The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, March 12, 2008 - 5A Making artfor the viewing public Rackham Auditorium last Thursday, the Beat- tradition poet Gary Snyder criticized fellow writers who lament the chore of _ - -- getting work published and sold, as though pub- lishingtheir work were A beside the ABIGAIL B. point. COLODNER "Well, they just haven't thought it through - not in an artistic sense and not in a spiritual sense," the 78-year-old poet declared. "Karl (Pohrt, the founder and owner of Shaman Drum Bookshop) and his work are as much a part of it as any other step in the process." Snyder's comments brought up the idea that artists are involved in a kind of public service and that, as public figures, they're obliged to accept accountability for what they produce. Not a revolutionary idea by any means, but it does distinguish, quali- tatively, between creative work done solely for personal expres- sion and creative work done for an audience - and, often, for a price. "To be an artist means to work with others in mind," Snyder said, between poems that reflected both on the moody limbo of bag- gage claim areas and the beauty of Japan's New Year celebrations. it's no wonder artists easily get the reputation of being attention- seekers. The advantages of work- ing hard to get one's work into public view may seem self-impor- tant and calculating - when what may have started as a labor of love or of obsession becomes a touch- stone for public discourse. Snyder seemed to be framing art as a critic might: "It's not art until you're willing to go public and take the heat, baby," he said. Snyder wasn't entirely dismissing work done for personal expres- sion. He distinguished between art made with an eye for others and art made "to build soul," put- ting an onus on the obligation artists have to dive into a place where their work can be put to the test. When the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art's legal battles with artist Christoph Buchel halted public viewing of an enormous installation, the cartoonishly dramatic legal blows from both sides prompted Mass MoCA to publish on its website a list of questions the public had about the stymied exhibit. Among these was whether the legal dis- putes were actually a secret col- laboration between the museum and the artist, meant to create a subversive performance on the state of contemporary art. Was this the art? Considering the circumstanc- es, it may have been an honest question. The art the museum- goers had been waiting for cer- tainly wasn't available, but the snide and antagonistic machina- tions between museum and artist could be tracked practically by the minute and from the comfort of your own home. It's as though Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit gave free admission to some meta-commentary on art. Here, "heat" came not only from professional critics but also from all the people who have easy access to the material - whoever asked MoCAD the million-dollar question. I agree with Snyder that vul- nerability is part of the point of public service of art. The way a work is presented once it's in that public realm can try to change the playing field, exempting the work from candid criticism. Something I feel tends to cheat in this brave exposure is the artist explanation placard, the paragraph or two accompanying a work of visual art. These can be terse or wordy. The ones IStake issue with explain what the work is supposed to mean and how it's supposed to feel. It does give a kind of full disclosure and lets a viewer judge the work on its own terms, something I feel can be important ammunition for a criti- cal viewer. On the other hand, it harnesses the work with a description of the work's effect. The artist hasn't made a work of art in the piece itself, since clearly the piece alone doesn't suffice to get the message across - and the artist demon- strates, with such a placard, that the message matters. A lot. one such contemporary work, in the de Young museum in San Francisco, was pointed out to me by a friend whose impres- sion of the work changed drasti- cally after reading the placard. Charred pieces of wood hung at different heights from invisible wires, collectively giving the illu- sion of a hovering cube. It was technically impressive and fun to stand near and practice missing the forest for the trees and find- ing the forest again. But the work itself - the pieces of wood - said little to me about the black congregation that died Descriptions of a painting's meaning are also subjective in a church burned in a hate crime, the souls of the victims collecting in solidarity and the sense of awe and horror I was supposed to feel. It would have been informative for the placard to state that the wood was origi- nal pieces from that destroyed building. As it was, there was a very moving idea present in the work, but it wasn't something I could see without the artist cod- dling it into existence. The closest books of poetry come to doing this when they have a glowing introduction, and even then those are rarely writ- ten by the author and don't argue their own interpretation. Part of what such texts bank on is the freedom of interpretation, and therefore of audience approval, allowed by not having a play-by- play alongside each poem. Pohrt is working on transi- tioning Shaman Drum from a for-profit business to a non-profit, changing the strict definition of how his store serves the public. Hopefully the kind of transpar- ency that often goes along with non-profits will push more of the publishing business into public view, generating more heat - and more light. Colodner doesn't like when people tell her what art means. But e-mail her your thoughts on Renoir at abigabor@umich.edu COURTESY OF WALT DISNEY "Oh shit, that's what Will Smith looks like naked?" On the road Lawrence controls his often spastic demeanor in new G-rated comedy By IMRAN SYED Daily Arts Writer If someone had told you back in the summer of 1995 that Martin Lawrence would one day star in light, G-rated family comedies, you'd have snorted and walked away. In those days, Law- rence was one of Hollywood's hottest action stars, fresh College from his role in the definitely Road Trp not G-rated "Bad Boys." But his action persona has aged At Quality16 very poorly, and Lawrence and Showcase has recently been reduced to Walt Disney a bevy of uninspired, sloppy slapsticks. All that history makes the following statement downright stun- ning: Lawrence's latest family comedy, "College Road Trip," is actually a decent movie. Lawrence stars as James Porter, a Chicago- area police chief whose daughter is about to go off to college. Overprotective of his daughter, as he is of everything else, James wants her to go to nearby Northwestern University, but little Mel- anie (Raven-Symon6, TV's "That's So Raven") has her sights set on Georgetown University. James agrees to drive Melanie to her admission interview at Georgetown,. fully intending to brainwash her alongthe way. But strange things happen when the loving movie father gets in a car with his perfect movie daughter - laughs, tears, lessons and morals - on both sides of the screen. As predictable as "College Road Trip" is in purpose and execution, it somehow works. Nothing this stock should be so charming, but the film finds a way to engage and, occasion- ally, surprise its audience. Having a good heart is one thing - even the worst family movies have that. This film, however, has feelings - as weird as that sounds. Rarely do films of this genre back up their warm and fuzzy intentions with perceptive, touching plotlines or charac- ters. Touching would be an overstatement here, but at east the characters and situations in this film ring true. One of the film's biggest accomplishments maybe that it bottles up the neurotic tendencies of Lawrence's usual screen persona. Though again his loudness and ability to talk really fast while saying nothing in particular has served Law- rence well in action comedies like "Bad Boys" and "Blue Streak," they're oddly out of place in the genre he has recently migrated to. In this' film, Lawrence is flamboyant but not explosive, allowing the rest of the players to fill their roles in the story. The result is not only a calmer, more coher- ent narrative, but also an unexpectedly deeper character for Lawrence. When we see him eagerly donning the colors and logo of colleges, he tours with his daughter he's easy to iden- tify and sympathize with. He represents the entire batch of nervous parents that emerges every year around this time, not just a psychotic exception. Doing that while still being at least a little funny is a remarkable feat. All this praise for "College Road Trip" must be qualified by stating that the film is hardly great. It is amusing and laudable less for its own merits and more as a testament to how dry and desperate the family comedy genre is these days. Slightly overacted and stumbling overjust about every clich6 imaginable, the film is little better than a pleasantcouple of hours for people of all ages. But that in itself is above and beyond everything we could possibly expect. The body's second brain By PRIYA BALI "Scientists say that the belly has DailyArts Writer a brain," Haddad said in an inter- view with L'Humanit6. Homer once wrote, "The belly is "I call it the sun, and arms and the commanding part of the body," legs are its rays." and he was right. It aches when She will be accompanied by the we're sick, drops Ghawazee musicians of Luxor, when we're Egypt, who play traditional instru- shocked, fills Leila ments like the re baba, a two string with butterflies Haddad Egyptian fiddle, and a tabla, an when we're ner- Indian hand drum. vous, but moves Tonight at oriental dance is one of uncer- freely when we 8 p.m. tain origins, reminiscent of the dance. This is At the Power indigenous dances of ancient something Ori- Center North Africa, India and other Mid- ental dancer, $16-$36 dle Eastern countries. Tonight's choreographer performance will be a collective and teacher Leila display of the sights and sounds of Haddad understands. Haddad will these regions. In addition, Haddad make her Ann Arbor debut tonight will incorporate Greek, Iranian at the Power Center for the Per- and Spanish dance influences. forming Arts. Born of Tunisian and Syrian Haddad will be performingRaqs descent, Haddad learned oriental el Sharqi, the Arabic term for "belly dance by watching her mother and dance," where the role of the danc- aunts as a young girl. In London, er is to convey emotion and rhythm after pursuing a masters degree in of music through movement of the English, Haddad decided to resist feet, legs, pelvis, chest and neck, the disapproval of her family and which all function in the move- pursue a career in dance. It was ment of the belly. no easy task. When she came to France, stereotypes of this far east- ern dance deprived people of an understanding of its true nature. "American culture is so domi- nant in France that no one ever took the liberty to translate the terms rock'n'roll, mambo, salsa and twist in equivalent French terms," Had- dad said in an interview with Tilda Moubayed. "It is not the case for oriental dance that they allowed them- The belly is the sun, and the arms and legs, the rays selves not only to translate but also to 'misrepresent' by a bad transla- tion: 'belly dance' for American people and 'danse du ventre' for French people." Haddad's work as a dancer has helped undo a cultural miscom- munication about the art of belly dancing, which is still being res- cued from its negative connotation in the West as a dance exclusive to nightclubs and cabarets. Haddad suggests a more accurate transla- tion, calling it "Eastern dance." Its identity as a credible form of art becomes more recognizable when it emerges from its hidden setting and onto a theatrical stage. "My struggle concerns people's approach to this dance, and it seems to me more than necessary to do this job and carry on with it," she said. Haddad's job is a work in prog- ress, as this Eastern dance is always in motion. While it remains true to its multi-layered traditions, it has become a sort of blank tablet in the U.S. where rock and hip hop, as well as fashion and film, can leave their influences. The dance is more com- plex than what we see. The sensual bold movements elicit an under- standing of an ancient civilization, whose dances will emerge tonight from the edges of a questionable form of art and into an acceptable and versatile mode of expression. WRITE FOR DAILY ARTS For an application, e-mail gaerig@michigandaily.com F RANDOLPH COURT APARTMENTS IS 2 Bedroom Apartment Homes ~ Ground Floor Ranch Style! Private Entrance! Patio! Spacious Kitchen! Air Conditioning! Laundry Facilities! 24-Hour Emergency Maintenance! Pets Welcomet And much, much more! 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