Page 8 ARTS Friday, June 13, 1986 The Michigan Daily Modern Times exhibits world of Atget at D.I.A. By Elizabeth Block ODERN TIMES," the final exhibition of French photographer Eugene Atget (1857-1927) is on display at the Detroit Institute of Arts through Sunday, June k 29th. Eugene Atget's Magasin, avenue des Gebelins, (1925). Kaplan LS PR... BE OVER 40 AND LOVE IT! No matter what your age, if you plan on going to law school, a score over 40 can put spring in your step! You see, candidates who score between 40 and 48 on the new Law School Admission Test enjoy the best chance of being accepted to the law school of their choice and going on to practice with top firms or corporations. At the Stanley H. Kaplan Educational Cente, LSAT preparation is a fine art. So much so that Kaplan has more "over 40's" grads than any other test prep firm in the nation. Isn't that just the test edge I your law career deserves? KAPLANk STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. The world's leading test prep organization CAILDAYSEVENINGSANDWEEKENDS. WEARE ENROWNG NOW! 203 E. HOOVER * 662-3149 OUTSIDE N.Y.STA1ECALL TOLL FREE(800)223-1782FOR INFORMA11ON ABOUT OUR 120CENTERS THROUGHOUT THE U.S.AND CANADA. preparation for the LSAT and over 30 other standardized examinations Atget began his career as an actor, yet by 1901 he specialized in Parisian photography. Though most of his in- come came from local artists, by 1920 he sold 2600 glass plate negatives to Service Photographique des MonumentsHistoriques. The pictures taken between 1898 and 1927 are divided into three periods. Through them, one sees Atget's evolution from documentary to surrealist photographer. The first period between 1898 and 1901 are candid shots of the working class, while the second period is more Eugene Atget's Rue des Saules, A complex. Between 1910 and 1913 Atget assembled 4 albums, each with According to John Szarkowski. the a unique theme. curator of Modern Times, "The pictures shown here consider aspects In 1910 he captured Vehicles, while of ordinary vernacular life that in 1912 he shot Trades. By 1913 he during the nineteenth century had printed pictures of Shops and the gradually become a central concern rebellious Zoners (Peupliers). These of the literary and visual arts." Yet gypsies and ragpickers moved south Atget depicts Paris life with a definite of the city walls where they existed contrast between the classes, a common free from the dictates of Parisian nineteenth century European con- society. Atget's odd fascination with sideration . In his work, Atget cap- the zone is obvious in these pictures tures bourgeois attitudes in the In- where he took short exposure photos, teriors and Window Displays while perhaps illustrating his uncertain Trades and Zoniers depict peasant feeling towards the Peupliers. life. Although Atget never imposes a political standpoint on the viewer, it is In the third period, Atget interesting to note that he donated culminates his movement of trade radical newspapers to the archives of and street life into the modernization Paris. of early twentieth century. Now, he photographs. Parisian interiors, win- If one acknowledges Atget's work in dow displays of mannequins and such a way, the political undertones carrousels, moving his work towards may be traced to many eighteenth surrealism. and nineteenth century post- ' MI ann arbor civic theatre presents... DIRECTED BY HANS FRIEDRICHS JUNE 11-14, 1986, 8RM. SATURDAY MATINEE 2RM. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE FOR TICKETS CALL 662-7282 Auberge du Lapin Agile, (1926). revolutionary French authors such a: Flaubert and Stendhal. At that time ii the arts, political extremisn flourished through different media Flaubert and Stendhal, in particular exposed the obvious class struggles whereas Atget delicately capturec differences. A provacative parallel between St. endhal and Atget is that both define( the class struggle through architec ture. In Stendhal's Red and Black, hi used buildings to separate the classe as does Atget. Atget depicts wealth for example, in Interiors whilt working class and peasantry is illustrated with exteriors of building: as background. Although Atget considered commor: modern European social concerns, his sensitivity extends beyond the or dinary Paris photography. He demon strates a nostalgic examination of modernization's molestation of primitivism, yet his eye gave us an ab solute sense of pre-nineteenth centur3 history even within his present da3 photographs. Phone 764-0558