The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com t Friday, March 22, 2013 - 5 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom A rts Friday, March 22,2013-5 PRISON PERSPECTIVE P CAP lends voice to incarcerated Diverse deities clash in ambitious 'SMITE' Pri thei mu Tue tion fo Creati Exhibi ily me incarc the ga ones' partic: ative ones w the re who'v from togeth nation In Profes "Buzz one of was ta lifers Wome Mich. at the come ti Boner Rancil a work Alexan exercis women Rancil "Th are yo studyi an inte had to we ma correct our vo really of the said w the wh Sixt signed showe "Wh in a cir I hadn ander thing s I did a wrong The be fou Actors eyes c they fe In a co some w tories cise w "I d Alexan gather and sas every Sinc have, plays c years, living the co initial variety ative w shops, progra al facil of Mic tion to Alexan isoners express University where students are given a chance to facilitate these mselves through workshops. English 310 and 319 cover theater and writing and ltiple mediums are taught by Alexander. His wife, Penny W. Stamps School By JOHN BOHN of Art & Design Professor Janie DailyArts Writer Paul, offers a course through A&D that covers painting work- 'sday, atthe openingrecep- shops. r the 18th annual Prison To join a course, students ve Arts Program (PCAP) must have a meeting with Alex- ition, over 500 eager fam- ander in which he explains mbers and friends of the exactly what the students are erated walked through getting into in addition to asking llery observing their loved them about why they would take artwork. A few of them such a course. ipated in a reading of cre- "Why do you want to work writing that their loved with someone that everybody sked them to do. Some of else thinks is dangerous?" Alex- adings were from those ander asks. e since returned home University alum Sari Adelson prison. All of this came joined PCAP during her under- er for what is the largest grad years. After graduating in al Prison Arts exhibit. 2007, she continued working 1990, Arthur F. Thurnau with PCAP and since then has sor of English William become one of the four curators, " Alexander found that along with Alexander, Paul and his students, Liz Boner, Charlie Michaels. king art supplies to two "Prisons are not pretty plac- at the Florence Crane es," Adelson said. "They are not n's Facility in Coldwater, happy places ... there is no sen- The lifers were enrolled sory input whatsoever." University but couldn't The prospect of working with :o the campus. Alexander, incarcerated youth or adults and fellow student Julie didn't make her uncomfortable. io came together to offer The discomforting part was her shop to these two women. experience with the prison sys- sder brought with him an tem itself. se in which he allowed the "The most difficult part for me n to ask him, Boner and is having to go in and out of this io any questions they had. gated area where someone com- e first question was, what pletely pats you down, puts you su doing here? Are you through a metal detector, makes ng us?" Alexander said in you take your shoes and socks rview with the Daily. "We off, makes you pull your hair speak very honestly... and behind your ears, looks in your y not have answered them nose and mouth," Adelson said. tly, but they could hear in "It's a constant reminder, for ices that we were trying me, of the fact that I'm in a space hard. So, at the end, one where people feel it's necessary m turned to the other and to be precautious or fear that the e need to open this up to people I'm about to work with ole prison." are going to be dangerous. And y of the 120 women who for me that is really problematic. up for the first workshop Because it's a shift in the way we d up. understand human beings and sen I came in, they stood what it means to have a sense of 'cle and held hands which humanity." 't asked them to do," Alex- "Getting to that space where said. "So there was some- all the women I will be working pecial in the room. Then with are waiting for me, that's o exercise which was the the moment I look forward to," exercise." Adelson added. exercise, Vampire, can That space that Adelson and nd in any theater group. other students arrive at can are asked to walk around, vary between facilities. In some losed, and scream when cases, it's a classroom. For the- el hands on their throat. ater projects, it can be a stage rrectional facility, where or a gymnasium or whatever is could be dealing with his- available. But what remains the of abuse or rape, the exer- same across every workshop is ouldn't translate well. the philosophy behind the pro- idn't know where I was," gram. der said. "But then I "Everyone has equal space in ed the ones that were left that room," said LSA senior and id, 'We're goingto be here English 310 student Emily Caris. week from now on."' "We are there as facilitators, e that first meeting, they not teachers," Adelson said. together, performed 606 "This is not about coming in ontinuously forthe past 33 with a lesson plan and being, making them the longest- for the most part, white middle- women's prison group in to-upper-middle class girls/ untry. Over the years, this women from the University of project exploded into a Michigan who say, 'This is what 'of others including cre- we're going to learn and this is riting and painting work- how you're going to learn it and as well as more theater you're going to learn it because ms offered in correction- it's important."' ities throughout the state In theater groups, the stu- higan. A large contribu- dents play roles; in painting this effort are the courses workshops, students share their der has offered at the own work and talk about their own experiences. Together they create a collaborative artistic environment where anyone is free to suggest the direction the workshop takes or the prompts they write on or the scenes they perform. "That's the point of PCAP, is that everyone has this creativ- ity," said LSA junior and English 310 and 319 student Talia Hor- witz. "It's just that a space needs to be created for that to come out in. My creativity definitely comes out through PCAP with the boys in the workshop." Alexander and Paul have put on the exhibition for 18 years now. The first exhibit had 72 paintings on display from 50 art- ists. This year, the PCAP exhibi- tion will host 428 works of art from over 200 artists. All of the pieces are up for sale, the prices being determined by the artists or with help from the curators. Since the artwork, once it leaves the prison, cannot go back inside the prison to be with the artist, PCAP makes sure that the art- ist has named a family or friend who they would like the art to go to in the event that they cannot sell the piece. "We're very on top of mak- ing sure this work has a home that the artist wants it to go to because it can't go back to stay with them," Adelson said. PCAP also encourages those who attend the gallery during its two-week display to write in a guest book about their expe- riences with the art and the exhibit. The comments are then sent back to the artists. "We hear some of the guys have said, 'I wait and wait until that packet arrives because I want to see the comments people are leaving,' and they sleep on it," Adelson said. "I know guys who keep it under their pillow and sleep on it at night because that's the world to them reflect- ing back on something that they did. And for most of these men and women, that kind of valida- tion doesn't exist. It certainly doesn't exist inside prison." The exhibition, having out- grown its original space at the Rackham gallery, is quickly requiring additional space beyond the confines of the Dud- erstadt. While PCAP originally started with correctional facili- ties within a 120-mile radius of Ann Arbor, last year PCAP received a grant to work on expanding to correctional facili- ties in the upper-part of the Lower Peninsula and the Upper Peninsula that usually don't have access to PCAP; as always, however, an artist from any institution in Michigan may sub- mit their artwork for the exhibit. "For me, there's a palpable energy when everything is up," Adelson said. "One of my closest friends who was in my workshop when she was still in prisons, who came home a few years ago, she said 'I can hear their voices. I know what it's like to be every person on this wall.' It's really special. I urge everyone to have that moment. To disconnect from the whole law, prison, crime triangulation to just come in and look at the work." By JULIAN AIDAN Daily Arts Writer It has to be pretty boring to be a god, sitting on Mount Olym- pus or battling in Valhalla for all eternity. Thankfully for A deities every- where, Hi-Rez SMITE Studio's entry to the Mas- sively Online Hi-Rez Battle Arena (MOBA) genre, the recently out-of-closed beta "SMITE," pulls gods from every pantheon and puts their power in players' hands. "SMITE" stands out from its peers by offering four different game modes and an over-the- shoulder perspective. The lack of an overhead camera restricts visibility, making Combat feel more similar to "World of War- craft" than "League of Leg- ends" or "Dota 2." All attacks are "skillshots," meaning they must be manually aimed, adding another layer of difficulty to the frantic combat. Player accounts level up as they play, unlocking access to new game modes. The standard three-lane, tower-pushing extravaganza is present in "SMITE" via the Con- quest game mode, where two teams of five gods fight for domi- nance. Each base is protected by three Phoenixes and a Minotaur, powerful creatures who pun- ish overconfident teams. Jungle monsters provide buffs rang- ing from reduced cooldowns on abilities to team-wide multi-stat upgrades. Organized teams can play in unranked and ranked modes, the latter offering bans and favoring tactical god choices and decision making to climb in rank. For those tired of game after game of team-centric, base- taking tedium, "SMITE" offers three other modes - joust, arena and domination. Joust is a condensed version of Conquest, where players face off one-on- one, trying to get rid of each other's respective towers and HI-REZ He's one hell of a bouncer. Minota tage po Aren match square starting minion tickets with th ing the and nat an unb skill an A con or Domi Hill typ of five Egyptia gigantic straight with the controll urs, using every advan- tial 500 tickets at a constant rate, ssible. with a constant back-and-forth a is the Team Death- between teams making for nail- of "SMITE." Players bitingly close games. off in teams of five, "SMITE" is an ambitious with 500 tickets, with game that delivers on all fronts. and god kills knocking Its 32 gods have very little over- off of the enemy team lap between them and each offer e ultimate goal of reduc- over-the-top abilities: Poseidon, sm to zero. The camera for instance, can call upon the ure of combat makes this Kraken, and Hindu god Bakasura elievably intense test of can regurgitate consumed foes. d reaction time. Aesthetically, there isn't much to be desired - the crowd roars in Arena, hearkening back to rena-sty le gladiatorial matches; the world Y beyond the map is every bit as ibat delivers beautifully detailed as the char- acters and their surroundings. 1 all fronts. With patches and fixes rolled out regularly and strong ties to the community, Hi-Rez Studios seems every bit as committed ination is a King of the to keeping "SMITE" as great as e game mode where teams the gods populating the game players aim to control are committed to beating the n obelisks defended by living (and unliving) hell out of Sand Guardians pulled each other. Gamers everywhere from "Aladdin." The team will find a solid, rewarding and leastamountofcurrently intense multiplayer experience ed obelisks loses its ini- in any one of "SMITE"'s modes. 'Spirit of Detroit' focuses on past racial tens ion COMMUNITY CULTURE NEEDS YOU, AND YOU NEED COMMUNITY CULTURE. IT'S A SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIP ... LIKE CLOWN FISH AND ANEMONES. To request an application, e-mail arts@michigandaily.com By GRACE PROSNIEWSKI Daily Arts Writer For much of the country, Detroit serves as an example of the lost American dream. To them, Detroit is nothing but Spirt of urban decay, a Detro murder capi- tal, somewhere Saturday to avoid. But and Sunday for the people at 7 p.m. of this region, Detroit is so UMMA much more. Free It's not only a major industri- al center. It's a place where many can trace back their roots. For decades, the city was a melting pot for European immigrants, Southern sharecroppers, rich and poor, black and white. But long-standing segregation and institutionalized racism within the city led to one of the most violent civil clashes in U.S. his- tory. Thick black clouds of smoke billow from buildings; snipers sit on rooftops; tanks of the Michi- gan National Guard roll through the city streets. These are the images that come to mind when talking about the 1967 Detroit riot. However, the emotional responses to these images vary greatly from person to person. A new play examines this riot vs. rebellion point of view and also the similarities that bind Detroi- ters of all races. "Spirit of Detroit," written by native Detroiter and Univer- sity alum Mercilee M. Jenkins, examines the turbulent events of 1967, including the riot-rebellion and the Algiers Motel Incident, in which police murdered three unarmed black youths. Residential College drama to -do with a long-brewing ani- lecturer Katherine Mendeloff, a mosity in the city between the close friend of Jenkins, will be white police and the black com- staging the play with students munity," Mendeloff said. "That's from her course, Contemporary where rebellion comes in, and Plays on Race, in conjunction where you'll hear white people with the LSA Theme Semester say it was a riot, and black people "Understanding Race." Each say it was a rebellion." production will be performed at For many, the violence was the Helmut Stern Auditorium at civil disobedience, as the Afri- the UMMA and will be followed can-American community of by discussions on the impact on the city faced marginalization the city. and discrimination, with no The play is told from the per- recourse in terms of political spective of two characters that advocacy. have grown up together in the "It was something born out same East-side neighborhood. of a long history of abuse that Anthony, an African-American just got sparked, it wasn't com- man, and Lucy, a white woman, ing out of nowhere," Mendeloff experience the violence togeth- explained. "The city government er. was all white, the state gov- ernment was all white and the police department was all white Jenkins'sp1a and tended to target young black en inSSen." casts light on Productions that deal with such heavy topics can often be riot-rebellion uncomfortable for audiences, but Jenkins's play tries to capture of 1967. varying facets of the situation. "It's actually avery funny play. Lee (Jenkins) writes wonderful dialogue, and the relationship "The main focus of the play is between Lucy and Anthony is the relationship between these really engaging and somewhat two young people," Mendeloff flirtatious," Mendeloff said. "It's said. "We see them as children, not like a history lesson, and it's we see them as older'adults, and not doom and gloom. It has a lot we see them primarily as teen- of different aspects." agers caught up in the events of "Spirit of Detroit," much like the riot-rebellion." the residents of Detroit, main- "Spirit of Detroit" examines tains an optimistic outlook on the role of race in terms of how the future of the city. the violence was perceived by "The play focuses a lot more citizens. Though the events were positively on the future of largely categorized as a riot, for Detroit," Mendeloff said. "That marginalized minorities it was was something that I felt was an act of protest, stemming from important because there are so frustrations with blatantly racist many people doing really good policies and power structures. work in Detroit, trying to bring "The riot-rebellion had a lot change to the city."