I 8A - Monday, March 24, 2008 HORTON From Page 5A like sequence where Horton goes Bruce Lee on someone's ass, but it graciously lasts for a limited time and the rest of the film's aes- thetic is highly impressive. Crit- ics raved about the animation in "Ratatouille," but "Horton" puts those rats to shame. Yet, the animation is just one of the many things that puts "Horton" on a level above typical kiddy flicks. Little touches, like the Mayor's moody son rocking an emo-swoop haircut or a sequence that is a dead ringer for a scene from "The Lion King," keeps the film engaging. So I suppose not all children's book adaptations are bad news, but don't think t'm not protestingthe upcom- ing "Where the Wild Things Are" movie. Come on, that shit is sacred. 1. LNThe Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com EVENT PREVW Finding 'place' on State Street I Wa] on dis Galler rifling the p strang album instea photog woodc landsc graph] hung 1 By KATIE CAREY canvases with a few lines painted DailyArts Writer on them come to represent memo- ries around the theme of "place." lking through the exhibition "Place-Mark" displays a col- play at State Street's Work lection of works from artists who y is like have attempted to capture the through Place-Mark physical or mental landscape of ages of a place. Because place is so inextri- er's photo Through cably linked to memory, the pieces . However, Mar.28 in Work vary from the abstract to d of just At the Work the concrete and manifest into all graphs, Gallery different mediums, reinforcing ut prints of the notion that memories are both apes, large relative and changing. ic comics, cloth installations "Place could be a geographical by black string and series of or a mental place," said Catherine Meier, a masters candidate in Art & Design and juror of "Place-Mark." You don't always have to have one definition - though the latter is trickier to describe," Yet the most powerful pieces in ? Work, the ones that make you lin- gerthe extra few minutes, are those that depict specific memories. An inkjet print on aluminum by Bruce Myron, "I Could Not Stop My Friends FromKillingFrogs," trans- forms the what-would-be ordinary lutes FREE* photograph of a pond and some ELL PHONE CALL grasses the art his sec makesl ied Pla Nobod: you in( By p which Co rather memor how it in doii betwee innocei realism oramic into a haunting glimpse of it's odd that the pieces at Work ist's childhood. The title of that emit the strongest sense of ond photograph depicting a place do so through their words. hift hut of sticks, "We Bur- A sculptural series of five teacups yboys and Cigarettes Where with roly-polies, spiders and bees y Would Find Them," lets crawling on them do not reach their on one of his secrets. full potential without their title, hotographing the places in "I Was Only Allowed to Play in his memories took place, Grandma's Basement Once." Meier herself hasn't figured out how to reach a visual understand- ing of place withouttext. Her piece, Using the "Here, 17 Miles West of Chambers," is a series of replicated woodcuts icept of place stretching nearly 30 feet, which captures thevast openness and rep- to explore etition of the plains. If you fix your eyes on the piece and then walk itists' past alongside the landscape, it appears as though you were watching the plains go by, driving 17 miles just outside of Chambers. than trying to depict the Included in the display is a y itself, Myron is sharing wooden carrying box, which Meier feels to remember a place. uses to store the rolled up land- ng this he captures a cross scape. Written onthe end ofthe box n enchanting nostalgia, in black marker is "Here, 17 Miles nt confession and daring West of Chambers." in his highly saturated pan- "It's the idea of containing place photographs. in a portable manner," Meier said. "Place came about as an idea ofhow people mark it." In the basement of Work alone, place is "marked" in three differ- ent ways. Meier's organic woodcut is displayed alongside a crisp digi- tal print of an arctic beach and an installation of hanging cloth with black thread sewn into the land- scape to represent the natural path of travel. The different ways in which these artists choose to rep- resent their memories of landscape is indicative of how place can take various forms and evoke striking emotions. Work is much more than a glori- fied photo album of other people's memories hanging on the walls. Sure, it seems as if you are walking through the ghost of many artists' pasts, but the pieces in Work say something about how their memo- ries have been constructed and continue to change. After the show is over, they will wrap their work up in wooden carrying boxes, leav- ing their memories and places on the shelf until they are ready to be revisited again. 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