The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom New Student Edition - 3D What the Ann Arbor arts scene is missing While in China for a summer, one writer sees the shortcomings of campus street art By BEN VANWAGONER Daily Arts Writer Jan. 10, 2008 - They were a very strange group of men. The three stood in the same place every day, always doing the same thing, wearing the same clothes and never once opening their eyes. I spent last summer teaching in China. I was in a city of about 10 million called Wuhan - one of" the hottest cities in the country. During the three months I spent there, I learned at least as much as I taught: I'd pick up Mandarin words from my students, hear a little more about the history of the country or get a better feeling for the way the culture worked. But it wasn't until months after my flight home that I realized the powerful influence of what I've grown to think of as "street arts." This trio appeared to be, if not brothers, old friends, and they were all blind. Two played curi- ous flute-like instruments, faces twisted in concentration, while the third (who always stood in the middle) held a plastic bowl to col- lect change from passersby. The men always stood precisely in the middle of the sidewalk, in front of a large mall. Every day when I passed I would consider giv- mats; ancient-looking monks log them a few coins, and once in burned incense and told fortunes; a while I would. Still, they-never teenage boys danced in crisp quite seemed to fit my idea of beg- rhythm to Chinese rap. These gars. people were as much a part of the They weren't, really, not in Chi- streets as the vendors selling fried nese terms anyway. They were rice - they belonged there. They collecting money, sure, but in the added a touch of variety, a differ- same way that a shoe shiner would ent environment to streets that, collectmoney - as part of his busi- without them, would have just ness, not as a begging technique. been grimy and loud. In a way that They were street musicians, not wasn't easy to understand: They beggars. Street musicians just like give the city a different dimension the buskers in the through their art. London subway The art of - skilled, legiti- China doesn't mate and decid- Slowly but surely, stay locked up in edly not homeless. its museums or in New York City and art in America is its exclusive, red- Chicago have even carpeted music developed systems becoming the realm halls. It spills out for artists like onto the street these that require of the educated in every possible them to have way. The street licenses. These artists and their men were more performances are like that - busk- just as much a ers. And the three weren't alone. part of the culture as the temples The sidewalks in China are or the rickshaws. They're invalu- teeming with street musicians. able, inseparable. They give every Wrinkly old men plucking their person - from the poorest noodle battered Erhu ("two-string" in vendor to the black-suited busi- Mandarin), their female counter- nessman - a chance to have a taste parts playing some sort of flute a of their own artistic culture just block down, and the 5-year-old I walking down the street. once saw marching with a drum When I came back to Ann Arbor around his father. They're every- this fall, just a few days after my where, and they're really just a last stroll through the streets of small sampling of the street art- Wuhan, I couldn't help but notice ists. the difference. For a city that's Artists of every kind lined the touted as multicultural there's not streets of Wuhan. Little girls a lot of anything on the streets of dressed as gymnasts did unbeliev- Ann Arbor. Some American cities able contortions on small cloth offer more, certainly: New York If these guys lived in Ann Arbor, walking to class would be so much more interesting. City, San Francisco, Chicago per-' We're drawing in on ourselves, lis- haps, but where else? In China, tening to music from our earbuds even the smallest towns have a rather than experiencing it as a few nien sitting in the town square living breathing culture. strumming their huluhu (a gourd- So where does this leave us? like stringed instrument). With a 'culture that's obsessed Slowly but surely, art in America with art galleries and concert halls is becoming the realm of the edu- and ticketed admission, is it possi- cated, the people with the extra ble that we're robbing ourselves of cash to attend $80 concerts and our own art? If nothing else, we're the desire to put on a collared shirt limiting it. We're confining art to a and visit the Met in New York. tiny part of our existence, and art should be throughout all of it. It's like putting all the great American literature in a bank vault instead of a library. After six months back, it doesn't bother me anymore. I hardly think about it most of the time. Still, I can't help but walk down the streets of Ann Arbor without won- dering, where are the three blind men, and why are the streets sim- ply grimy and loud? 4 t If I