S The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com I Thursday, November 1, 2007 The Daily Arts guide to the best upcoming events - it's everywhere you should be this weekend and why. A photograph of a boy running on the beach in Benin, taken by Peter Schottenfels, part of today's Slideluck Potshow. AT THE ARK Neo-Scottish folk band Back of the Moon - named Best Folk Band at the 2005 Scottish Trad Music Awards - returns to The Ark Sunday. Tickets are $15 online, at the Union ticket office or at The Ark box office. Doors open at 7 p.m. and the show starts at 7:30. ARTS ON How the deans of four different University schools pooled their knowledge and resources to bring art to the most unusual communities. By Ben VanWagoner I Daily Arts Writer ow many times have you heard 'evolution- ary theory" and "Romantic period violin" in the same sentence? Probably not many, and that's the kind of issue Arts on Earth aims to address. Arts on Earth is an ambitious, multidisciplinary program that originated witt the deans of the School of Music, Theatre and Dance; the School of Art and Design; the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Plan- ning and the College of Engineer- ing. With the' goal of connecting the arts to the community of a research-based university, the deans came up with a program that explores how the arts interact with the way we think both as indi- viduals and as a culture. The program sponsors a wide range ofevents, startingwithtoday's "learning studio" at the Duderstadt Video Center, which addresses the relationship between arts and evo- lution. Other events include a per- formance by University alum Pat Oleszko, a renowned artist,twhich is today at The Michigan Theater. All the events are intended to encour- age "arts-driven inquiry," said The- resa Reid, the managing director of Arts on Earth. It's an effort on a grand scale. "We want to know how the arts teach us to think differently," Reid said. "I don't think it's been done anywhere else." She's speaks of the wide array of scientists, scholars and artists who've committed to making the endeavor successful. These include Jon Deak, associate principal bass- ist of the New York Philharmon- ic, Oleszko and professors from Argentina, Yale University and the University of Michigan. The aca- demics' disciplines include philoso- phy, music and neuroscience. The mingling of these diverse fields is exhibited in events like the "learn- ing studio." One of the strengths they hope to emphasize is the involvement of those who attend the studio. There will be no audience, per se. Instead, every person who attends will be encouraged to play an active role in discussing and build- ing ideas about, say, how the arts affect us morally. Reid emphasized the programs are not lectures but investigations - we don't neces- sarily have the answers, but we certainly are looking for them. ARTS ON EARTH The following events areat theDuderstadt FEATURED Video Center-and they're all free. ARTIST F.O.K.U.S presents Art- TODAY Arts -FAKTS with special 9a.m.to Noon guest Justin Bua tonight Wby does virtually evety ruman culturetproduce at the Monroe Trotter art? How dotbe arts aid oar sunvival? Multicultural Centeras Artsandthe Brain first floor and basement. 1:30 p.m. to 4:3oQp.m. Shaman Drum will host a signing of Bua's book. TOMORROW "The Beat of Urban Art." Arts& Health The event is free and 9a.m.toNoon Can engagement withthe arts promote physical, run from B until11 p.m. emotional and mental healthin individuals? In societies? Arts & Conscience 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. What are thepowers and limits of the arts to shape us morally? Go to www.artsonearth.orgfor complete details. Michigan's Ms Tricks of Dis Guise Art and food: the best of two worlds By MAUREEN SULLIVAN DailyArts Writer In 1970, the University decided the tradition of electing a homecoming king Pat Oleszko: and queen was politi- cally incorrect. The Depart- That same year,Art m t student and Dearborn me native Pat Oleszko Corrections entered herself as a homecoming float. In At the a stuffed nude body Michigan suit topped with a Theater crown and roses, she Toda t 5 was driven through a p.m. town in a friend's Free borrowed red convertible with tulle surrounding her "like a giant valen- tine" and 200 of her Art School friends dressed as lazy band members. Such marked one of her early perfor- mance pieces: "Funk Homecoming." "It was awesome," Oleszko said. "We were attacked by security, though, because we were right behind the Viet- nam protestors and they .figured we were a part of that." Oleszko, now based in New York City, has taken her slapstick and fantastically absurd one-woman performance art from Ann Arbor to all over the world. She returns today with a performance at S p.m. at The Michigan Theater. Known as the Ms Tricks of Dis Guise, Oleszko uses loud and risqu6 props and See OZLESZKO, Page 3B By KATIE CAREY Daily Arts Writer The Slideluck Potshow serves up its first appearance in Ann Arbor tonight. As founder Casey Kel- baugh put it over the Slideluck phone - naturally as he made squid ink Potshow penne with zucchiniA lemon and arugula at At the the same time - "It is Michigan a desire to bring peo- Theater ple together through T food and art." 9oday 30p to To participate in Fr the show, artists sub- mit up to five minutes of slides to be projected after a meal, usually a potluck. Photojournalists, painters, graphic designers and sculp- tors join the ranks of students and other amateurs in the Slideluck. "Very few events cross-pollinate that way," Slideluck's producer Alys Kenny said. Added Kelbaugh, who is also a New York City photographer: "Real rock stars of the art world are showing work alongside the lawyers and students that have never displayed. It's very egalitar- ian in that way - everyone has the same five minutes." Seven years ago in Kelbaugh's Seat- tle backyard, he, Kenney and a small crowd of SO created Slideluck. The night sparked a tradition that i~ould See POTSHOW, Page 3B ON STAGE Thia Saturday, Asha7Ann Arbor presents "Rhythms of Hope." a night of Indian classical music and dance at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The performance starts at 5 p.m. and tickets are $12 for students and $25/$35 for general audiences. Proceeds go to the education of underprivileged children in India. Why guys should reject Norris By JOHN DAAVETTILA Daily Arts Wr'ter Boys like footballs. Girls like dolls. The gender paradigms of our youth have crept out of the play- ground and into our living rooms. Guys, asked about a show tar- geted mainly to women, might be interested, but the Chuck Norris inside him screams, "No! Tell her you couldn't care less about ball gowns made of recycled plas- tics!" After wrestling with it for a few seconds, Norris wins, which isn't surprising. He's a big guy. Men have been limiting the programs they watch on tele- vision for far too long, fearing the reproachful looks or teas- ing remarks if someone were to overhear. Sticking to shows like "Ninja Warrior." or watching ESPN all day is entertaining, but after a few years, aren't we due for a slight change of pace? Here are some shows most guys avoid but shouldn't: "PROJECT RUNWAY" -Even if you don't care about fashion, most guys can appreci- ate the challenges the contestants get each week. Whether it's con- structing a dress out of apartment furnishings, dressing another contestant's mother or just plain "making it work," the contestants are always good for a few laughs or catty interviews. If these reasons still don't relieve your embarrass- ment, just remember the host is Heidi Klum. See TV, Page 2B AT THE BLIND PIG Patton Oswalt leads fellow comedians Brian Posehn, Maria Bamford, Eugene Mirman and Doug Benson to The Blind Pig tomorrow. Get your $20 ticket at blingpigmusic.com or get your ticket the night of the show for $22. Doors are at 8 p.m. for the 18+ show. Look at those ... legs. No, wait, that's not the point. k'*