The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, September 10, 2007 - A Work Gallery comes up big on both sides of the fence By ANDREW SARGUS KLEIN ManagingArts Editor O nce again, the School of Art and Design's Work Gallery at 306 State St. quietly houses an astonishing exhibit without much fan- fare or advertising. That's especially a shame this time The Studio because this is one of the strongest, most and the compelling exhibits Lab: the they've had in some time - a fantastic Intersection start to the year. Of Artand "The Studio and the Lab: the Inter- Science section of Art and Science" is running Through Oct. 5 through Oct. 5 and is just as its title says. Al Wtk Gallery Anyone who's seen 306 State St. Hubble Telescope shots of the Helix Nebula, microphotographs of bacte- ria or computer-generated paintings understands there's plenty of creative inspiration in the scientific world. On a simple, aesthetic level, science-based art looks cool. But this exhibit and its pieces aren't so simple (though several are certainly very cool). As the heavily belabored placards imply, there is a sophisticated air of interpretation and innovation throughout the works. There exists on another level a certain quirkiness, where serious science is laced with the peculiar, the personal and the fantas- tic: sculpture inspired by pregnancy- induced hallucinations; man's conflict with nature told through simple, geo- metric combinations of wood and nails; and evolution interpreted through con- struction-paper animation. Both sides of the exhibit - the artistic and the sci- entific - are equally accessible. Works such as the magnetoscope, which is a beautifully bizarre lesson in the properties of ferrofluid (magnetic particles suspended in oil, pictured to the left) are pureunadulterated science. It's not necessarily "art," but it's won- derful and hands-on. But the surreal "Sarcinae de Corpus," a ceramic sculp- ture with an accompanying glass tube of unsettling wax molding, succeeds in two ways. It's intriguing art and a start- ing point for dialogue with the viewer outside of art history-specific tropes (in this case, disease as it relates to the mind, the body, social status, etc.). The exhibit has a personality - an unusual cohesion. A few feet from the magnetoscope is a map of Napoleon's march to Moscow. The march begins as a thick band representing nearly 500,000 troops. As the march prog- ress, it slowly narrows, representing in utmost simplicity the unbelievable mortality rates of Napoleon's historic failure. "Neo/Ethnocentrism" is a small photograph of a globe with the United States cut out and, with Alaska as the head, it looks like some sort of duck walking out -of the globe. The photo is intimate and personal. The larger theme of ethnocentrism is scaled down and unpretentious. It's a good omen that Work's first exhibit of the term is as strong as this one. An exhibit of alum art is set to fol- low in October, and if it's anything like "The Studio and the Lab," we're all in for a treat. - For more photos, check out our website at michigandaily.com. Ferrofluid consists of magnetic particles suspended in oil, Amazing what you can learn at an art exhibit. Through'Shoot,' a question of existence TBy ELIE ZWIEBEL Daily Arts Writer It's a rare breed of film that causes us to question our purpose in life. Hopeful- ly, we can see such a film coming and pre- pare ourselves for self-examination and philosophical postulation. On the night of Sept. 6 I was caught off guard by the appropriately titled "Shoot 'Em Up" - so off guard that I was brought to the brink of an existential crisis. After deciding to take the night off from revelry and schoolwork, boredom consumed me. I realized I would eventu- ally have to see "Shoot 'Em Up" as a writ- er for the Daily, so I indulged the idea of seeing the movie just before midnight at our local Cineplex. A plan, a goal, a pur- pose. None of my housemates would accom- pany me, so I drove out to Ypsi by myself. one of the ticket-takers offered me a special that would include a ticket to "Shoot 'em Up," all-I-could-eat pizza and free video gaming for $15. I graciously declined only to receive an outburst: "Then my job is futile!" As the sole audience member of the fated Theater 10, I listened to the National Amusements digital radio ser- vice encounter difficulties, never getting more than two minutes into a songbefore distorting the sound and cutting back to the beginning of a hellish loop. Ten minutes after the show was sup- posed to start, I informed an usher they were behind schedule. Fifteen minutes after the show was supposed to start, I let the concession attendant know - becom- ing visibly irritated - that they were behind schedule (the usher, presumably, had gone home for the night). Twenty- five minutes after the show was supposed to start, I angrily complained to the man- ager they were still behind schedule (he appeared to be the only one left in the theater aside from yours truly). Solitude. A bad movie. A life realigned. Duringthe previews, I started to think: Why am I putting up with all this? I don't want to see this movie. I don't really have to see the movie. And what was up with See SHOOT Page 9A The man is totally relationship material. He is so comfortable with babies. And hookers