The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com GIFT OF ARTS From Page 1B It is now the Canamores' 63rd day at the hospital, and every day Jackie has goneto the hospital and waited at her husband's bedside from nine in the morning to five in the evening. When we meet, she sits down heavily in a wheelchair in the hallway, with her husband asleep in the room. She has red hair and speaks with a folksy tone pleasing to listen to. "I've never seen a 64 year-old color before," Canamore said. "But I did, because I was so bored." Reed pushes a cart packed with small projects she gives out to patients - bracelets, pictures, coloring books. She had given Canamore four bracelets yesterday. Canamore made all four bracelets, and she has since given all four away, one to a valet because she enjoyed watching him with his family. On that same floor on which the Canamores reside, Merideth Hume works as a unit host. Her responsibilities include connect- ing patients to the services offered by the hospital, such as GOA. "The question Mrs. Canamore asked this morning was: 'When is that gal coming around, you know, with the art carts?"' Hume said. The art cart Reed pushes through the halls also carries replacementsforthepicturesinthe patient's room. She allows them to pick out a painting they like, talks to the patients about their choice, giving them a history of the work and the artist who painted it, and she hangs the it. It's a small ges- ture, but important nonetheless. "I've noticed this over the years: The artwork can make a huge dif- ference," Hume said. The eighth floor is dark and somber, and in many ways, separate from the rest of GOA's . work. Downstairs, throughout the corridors and waiting lobbies, a passer-by will see evidence of Sims's efforts hung on walls and stood in display cases, often with whimsical results. A clown with fat marks of face paint doffs his top hat. A frog carved from wood stares mystic-eyed out from the glass case into nothing, skin crawling with little turtles and frogs. Yet there is meditative work, too, being displayed: a blue rocking lawnchair, an oil canvas painting of a window opening to sunlight. Extravagant with art, the landscape of this hospital is a testament to GLAAH's movement to enhance the landscape of hospitals across the world. Carrie McClintock, the Communication Coordinator of GOA, has degrees in both Fine Arts and Performing Arts, having studied at Rice University and the University of Arizona. "We've had staff tell us," McClintock said, "That when they're busy, going back and forth between differentprocedures, they stop for a few moments, taking in some of the art really calms them down and makes them feel more able to take on what's next." She also explained that what they do at GOA is not music and art therapy; it's therapeutic music and art - a distinction people often miss. "It's just for its own sake," she said. Yet there is also a sense of solidarity in what GOA does. In their most recent collaboration with the University of Michigan, GOA sought out the stories of both patients and staff - their wishes, hopes and dreams - which were then written down on blue pieces of paper and given over to School Art & Design Prof. Anne Mondro. She and her class then folded the pieces of paper into round fans - 1700 in all - into a design by an artist named Katy Bergman Cassell. Those stories are now rippling 16 feet in length in the form of a surging blue dragon. It is called the Dragon of Wishes, Hopes and Dreams-- a permanent fixture in the University Hospital. "A dragon is a symbol of trans- formation, so it's very appropriate for the In t live mt the rot waitin called March Tracy music1 the ma This is "it's brough Thoma always always hearin you wo lobby." I t] t] mi In progra brings of pati. space t In 1 Maxw happil small r set to p from t Transi a nat prepar therap bedsid bedsid from qualifi "Be: high-in hard ft said. "A to your Part hospital," McClintock said. Maxwell's job as a bedside he hallways the sound of musician, for which MHTP usic can be heard playing in has trained him, is being able oms of patients, and even in to understand where a patient globbies through a program mentally lies on the spectrum Music While You Wait. On of health, and how to apply the 20, Jazz and R&B artist appropriate music. Kash Thomas played her "We start based on our for a tired group of folks in observation and our assessment," ain lobby of the University. he said. "From there, we are her second time doing so. continually observing the patient. wonderful that music is If we need to shift our music, then t in to help with healing," we shift our music." ts said. "And the audience is "It's amazing - the change in so grateful, too. People are the atmosphere when a musician just so enthusiastic about starts playing," he went on. "I'm g live music ina place where not joking when I tell people we tuldn't expect - in a hospital will never have too much music in this hospital. It's just not possible. Even with 28 volunteers (who play in public spaces), each one playing It's not art an hour a week, that's out of hundredsofpotentialhoursaweek herapyit's anywhere in this hospital, we're still justscratchingthe surface." herapeutic Canamore herself may be among those just below the surface usic and art. - amusician has yet to come to her room. "When I hear those musicians when I'm going back and forth one of their most popular to the door -- I love the music, ins, Bedside Music, GOA especially the harp," she said. musicians into the rooms "Sometimes when I come down ents, a much more intimate into the Taubman Center, I'll hear han a lobby. a piano player, they had jazz band the GOA workroom, Greg down there one night, and it was ell tunes his guitar where he really nice. I'm usually pretty busy, y sits. As we spoke he played but I take a few minutes to enjoy iffs, his fingers instinctively the music, yes." lay. He received his training The success of GOA in Ann he Music for Healing and Arbor feels like a blessing to Sims, tion Program, which is whom McClintock described as tional organization that "very instrumental in helping es its members to play to propagate the field of arts in eutic music at patients' healthcare." At GOA's disposal es. It is GOA policy that all lies a vast pool of opportunity e musicians receive training from which to draw resources and MHTP, or an equivalent talent. cation. "I don'tnwant to go out on a limb, cause the hospital is a pretty but ours is probably if not the most ntensity environment, it's extensive and varied, (then it is) tr people to relax," Maxwell certainly one of the largest in the And being able to relax is key country, maybe even in the world," healing." Sims said. of the difficulty of Adding further to that success, Thursday, March 27, 2014 - 3B Dr. Robert Kelch, former executive vice president for Medical Affairs, reserved five million dollars in institutional funds to match dollar for dollar any contribution made to GOA, an endowment that could amount to ten million dollars total. Perhaps most criticaltothe success of GOA, however, is the culture of the university itself "We have the intellectual climate, the people that come and bring new ideas and new thinking which helps to stimulate and keep things growing and moving," Sims said. "Sometimes,I feellike akidin a candy shop here." As I leave the quiet hours of the eighth floor, and Canamorereturns to her husband, and Reed returns to work, I take the elevator down to the main floor of the hospital. I pass the exhibits and galleries one more time. A few people stop and peer at the paintings, some stooping with their hands in their pockets, and move on to the next display. Outside in the courtyard, where GOA hosts outdoor concerts in the summer and spring, there is a small garden called the Friends Meditation Garden. In the winter, it is chained off, covered in snow, empty. In the main floor lobby next to the wall is an exhibit showcasing an antiquated office of a doctor from another time. It lays behind a wall of glass. Everything inside sits perfect, unmoving - unsettling. Below, a short paragraph explains how hospitals were once charity organizations, and personal physicians the only reliable source of healthcare, and times were changed. When I finish reading, I look around at the paintings of Black men and women draped in African garb on the wall, the huge mobile hanging from the ceiling. I imagine the walls blank. I imagine the ceiling unadorned. A hospital without music. One must wonder if a hospital were a form of charity, what then would art be. I pick up my stuff and I leave. MUSIC VIDEO REVIEW The Art Pop Film "G.U.Y." is unusual for a music video, but expectedly eccentric for Lady Gags. The production starts off with a gang of business- men in a full out brawl over G UY money that is LadyGaga cluttered all Interscope over an open field. The cam- era zooms in on Lady Gaga in a bird costume that has been struck by an arrow, and then . depicts her struggling across the plane. Magically, the bird/person somehow manages to make it to the gates of what looks like a modern Oz. Guards in stylized trash bags pick her up and parade her in a pose that is reminiscent of a crucifix through the vibrant and expansive open-air palace that lies behind the gates as dancers shimmy around them. Finally, the guards hand over her body to a synchro- nized swim team and the more substantial music video por- tion starts. It definitely "heats up" from here - Lady Gaga is displayed in a nude pose, only cevered by a blanket and pantyhose.-The shoot primarily alters between various stages - the pool at the palace with Perez Hilton in the sky, an Egyptian scene with an indoor pool, a dance sequence with the lights dimmed and then a contrasting bright white scene with reefs overhead. The video closes with an inunda- tion of men in suits exiting the gates of the massive landscape. On the whole, Lady Gaga's "G.U.Y." is a wildly creative video with an expectedly bizarre flair. If the videoitself doesn't impress, then the four minutes of credits rolling for this seven-minute video prove how much time and effort went into this over-the-top production. -KEN SALANDER EPISODE REVIEW TRAILER REVIEW "Bates Motel" has never shied away from its inherent strangeness. When you're:a telling the story of a too-close- for-comfort Bates Motel mother and Check-Out son - a story that ends A&E with the mother's corpse rotting in the basement - there's no option but to embrace the crazy. And in that vein, "Motel" 's latest episode, "Check-Out," does not disappoint. "Check-Out" is "Bates Motel" 's most significant reminder of its source mate- rial. The prequel to one of Hitchcock's most iconic films, "Bates Motel" had con- tinually dropped hints about Norman's future in season one - his blackouts, his fascination with taxidermy. But in "Check-Out," Norman goes full "Psycho," assum- If the producers of "Insidious" and "Paranormal Activity" have taught us anything, it would be this: demonic possession Ocuius and creepy Relativity Media antique objects often go hand in hand, and when this dueling terror-combo decides to raise hell, the result is pure cinematic horror. Abroad, wooden-framed mir- ror is the focus of the film, as all evil and frightgravitateswithin its sinister control. Throughout the centuries of the mirror's existence, the families dwelling in its presence have been repeat- edly driven to criminal insanity, as those who get possessed by its evil embark on sudden killing- sprees and slaughter their entire ing Norma's personality and attacking her estranged brother. The episode's climax was one of the series' most excit- ing moments to date. Under John David Coles' superb direction, "Bates Motel" imaginatively recreated the original film's big reveal - butcher knife, multiple per- sonalities and all. A&E Showcasing character development, thrilling action and Vera Farmiga and Fred- die Highmore's equally masterful performances, "Check-Out" stands as a potentially series-defining episode - one that brought us as close as we've ever been to that rotting corpse in the basement. -ALECSTERN families. Foryears, investigators overlook the evil of the mirror, that is, until a family in the pres- ent day becomes suspicious of its possessive powers. Sure, "Oculus" would seem to fulfill the quota of surprise moments, gruesome-looking evil figures lurking in the dark and heart-wrenching intensity. But the film also promises so much more. Cleverly written and smartly shot, it reveals a multitude of converging themes: historical drama, family disin- tegration, sibling relationships, mystery, semblances of time travel and the good versus evil conflict. Instead of relying on the basic horror-movie template to create a good scare, "Oculus" utilizes depth of character and a multi-faceted storyto drive home a serious mental, emotion- al and spiritual fright fest. -BRIANBURLAGE .-; 4