8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 22, 1999 Artist shares lesson By Jenui Glenn Da4l Arts Writer Writers are known for their insight- ful comments, while artists become famous for their creative media. Artist Barbara Kruger, the lecturer at the final installment of the year's "Photo-Active Feminists Artists Series," gained her rightful place in the spotlight by com- bining these two elements to form a political message. Her favorite Malcolm X quote, which she used in two of her pieces, embodies the spirit of her work: "Give your brain as much attention as your hair and you'll be a thousand times better off" Kruger certainly gave the people at the overflowing Rackham Amphitheater on Friday night that attention. In spite ofthe audience filling the rows, aisles and even hallways lead- ing to the amphitheatre, no one com- plained. The atmosphere of intense concentration punctuated by Kruger's humor merited the attendance. Audience members studied slides of Kruger's works in the forms of sculp- tures, billboards, room installations and even a New York City bus with "Don't look down on anyone" inscribed on the top. "I'm very suspect of style wars in the arts" she said. "I think there a mil- lion ways of working" Kruger believes this partly because there are so many types of impulses to create art. "It's a mixture of premedita- tion and total white light, Zeitgeist shit," she said. "It's our own semblance of beauty." She favors a simple format of red words plastered on black and white pic- tures, a method left-over from her I11 years as a designer for magazines such as "Mademoiselle" and "House & Garden" The insightful text conveys messages on topics ranging from the need for free speech to the importance of fighting domestic violence. In spite of these obvious attempts to impact others' opinions, she claims, "I am not the conscience of the art world." Yet she often uses her work to argue against the growing awareness of art as a commodity. One of her pieces dis- plays the words "Buy me/I'll change your life." Although Kruger obviously wishes the situation were different, she said the art world can also be looked at as simply part of the global economy. "We all need to figure out how to work within that construct, she said. On the flip side of these serious issues, Kruger uses biting wit to make her point. One of her recent projects, a sculpture titled "Family," portrays brothers John F. and Robert Kennedy with their rumored lover Marilyn Monroe in a cheerful pyramid. The audience erupted in giggles after just a brief glance at the slide of this work. Although the public perception of the Kennedys is generally positive, Kruger set out to illustrate the darker parts ofthe family reputation. With pieces like this, she shows that there is no single inter- pretation for any event. "History to me is never singular" she said. "There isn't history, there are histories." Along with history, Kruger also deals with the nature of celebrity in "Family,"an issue she seems to strug- gle with in her own life. During the lecture, she tried to dispose of preten- sion by keeping the video cameras off her and on the slides of her work. After responding to one question, she said, "I don't know if I answered your question, but I'm happy to be here." She said the success of her work con- tinues to surprise her. ' rowd' si By Lucija Franetovic For the Daily For one night, the University Museum of Art came to life in a play of dance and dialogue response pieces bearing the message and soul of famous Polish export artist Magdalena Abakanowicz. Based on the current exhibition of Abakanowicz's work, the Museum hosted a show entitled "The Mindless Crowd: New Studies in Dance and Theatre." Its themes were divers, uni- fied often directly with spoken text by the life experiences of the sculptor. Along with a small selection of works from a private collection, the major piece in the exhibition is "Flock II" (1991), a group of 35 anonymous fig- ures with no personal identity but the joint uniformity of their stance to hold them together. "I was obsessed by The Mindless the image of the crowd, Crowd manipulated like a brainless organism and acting like a Museum of Art brainless organism," stated March 18, 1999 Abakanowicz in a 1998 com- mentary of her own work. .. ;Her works contain a bio- r graphical angle, for Abakanowicz has endured family struggles during the World War II persecution of aristocrats. She witnessed the destruction of Warsaw during that time as well as the severing of her mother's arm during a raid on their estate. "With the lack of heads, she has a lot to say about the destructive impulses of a mind that is severed from the body," said Western art curator Annette Dixon in her opening address. Now one of the preeminent artists of the 20th Century, Abakanowicz grew up near Warsaw in the '30s. From a young age, she gathered twigs and played with mud in the forest, carving and molding the things she found even if they would later be thrown away. In "Preservation of Memory," Atala-Nicole Loud opened the show with an emotive solo set to Abakanowicz' text. "I did a lot of relating of humanity with nature and used a lot of images from that," Loud explained during the post-perfor- mance discussion. Every beautiful and deeply expressive perfor- mance was inaugurated to a new level by the Museum's apse atmosphere. The marble gave a sense of reverence and cold at the same time. An interesting effect was created in the piece "The Harrowing of Hell" when narrator Robert Sulewski talked to the James Ingagiola, who portrayed the Devil, from the second floor of the Museum. low enlivens exhibit . courtesy of The University of Michigan Museum of Art Magdalena Abakanowicz's "The Flock I" is comprised of burlap and resin figures. He spoke about retrieving his flock which Satan had seduced. And Lucifer had a nervous break- down about the matter before the audience's eyes. It was later in her life that Abakanowicz first began casting real human bodies in burlap cloth saturated with glue and resin. She'd then remove the hardened hollow shells to reveal often headless or limbless and sexless figures. Called Crowds and Flocks, groups of 30, 50 or 80 of these sculptures stand in museums across the world, challenging viewers' ideas of the crowd and its respective role in history. The figures are arranged rigidly and geometri- cally to portray a mindless mass which follows without thinking. But thinking and feeling is exact- ly what the performance and sculptures provoke in the viewer. The dancers portrayed both the loss of individu- ality of the herd through carefully choreographed synchronization and an overall sense of detach- ment through their faces and movements. With the close semi-circle position of the audience, those fearful stares and hopeful gazes made it impossible to turn away from the immediacy of the perform- ers' passion and the impact of their flawless dance. At times it seemed like they were personifying the sculptures, sometimes historical figures' destructive and constructive moments, and at times the artist and even ourselves. Local performer and writer Jeffrey Steiger posed the ironic message of how a faith or group of peo- ple can sometimes be blind to the destruction they create. In his funny monologue about friends try- ing to comfort a woman that has been saddened by reading a Tolstoy book, he shows how they can actually act destructively when they suggest recy- cling the book as a solution to her saddness. The performance event and exhibition were col- laborative endeavors with the Center of Russian and Eastern European Studies. They will will host an international conference celebrating the tenth anniversary of the fall of communism in Poland. "It is the latest in a series of performances based on exhibitions at the Museum of Art," commented public relations coordinator and event organizer Whitley Hill. Other events included a surrealism show in the fall, a performance responding to the work of Monet and another event linked to Jim Dow's baseball stadium photographs. "In produc- ing these events we celebrate the bond between the visual and performance arts," Hill said. An exciting aspect of the setup was that people had a chance to stroll around the museum and view the art before the show. "We want students to feel this is their museum; whether they visit on a break or during a date, the art and events here are for them and they are free," Hill said. Stop by or call 764-0554 to have your SENIOR WISH published April 15th deadline March 31 ALLISON Thank you for finally graduating. You were the worst tenant. Please never call here again. Andno, we will not shovel the driveway. -Your Landlord LaSalle drops scalpel, joins force By Jonah Victor Daily Arts Writer "ER"'s Eriq LaSalle throws aside his scalpel and picks up a gun when he stars Mind Prey ABC Tonight at 9 as Deputy Police Chief Lucas' Davenport in "John Sanford's Mind Prey." "Mind Prey," adopted from Sanford's novel of the same name, is not your standard TV movie fare. "We wanted it to be scary, we wanted it to be suspenseful," executive produc- counts, "Mind Prey" succeeds. "Mind Prey" begins in a mundane environment as single mother and psy- chiatrist Andi Manette, played by Sheila Kelley of "L.A. Law," picks her two daughters up from elementary school after a busy day at the office. A disguised man brutally forces the three into his van and drives away. The attacker, John Mail, is a former patient of Manette's that she sent away to a mental institution 10 years before. Mail, played by Titus Welliver of "Brooklyn South," throws the three into a dungeon in the secluded countryside where he subjects the family to mad whims. Davenport is the break-all-rules detective assigned to the case while attempting to propose to his girlfriend. It is easy to be skeptical of adapting novels for two hours of television, but "Mind Prey" works. It's a relatively modest one month production, but it never falters. The movie is unusualO because the plot wasn't altered from the original book. "It's really dark, really gritty. It looks like a little feature film," Braunstein said. "Mind Prey" has a very competent cast that protrays real charac- ters that are not glossed over. Seeing LaSalle out of his surgical scrubs is a real treat. This is his first movie. From sensuous to aggressive,. viewers get to see a side of him they've* never seen before. "We just thought he'd be good for it, it would be a different way to go" said. Braunstein, who plans to have LaSalle' do another movie. "Mind Prey" shies away from being overly ambitious but does a very thor- ough job. With it's intensity, some may not like the dark and disturbing themes of "Mind Prey," but it's a TV thriller of cinematic caliber. er Howard Braunstein said. "We wanted people to go on a ride." 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