4The Daily Tar HeelFriday, February 3, 1984 Union gallery art exhibition Grace Chow adds color to Chinese By ARLAINE ROCKEY Slarf Writer ' ' Grace Chow has brought the Carolina Union a splendid exhibition of Chinese watercolors with distinction. The unique ness of Chow's style lies in creatively liberating color while maintaining a reverence for classical Chinese painting. ' Classical Chinese paintings are dis tinguished by the use of rice paper, calligraphic-type brush strokes, nature as subject matter, Chinese ink and Chinese philosophy behind the work. To understand the importance of Chow's creative use of color, it must be realized that, traditionally, Chinese pigments come in a very limited array of color. The basic ink stick, made from the soot of burnt palm, is ground by the artist and mixed with water to create various shades of black on paper. Chow's crab paintings are exemplary basic black ink water colors. To create color, two types of Chinese pigment chips are soaked in water for. about 15 minutes. Mineral pigments are opaque. The gradation in Chow's horizontal rock for mation landscapes is created through a mineral layering techriique using pigments. The more transparent vegetable pigments are used alone or are mixed with other pigments to create other colors. For example, various hues of green are ob tained by mixing yellow with indigo blue. The traditional Chinese color wheel, however, has no red pigment - one. of the Western world's primary colors. By exercising her artistic license, Chow uses Western red in her watercolors to bring out the vivacity of her subject mat ter. Therefore, her show appears much more lustrous than would be expected of a typical exhibition of Chinese water color. This fact is especially apparent in her lotus paintings. Chow demonstrated her methods of composition and technique Jan. 22 to an eager audience of about 30 students, ar tists and fans. During her demonstration, she explained the basics of Chinese water color and told about her life. . By the age of 12r Chow had had several miniature paintings published in a children's magazine in Hong Kong. Recognizing her talent, Chow's father sent her to her future in-laws for private art lessons. Chow spoke about life as a young art L ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 BARGAIN MATINEE-ADULTS $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 4TH WEEK! 3:20 5:20 7:20 9:20 if- CoOT3N ) S3 TH WOT POO Wlf AU 3fffS fiESf RVt '13r2SJt?' i 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:45 William Hurt CHAPEL HILL-DURHAM EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT fv si,' i''- , ' - ' f Mr. -x : rs- 'VS. .ys- -r- ' , ' V.vz.v. v. .v.-. v.-.-. ? ; - - n., A '(ft '"S 7 ' II St J t.lt I, i nl lli Mull JI,'iHi1'l!Tjl MS .MI'V 3 i'.r,U l5ZSXGn2IL- STARTS TODAY! 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 EXCLUSIVE CHAPEL HILL-DURHAM DOLBY STEREO ENGAGEMENT student in China. Students help their teachers by grinding the ink and changing the paint water, she said. The students learn by imitating the works of the masters and of their teachers. Chow studied for six or seven years before com ing to the United States. As a student, Chow learned more than technique; she learned the philosophy behind Chinese painting. The Chinese venerate nature. They paint subjects in their natural settings. Therefore, Chow explained, one would never paint a vase of flowers, but always flowers as they grow. f ,v These subjects are painted solely from memory, so the artist must have firm knowledge of the life cycles of their sub jects. The artist must study nature thoroughly. Whenever human life is pre sent in Chinese paintings, it is always sub ordinate to nature. On the left wall as you enter the gallery from the Union lobby, a fisherman and his boat are painted very small in the mountain river painting. When Chow came to the U.S., her greatest dilemma as an artist was that she ; was faced with the threat of composition. As a Chinese student, she had been taught to mimic, not to create. Now she paintings finds that her compositions explain them selves to her as she paints through a balance of shapes and colors. Chow's paintings often maintain the Chinese "moving-focus .perspective," meaning that the viewer has the freedom to compose the ability to choose vary ing perspectives from which to view the work. There need not be any specific focal point in a painting. Surprisingly, this solo exhibition is only Chow's second. Her first was in Seattle, Wash, in 1976. In the past eight years, Chow has been busy with her family and her education. She received her master's degree from the University of Washing ton at Seattle in 1982, where she studied Western watercolor. Chow perceives herself as continually learning and transforming. She cherishes .the freedom of creativity she has found in the States and looks to cultivate that freedom especially in chjldren; Through her study in China, she came to understand the feelings of deep involve ment in her art, which remain with her. -Grace Chow's personal triumph has been to return to Chinese watercolor while maintaining her artistic right , to creativity. VARSITRONIC! Surfacing at 12 MIDNIGHT: THE John WatersDivine EPIC! LATE SHOWS FRIDAY & SATURDAY . Just when you thought it was safe to breathe again w FREE SCRATCH SNIFF CARDS YOU'LL NEVER CrtDPCT IT . J "One of the year's 10 Best Films!" -Cheshire. THE SPECTATOR KAREN BLACK, CHER, and SANDY DENNIS in ROBERT ALTMAN'S BRILLIANT FILMy 11:30 Of I Discount Tickets Available at the Student Union LATE SHOWS FRI. & SAT. HARD DAY'S NIGHT 11:30 AIRPLANE 12:00 CAROLINA CLASSIC I ASPHALT JUNGLE 3:00 5:05 EAST FRANKLIN STREET 942 3061 DEBRA WINGER SHIRLEY MacLAINE A PARAMOUNT PICTURE I "I 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30 TEIE LHTTTTLTL 3:15 In a cold world you 5-15 need your fnends f.19 9:15 COLUMBIA PICTURES NORTH CAROLINA'S MOST EXCITING FILM SHOWPLACE I ii K ' . - it U 1, "ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIC! This is one of the best movies I've ever seen about man's relationship with other animals on this planet!" -Siskel & Ebert. AT THE MOVIES "ONE OF THE 10 BEST FILMS OF THE YEAR" M4 Ann. NEWSWEEK la ImC NEW VOU POST Uti Sktd. GOOD MGLSLNG AMIS1CA tMi Inm, LOS ANGELES TIMES GvrAmoM. WASHINGTON POST Bract Wjffitaio. PLAYBOY DwW Io(ktl, ROLLING STONE Can FruiSi. ILNXT-TV. LOS ANGELES MtyknStfctfl.VANmrFAai Imitk Tkru, CA1ITOR.N1A MAGAZINE MtUStMcSANFtANaSCOrHKONICLE MkUti Hntj. DENVER POST Roktft W. Iidct, KANSAS CTTY STAR DMffeM D. AnMtiMM. MILWAUKEE iOL'RNAL lMM Mmvtitr, INDIANAPOLIS NEWS . NEVER CRY A ' TRUE STORY IPGI A CARROLL BALLARD FILM FROM WALT DISNEY m a 3:00 5:00 7:10 9:10 Daily Plus 1:00 pm Sat. & Sun.f Delicate, beautifully acted, terrifying. We react all the Way!" -David Denby, NEW YORK MAGAZINE Golden Globe Award CHER Best Supporting Actress WERYLSTREEP KURT RUSSELL CHER 'Wp'immmm1,immmmimmA,mmmmmv,,w,..v mninii m i,.i. i.iii. if m - ,z: sK v ' f i'i. aT v T.. 9 . . y. O. . ::-v. -v J?.-rs r- Jf V--1-"-- 4f STEEWOGD KCMTESC a i jtir aiioi ini o rn n M IVIINi: N UnULOnuyi hJnrih C.arnlina'x Frr.lnxivf ' KINTEK STEREO PRESENTATION 2:20 4:40 7:00 9:30 Daily jjMjjjnjjMniMBMMMMr rnnrwi.ijyn .mi iijpib jw n.n .ji.ii u n iiiuull Crowd enthusiastic for 'Blues' concert By DAVID SOTOLONGO Staff Writer . When Roomful of Blues finished its torrid three-hour performance Wed nesday night, a collective sigh of relief came from the enthusiastic but tired crowd. " . ' . Review From the swinging solos of 55-year-old trombonist Porky Cohen to the re lentless banging of pianist Al Copley, the Rhode Island band led a fast break of rhythm and blues, jump jazz and soul that left the floor of Cat's Cradle drenched in sweat. A capacity crowd, ranging in age from peach fuzz to gray beards, danced heartily as Roomful unveiled a reper toire that spanned the Big Band decades, early Motown, New Orleans swing and Chicago Blues. Although shoulder-to-shoulder on stage, the band members nicely weav ed individual solos into the ensemble sound. Ronnie Earl's boozy guitar never stumbled, and Cohen and trumpeter Bob Enos drenched the crowd with non-stop blows. The spotlight fell" on vocalist and part-time tenor Greg Piccolo, pianist Copley and saxophonist Rich Lataille. Piccolo was especially entertaining, mixing his Southside Johnny screams with a throaty saxophone that swallowed the microphone. Copley, the only original member left from the 15-year-old band, sported a tacky white suit and slicked- back hair and donned neon-red shades for the second set. He noisily pounded the piano with his fingers and toes, ap pearing at times as some hybrid be tween Jerry Lee Lewis and NRBQ's Terry Adams. Not just physically amusing, Copley was foot-stomping good during his solos, notably the jazzed-up "Please Don't Leave Me." Lataille was the band's piston, calmly setting the rhythm for the Big Band numbers and swinging his sax into the blues and soul songs. Lataille and Piccolo roared throughout a 20-minute version of "Last Night," a ' tune from the Big Joe Turner album that left the crowd breathless. Piccolo was feverish during the wrist-clenching "Dressed Up to Get Messed Up" and "Down for the Count." He thundered through "Where You At?" and "Whiplash," laughed through "What Happened To The Sugar In My Lemonade?" and grinned during a medley of Chicago Southside blues. Cohen treated the older members of the crowd to a toe-tapping version of Juan Tizoi's "Caravan," a song from the Duke Ellington era. Roomful obliterated any barriers between Big Band and rock 'n' roll as it eased in and out of the genres without hesita tion or notice. The band thanked Pat O'Connell and Bill McCarthy of the Flying Pigs for lending and assisting with the sound system. Although distorted at times, the sound was good for the cozy confines of Cat's Cradle. m Box Office Ooens I NJv1,yAIE,D... I XXI o cm I FOR ALAUtMl 00 at 6.30 I AWARDS Wl 7.nn 4M n.on I b ism i I '.. .iii.ii , hi. ,ii i. hl i -1 1 f : mm. including EEST ACT0H 7:05 Erie Hsbcrts 9:05 CZST DlfiECTOn Csb Fossa Michael Caine in EDUCATING RITA final week PG Cxxxxxxx) I WCHL LATE MOVIES Fri. & Sat. 11:30 $2.00 n7' ( NCN B PLA. ROSEMARm 967-8284 JJ j NCN B PLA. ROSEMAR) 967-8284 71 Z THE Daily Crossword by Samuel K. Fllegner ACROSS - 1 Home for amigo 5 Shellfish 10 Alphabet start 14 Monad 15 Kind of rocket 16 Fashion name 17 Hall of Fame catcher 19 Mother of Romulus and Remus 20 Church part 21 Cereal grass 22 Bread spread 23 Scorch 25 Ancient Gr. theater 27 Reflux 30 Postscripts 32 Paddle 35 Rudolph, 'for one 37 Digestion agent 39 Suggestive look 40 Equipment 42 An egg for monsieur 43 Food tray 46 Opposite 49 Familiar abbr. 50 Love affair 52 Homily: abbr. Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: j PI 1 1 L I E riSTC IP IR IE r 1CIAIRIPI ANON WAKEN ftMJER STAG! TRADE HT I R( IMS A AA. a.r for u n "Iff E t T I H IT Al0"W G a l i n- v a sjllslrHr dTeTs HAVE EjM P A TtHlYIW I H SNA G AITIrJe ECTTH E A kTT Jfl Al L E D LIU D T A MR I HE IN Id" AjR A.ZS NEE RIlSjrETvTE GAM ET TAT THi 10 R A L AlilHj I N.JL In I e Is Is L-Js It I e iETDLfS Ie Ie is I 2313 53 City on the Mohawk 55 College bldg. 57 Gallery 59 Vintage car 61 Native Israeli 65 Retained 66 He left home (in song) 68 Angered 69 Retract 70 Undressed 71 Horse 72 Pester 73 Love god DOWN 1 libre 2 Indigo 3 Sediment 4 World supporter 5 Dernier 6 Flute's cousin 7 Aleutian island 8 Celt 9 Bean 10 Ta ta 11 TV analyst 12 Helix 13 Wagon 18 Apprehen sion 22 Paul Belmondo 24 Fruit drink 26 White House initials 27 Uneven 28 Procreated 29 Popular game show host 31 Heather 33 Entertain 34 Allude 36 North of Ariz. 38 Actress Caldwell 41 Freight cars 44 gobragh 45 Slnbad's conveyance 47 Sgt. or corp. 48 Vice 51 Leatherneck 54 Hot (drink) 56 Pine Tree State 57 Vessel 58 Flying prefix 60 Lohengrin's bride 62 Smear 63 Change the format 64 Affirma tives 66 Save 67 See 10 D T p 13 14 I 15 16 17 18 19 f 1 10 111 1 12 113 U . - j . 22 " 23" " 24" """"" 2i 26 " "" tti irrir" "" 30 in"" "" " 32 sfniJi 39 . 7T " " 44T45" 46" "" tTTia-" " " "" " 7T " " "So" " "bT" "" " " " "" " m" " 53" IT" "" m' 55" " " """" 56" 57T 58 " " " "" 59 6flT" " 61 " 626364" "65 '. ' 66" f "" " Ti "" " 69 "" "" " """" 70" "" 71 1984 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. All Rights Reserved 2314