counfal MTraeI- 1220 S. University Ave., Ste. 208 (above McDonalds) Ann Arbor, MI 48104 313-998-000 figh om-o teoidays. NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt display Michigan Room, Michigan League *Opening event will be Oct. 20, 6pm Portraits of the Quilt (photography exhibit) Michigan League Buffet Red Cross African Proverbs poster display Leonardo's, North Campus Commons The Individual's Response to AIDS: Materials from the Labadie Collection of radical social protest Hatcher Graduate Library, Special Collections, 7th Floor "AIDS Friendship Tree", Tree Planting Ceremony UM Hospital Courtyard (between Mott & main hospital) "QUILT, A Musical Celebration" Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre "QUILT, A Musical Celebration" Final Dress Rehearsal Benefit Performance (benefitting localAIDS service organizations) Talk to Us (anxieties concerning HIV testing) Oct. 21-24 $am-11pm Sep. 28-Oct. 24 Su-F 11:30-7:30pm, Sa 4:30-7:30pm Oct. 1-31, 8am-10pm Oct. 18-24 Oct. 22, 1pm Oct. 21-23, 8pm, Oct. 24, 2pm $14 & $10; students $6 w/ID Oct. 20, 7pm $10 minimum donation Oct. 26 Bursley Hall, (N. Campus) LAST TWO DAYS THURSDAY & FRIDAY THE SWEATER SALE Ecuadorean wool sweaters bg Codepaz i/i cruI OMEL MSM- 551TONS Living with AIDS East Conference Room, Rackham Hall Democracy Under Siege: The Dismantling of Civil Rights Suzanne Pharr, speaker HIV/AIDS Education Session Bursley Hall, North Campus Oct. 21, 7:30pm Oct. 24, 7pm Rackham Auditorium Oct.26 immediately following .3' 1 I