Art Fair mania creates people- watching By RACHEL GOTTLIEB Conversations betw Ahh, sweet Ann Arbor...green in more ways than one. (not his real name) ha The midwestern town that mellows in the summer sun to the Art Fair by his when the students leave, becomes a crowded, bustling browse, but she convei haven for the people with capitalistic inclinations during check book. the annual summer Art Fair. "No. That's an ugly Roaming the downtown streets in Ann Arbor are You never would hav( thousands of people of all ages, overwhelmed by the sights you only wanted to se and sounds of the art fair that has transposed this other- "I'M SORRY I broul wise languid town into a jungle. vase back. PEOPLE WATCHING is one of the best ways to gage But some people a how much people are really enjoying themselves. they are in another wo The people who roll into the Art Fair early in the mor- gathered to listen to' ning to secure a parking space are bohemian, preppy, ar- front of the Union, a: tsy, intellectual, simple, funky, charitable, and friend "look at (the au materialistic. But one thing they all have in common is a some 'shrooms the'd peculiar glaze over their eyes. Although met of th As if in a trance, the Art Fair dwellers meander past ping they were laid side walk stands - tripping over each other as they look covered the lawn and past the people blocking their line of vision to the wares kicked off their shoe: that cover the shelves.otesokadnag PLAS FvROM tied and hot children who are fed-up others took advantage with the whole affair are frequent. "Mother," said one lit- passed a pipe around. tle blond girl in big red sunglasses and plastic pink shoes, One curly-haired tod "walk faster - I want to go swimming." Without looking, fered Cheese Doodles her mother patted her on the head, but maintained her played the golden old distant glare with her pupils almost taking on the shape of spirit of youthful inno dollar signs. ted the cheesy offering heaven een spouses are also telling. John d apparently been coaxed into going s wife who said she only wanted to niently brought her credit cards and vase and besides, it's too expensive. e gotten me here if you hadn't said e everything," John said. ght you," she responded and put the re exceptionally happy...or maybe rld. Wednesday night when a crowd "Madcat" Ruth play some tunes in short blond haired woman told her dience), maybe if we gave them all all get naked like at the Woodstock ave some fun." e audience didn't appear to be trip- -back. Probably over 300 people d overflowed onto the street. Many s and lay down on the grass and of Ann Arbor's $5 dollar pot law and Idler assumed the roll of host and of- to his neighbors, while "Madcat" ie "0 Suzanna." Caught up in the cence, the child's neighbors accep- 9. 4 Stretch A mime on stilts stands before the Michigan Union yesterday. GET CAUGHT IN THE FALL CRUNCH? NO WA Ya We have GREAT EFFICIENCY 1 & 2 BEDROOM APART- MENTS to lease for the Fall Season, close to CAMPUS, with all the amenities: A/C, disposals, free parking. Room to breathe! / N Artist displays unique wares By SUSAN GRANT While jewelry, paintings, ano ceramics may dominate the Art Fair exhibits, there's still a place for ar- tists who have something a little dif- ferent to offer. Richard and Denise Wilson, whose booth is surrounded by painters, are perfect examples. The Wilson's booth is only one of three booths in the fair that make and sell mountain dulcimers. MOUNTAIN dulcimers, which look a little like guitars, were created by Scottish settlers in the Appalachian Mountains around the time of the depression." Wilson was fired then, Revolutionary War, explained and had to find a new career. Richard Wilson. "MY PARENTS got me interested "They had brought over their most in the dulcimer," Wilson said. precious possessions, but they needed "Then my parents got me a something for immediate party dulcimer record and I liked it," he time," Wilson said. Dulcimers filled said. the need, Wilson said, because they're The Wilsons began slowly. "At the played on the lap and easy to learn to time, we were living in Ypsilanti in an play. apartment and we had $200 to spend," Wilson said that he got into Wilson recalled. "We could either buy dulcimer-making eleven years ago a sofa or a bandsaw (a type of saw), when he was a carpenter. "I was and we chose the bandsaw," he said. making a pretty good living," Wilson "We turned the living room and the said, "but in 1973, there was a housing dining room into a workroom and lived in the bedroom." WILSON said they made their first dulcimer from a kit. They made their second from scratch, but the wood was pre-cut, he admitted. "I know a lot about accoustics and construction," Wilson said "and my wife did the ornamentation, like the in-lays and the soundholes." Most of the in-lays are made of mother-of-pearl and depict everything from unicorns to sail boats tobirds. The soundholes are also in ar cut?" various shapes, such as nearts, seagulls, and cherries. m Deigned "I'LL DRAW them out, and she'll work on them," Wilson said of their iOfl Cut teamwork. uhed Product Each dulcimer takes 13 to 150 hours to make, he said, and they charge l Uiomenl & Children anywhere from $110 to $1,100 each. tiful Over the last ten years, Wison said they have made 2,000 instruments, ut aand have won over 100 awards ranging from merit awards to first place prizes. DULCIMER-making has so become a part of their lives, Wison said, that o " : : . they now own a mobile home and travel around the country going from ! . art fair to art fair. This is their eighth year at the Ann Arbor art fair. 4 "This city is a great town. It's a real * 1 S". 11 folk-oriented town," Wilson said. "I can't think of another way of making a living, he said. v1 t --- Tf -Colony-Madison Apts. 736 PACKARD No._100 665-2194