ARTS Page 9 Friday, July 18, 1986 The Michigan Daily Give me your tired, hungry, and artistic By Nolan Feintuch IF YOU WAKE up one morning -land take a stroll down East or South University and encounter more than 100,000 people crowded on the streets, the answer is no it is not another football game; it is the 27th Annual Original Juried Ann Arbor Art Fair. This event will take place July 23rd through the 26th and will feature over 240 different nationwide artists displaying their art, in addition to cultural entertainmentsuch as dance, theatre and music. The goal of this art fair is to gather, the country's most progressive and talented artists to form the highest quality four-day art festival in the country. The Ann Arbor Art Festival Committee set up a twopart judging system to select the most capable ar- tists to ensure the highest calibre of work at the festival. This selection process includes slide reviewing of the artwork and "on the street jurying" of the art for the possibility she said. R&B, and the southern favorite, of renewing the current artist's "They (the artists) are challenged Dixieland. booths for the following year.'This proces to continually explore the limits of Nineteen artists and members of is administered by the Art Fair's Accept- their medium, and the fair is con- the Potters Guild will give fairgoers a ance Committee, which consists of outside tinually challenged to seek the most chance to see the creative processes professional artists. This two part innovative and exciting artists. We do behind hand-built porcelain, ikat process of jurying provides fairgoers not seek to exclude artists who have weaving, reduction block printing, a chance to experience new forms of participated in past fairs, and are paper making, jewelry making, and art that are created by the country's delighted that so many return. Good many more art crafts. Caryle Crisler foremost artists. In the 1985 fair, no artists realize that an art fair with a will demonstrate for visitors how she artists in painting, drawing, prin- tough acceptance process is one in uses chalk pastels and a model tmaking and 2-D mixed media were which they will be fully recognized for wearing a costume to create a juried on the street and invited back; their outstanding talent." drawing that represents not only what all these artists had to re-submit and Besides the art, this fair is known she sees, but what she feels through be judged with all the other artists in for and is always rich in visual arts. her choice of color and line. their respective media class. As a There are many other entertaining The famous fish, which will be seen result, over half the artists in this events that are scheduled to take flying over the art fair became year's fair are either new or re- place on a stage on East University tradition when local merchant Bruce submitted, allowing the fairgoer to called The Graceful Arch. An array of Henry, of Artisans, donated the experience the works of seventy new top-quality groups have been asked to Japanese paperfish. They have been artists. Acceptance committee co- perform dance, music and theatre. a commonplace to the fair ever since. chairperson Jean Lau feels that this One can enjoy the many different Along with the entertainment and system has a positive effect on the varieties of dance available: Middle art exhibits, there will be refresh- ongoing integrity of the fair. Eastern, Indian, Modern, African, ments and sidewalk sales conducted "It is a good way to avoid and even Jitterbug. One can say the by local merchants. stagnation, both of the fair and same for the music, stemming from For those lost and confused, there perhaps the artists themselves ..." folk, jazz, pop, classical, bluegrass, will be a special information booth staffed by willing and knowledgeable volunteers comprised of students and townies, old and young, who will be able to answer all but the most unlikely of questions. This booth will be located at the corner of South and East University Avenues and will remain open the same hours as the fair: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday through Friday and 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturday. Rea W~e Daik C~ca iierd6 TheTCalendar of The University of Michigan The calendar combines meeting, lecture workshop and conference announcements with other events happening each week on campus. It is based on The University Record calendar, and is open to a Univer- sity sponsored groups and organizations recognized'by the Michigan Student Assem- bly. Items must be submitted in writing by 5 p.m. the Tuesday before publication. Ad- dress allinformation to: University Record, 412 Maynard St. Asterisk (*) denotes events to which admission is charged. v FRIDAY Juy 18 *AAFC-Pretty Poison, 7:30 pm; Psycho, 9:15 pm, MLB 4. *Brecht Co-Play, The Cuacasian Chalk Circle, 7:30 pm, Residential Coll north courtyard, 701 E Univ. For info, call 995-0532. *Intl Folk Dance-Dance club, 8:30-10:30 pm, Angell Sch, 2nd fl gym. No partner nec. For info, call 764-6564. International Students Fellowship-Mtg, 7 pm. For ride, call 994-4669. Microcomputer Ed Ctr-Workshops: Macintosh System Selection, 1-5 pm, 4003 SEB; dBASE III PLUS Pt 2, 1-5 pm, 3001 SEB. For info, call 764-5356. Alumni Assoc-Summer Festival Enrichment, H Schumacher, "The Music of Dizzy Gilles- pie, " 4 pm, Alumni Ctr. For info, call 763- 9753. Tae Kwon Do Club-Practice, 6 pm-ield adja- cent to Chrysler Ctr parking lot. For info, call 665-2958, 665-7399. SATURDAY July 19 *AAFC-Amadeus, 6:30 & 7:40 pm, MLB 4. Mus Art-Storytelling, Sharon Roberts, African folktales & music, 2 pm, Mus Art. HAP-NICA-AMISTAD Bash featuring music, theater, mime, speakers, games, etc. Child care available. Beg at 1l am, West Park. For info, call 761-7960. *Brecht Co-See July 18. SUNDAY July 20 *Brecht Co-Play, The Caucasian Chalk Circle, 2 pm, Residential Coll north courtyard, 701 E Univ. For info, call 995-0532. Univ. Lutheran Chapel-Worship, 9:15 am, 1511 Washtenaw Ave. WELS Campus Ministry-Worship, 9 am, Re- deemer Lutheran Church, 1360 Pauline. For info, call 662-0663. Lord of Light Lutheran Church-Worship, 10:30 am, 801 S Forest. MONDAY' July 21 *HRD-See July 14. *Outdoor Rec Ctr-Horseback riding pre-trip meeting, 7 pm. Reg req. For info, call 764- 3967. TUESDAY July 22 *UM-Flint-Film, Farewell to Arms, 7 pm, Univ Ctr Kiva. For info, call 762-3439. Microcomputer Educ Ctr-Workshops: Basic Concepts of Local Area NetWorks, 1-5 pm, 4003 Sch of Educ Bldg; Programming in dBASE II, Pt I, 8:30 am-12:30 pm, Learning to Use the Macintosh, 1-4 pm, both in 3001 Sch of Educ Bldg. U-M Hospitals-Lumpectomy grp meetings, noon. For loc and reservations, call 763- 9953. Chemistry-Sem, "Spectroscopic Pursuit of the Isomers of Cyanamide in the IR and MW Re- gions, "2 pm, 3403 Chem Bldg. *Outdoor Rec Ctr-Pictured Rocks Natl Lake- shore pre-trip meeting, 7 pm. Reg req. For info, call 764-3967. WEDNESDAY July 23 Microcomputer Educ Ctr-Workshop, Micro- soft Word for IBM PC Compatible Micro- computers, Pt. 1, 8:30 am-12:30 pm, 3001 Sch of Educ Bldg. Student Wood & Craft Shop-Safety class for new shop users, Session I, 6-8 pm, SAB. For info, call 763-4025. Psychiatry-Lec, H Nasrallah, "Brain Imaging and Schizophrenia: CT and MRI Studies, " 10:30 am-noon, Child & Adolescent Psychi- atric Hosp Aud. Aft seminar, "Neurology of Schizophrenia, "2:30-4 pm, CFOB Conf Rm, 3rd level. For info, call 764-9527. Microcomputer Educ Ctr-Workshops: Micro- soft Word for IBM PC-Compatible Micro- computers, Pt II, 8:30 am-12:30 pm; Versa- term, 10 am-noon, both in 3001 Sch of Educ Bldg. Student Wood & Craft Shop-Safety class for new shop users, Session 11, 6-8 pm, SAB. For info, call 763-4025. FRIDAY July 25 Microcomputer Educ Ctr-Workshop, IBM PC and PC-Compatible Microcomputer System Selection, 10:30 am-12:30 pm, 4003 Sch of Educ Bldg. SUNDAY July 27 *Amer Soc Pharmacognosy, Coll of Pharmacy -27th annual 4-day conference begins. Reg req. For info, contact Therese Birney, 764- 8053. MONDAY July 28 Microcomputer Educ Ctr-Workshops: Mac- Draw, 10:30 am-12:30 pm: MS-DOS Basic Skills, Pt. 1, 1-3 pm; MS-DOS Basic Skills, Pt II, 3-5 pm. All in 3001 Sch of Educ Bldg. TUESDAY. July 29 *AAFC-Summer and Smoke, 7:30 pm; Street- car Named Desire, 9:40 pm, MLB 4. *UM-Flint-Film, The Wild One, 7 pm, Univ Ctr Kiva. For info, call 762-3350. Microcomputer Educ Ctr-Workshops: Pro- gramming in dBASE III PLUS, Pt II, 8:30 am-12:30 pm; Programming in dBASE II, Pt I, 8:30 am-12:30 pm; FinalWord II Pt 1, 1-5 pm, all 3 in 3001 Sch of Educ Bldg. Intro to Microcomputers, 1-3 pm, 4003 Sch of Educ Bldg. Chemistry-Sem, "/2, 31-Wittig Sigmatropic Rearrangements in Organic Synthesis, " 4 pm, 1300 Chem Bldg. Microcomputer Ed Ctr-Workshop, Basic Con- cepts of Microcomputer Word Processsng, 10:30 am-12:30 pm, 4003 SEB. For reg tifo, T call 763-5356. *HRD-Workshop, Written Communications J Seminar, 9 am-4 pm, HRD Ctr. For info, call 24 764-7410. Cont Med Educ-2-day Conf, "Nutrition and Turner Geriatric Svcs-Housing Bureau for Sen- Related Concerns of Chronic Illness, " Tows- iors forum, "Senior Housing: The Private ley Ctr, Med Campus. For info, contact Sector," 1:30-3:30 pm, Oliphant Marshall Janet Boomer, 763-1400. Aud, Kellogg Eye Ctr, 990 Wall St. For info, *Amer Heritage Night-Ozarks, Mich League call 763-0970. Cafeteria, 5-7:15 pm. ,. r. w .. ", i p !. k a a.. t. t. t { r r{ a {- a a r a a 3