0h do weekend essentials Nov. 12 to Nov. 15 CONCERT Concert hopping on a budget? Stop by The Blind Pig tonight for a four-pronged punch of indie eccentricity. The Javelins head- line with their fluid, angular space-punk. Rounding out the set are sunny-side-up power-poppers The Pop Project, blue-eyed blues-smiths Looking For Mammoths and hoppity twee-boppers Murder Mystery. Tick- ets are $5 ($8 if you're under 21), and doors open at 9:30 p.m. Wu 36 MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily -- ON STAGE The Indian American LiStudent Association 4 ( will host its annual Cultural Show at Hill Auditorium tomorrow. This year's perfor- mance, "Vistaara: An EterniP siogrdc combines song, d ance d. " t c~ i~h i wic al r : Inside the world of Ann Arbor printmaker Takeshi Takahara By David Riva 11 Daily Fine Arts Editor anu s unning visuals that are sure to make for a truly unique experience. Don't miss your chance to see the largest student-run cultural show in North America. The show starts at 7 p.m and tickets start at $12. long a dirt path some six miles outside of Ann Arbor sits a white- washed house. It seems to be in the middle of nowhere, surround- ed only by a carpet of russet- colored fallen leaves. Pristine exterior withstanding, the building's inside is lined with a clutter of items strewn about from constant use. Crawling, reaching plants sit in the corner, looking as if they are impossibly climbing upward into the sky. One wall is covered in a flurry of rect- angular sheets of paper, some colored with bright hues: blood red, royal blue; others covered in black textured dots and lines. Various drafting tables are set up along the walls, the heavy arms of drafting lights hanging over them, the surface of the desk covered in cans filled with brushes, oil pastels, measuring tape and etching tools. Upon entering the house, immediately noticeable is a giant printing press made of, gray metal. It's about eight feet long, complete with knobs and screws and a turning wheel. The press itself is covered in metal plates with lines and images etched into them - printmakingplates. This is the thinking space of printmaker Takeshi Takahara, former School of Art & Design Professor and Arthur F. Thur- nau Professor Emeritus. Ie faces this room every time he seeks to create a new piece, his mind perhaps as cluttered and active as his drafting desk. Takahara employs a print- making technique known as intaglio, usingetchings in metal to produce a printable image and capture his thoughts and feelings taken from past experi- ences, often based on his trav- els. His latest exhibition, "The Four Corners," (on display in the Residential College Art Gal- lery through Dec, 4) focuses on the Southwest United States, known for its stunning red and orange rock formations and supernatural forces. It was Takahara's goal to encapsulate the feelings of this area in his intaglio prints. The selection of this unconventional method of expression may appear to be unusual on the surface, but for Takahara, it pays off in the long run. Intaglio, along with lithogra- phy, silkscreen and woodblock, are the four basic printmaking processes. Growing up in Japan, Takar- hara always saw woodblock as the most popular form of printmaking. Still, he always had a desire to work with other material and soon discovered he preferred a stronger, almost impenetrable surface. "Metal is very hard and it's is put on a press bed and paper is forced to pick up the ink from the grooves, resulting in an image. This prolonged and meticu- lous process might seem exces- sively laborious and drawn out, but it's the perfect medium for Takahara to fully realize the ideas in his head. The process also suits his tendency toward constant revision. He claims he's in a perpetual state of reevaluation and correction, never truly finishing a piece. "People assume when you have an idea, you get the result right then, but that's not the case," Takahara explained. "The artist is changing (his or her work) all the time before arriving at the final product. FILM Free new movie alert: If you're a member of the freakishly devoted cult celebrating "Boon- dock Saints," you won't want to miss the free midnight screen- ing of "The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day" at the State The- ater. But wait, there's a catch. In order to get in for free, you must present a pass at the door, and these passes can be found scat- tered across campus. Let the hunt begin! The artist is changing (his or her work) all the time before arriving at the final product. That's exciting to me. - Takeshi Takahara, printmaker very resistant," Takahara said. "I like that dynamic between my vulnerable idea versus the solid metal." Although he was initially attracted to the materials of intaglio printmaking, Taka- hara would have to learn to be patient, for the steps of the technique are undeniably time- consuming. In intaglio, a copper plate is coated with an acid-resistant, asphalt-like substance into which the artist scratches a design. An acid bath exposes the lines, their depth deter- mined by how long the plate is left in the bath. These three steps are repeated mul- tiple times on the same plate to create variations of lines. The asphalt-like substance is cleaned off, which exposes the etched lines. Ink is used to fill in the grooves. Finally, the plate That's exciting to me." Even though Takaharaviews the length of the procedure as an advantage now, that was not always his view. "My instinct was to get a result very fast, which many people do when you don't really understand the process. You just want a quick result," Takahara explained of his early work. Takahara acknowledges that drawingand paintingmayseem like more appropriate art forms for immediate artistic achieve- ment and satisfaction. How- ever, he prefers to meditate on and rework his concepts. "Drawing has a limit in its own way," he explained. "Printmaking allows so much time to produce work. You get to rethink, revise and remake your original ideas. (It) See PRINTMAKING, Page 4B CONTEST Do you think your "Rock Band" group is the best? Do you dominate in "Dance Dance Revolution?" Display your skills and prove your worth at these music- and movement-fused games 6 p.m. tomor- row at the Rock Revo- lution "Rock Band" and "DDR" Tourna- ment at the Ann Arbor District Library. Admission is free so grab some friends and kick some ass. DESIGN BY MOSTYCH