B-2 The Daily Tar Heel Thursday, April 24, 1980 1 Ingenuity character! A. eMail d. thesis exhibit if -1 Edd Cctnvcb'o 'Objects . .'. unique in M.F.A. show By JOHN BEHM Staff Writer Ingenuity, not -genius, best characterizes the works on display this week in the Master of Fine Arts Thesis Exhibition at the Ackland Museum. The thesis projects of this spring's six Master of Fine Arts candidates include distinctive approaches to oil, acrylics, clay i modeling, mixed media constructions and lead casts. . These are the finished products of an unfinished process not presentations of fully matured artistic talents, but working models of developing creativity. The, students' work suggests, in most cases, the possibility of genius to come. Linda Rosenthal's canvases (charcoals and acrylics) are particularly energetic, among the best in the show. "Rectangular Garden" juxtaposes floral images with NCNB PLA, ROSEMARY 967-8284 mm f j """" I mm mm mam m Mill Ibb ft mmm Lato Shows FRI-SAT 11:30 (Last one 'till Fall) Till TV SHOW THAT CAUT DE SllOUtl Oil TV! Persona!: Thanks B.C. and the staff at FM 107 for your expertise and honesty In adver tising our late shows to your large college audience. Looking forward to It again this Fall. 11:30 $2.00 , f f :.V. ,i ' mgmug 1! IV V i 'J.; fcj i fMw bbitti J lus Spscii VVTTH SATUTM KEHT LIVE STAR MICHAEL 0D0TJ0GHUE AMD FRIENDS "flat since mv hanovfrnocn hssve I eazsd m - m - temm m on anything so disgusting." nBU!1Ct1 -Buck Henry "Some b! the most uproarious comedy tvotn maienai i nave ever seen, hullinu siuinl 'MOHDO VIDEO' is simply 'too funny' for television. I lost weight!" Chevy Chase AND ON THE MORE SERIOUS SIDE 1 msma 11:30 OF THE LATE SHOW BIZ... TastofooG." inbu uensor A SOUNDTRACK Shnon A Onrfunkwl MtCMOL 1T jagged rectangular shapes to create a jarring effect. Though intriguing, the piece is thrown out of balance slightly by overdramatic use of color. An improvement on the same idea is "Scratched Out," which uses sketchy charcoal outlines and neutral shading to achieve a high intensity of motion. Rosenthal's best work is "Hanging In There." Her subject is at once familiar to any student who has spent an afternoon contemplating the walls of a too-small dormitory . room. Rosenthal's treatment a burst of , bright colors played off against more somber tones is strengthened by exaggerating the perspective. Susan Dodson Estes' four untitled entries may not be immediately satisfying. Estes has produced four coinciding explorations of disintegration, which can be hesitantly described as abstract art. Her use of vivid color contrasts are startling though not clearly aggressive; the paintings contain conflicting recessive color combinations. The offerings from Connie Rubino show a fascination with motion which is effectively translated into oils and silkscreen ink. In "Flight of the Fan," "Reversed Order," "Half Circle," and "Second Flight," Rubino layers color and design beautifully, combining lines and m three- two-dimensional forms dimensional relationships. Imagination and versatility are evident in Rubino's efforts. One oil painting, "Angela's Mirror," manipulates light and depth to convey a cool, almost underwater effect, while "Full Circle" assaults the viewer with an explosion of hot red hues. Michael Joe Helton's paintings, especially "Dow Jones at Salisbury," are convincing evidence that a truly unique form of presentation has been discovered by this UNC student artist. Not merely geometrical or mechanical, Helton's giant canvases are constructs of a superactive computer-age imagination. Bright and electric, "Dow Jones," as well as "It's Just Opening Night" and "Post Horn with Orchestra" look like full compositions which have been broken down into interlocking gridworks of color. The canvases have been painted over twice perhaps more allowing the texture and color of the acrylic paint to vary considerably. Just as intriguing is Helton's experimentation with color intensity. One canvas, "Molliance," is hung next to an electric outlet that it very well could be plugged into. Dennis Deane's untitled paintings are not disastrous but enigmatic; some of them show skillful employment of texture and color variety, but others betray a less proficient approach. A few canvases are segmented, torn, cut and subjected to other tricks which have no effect. Rather than being abrasive or nightmarish, Deane's work is just exhausted, showing signs of being worked on too hard with too little concentration. The clay work by Deane is superb, however, as are the lead casts "Two Casts." The table full of fired clay figures all violent, spooky and ghoulish represent a depth of creativity not at all evident in his paintings. Deane gives- his clay forms a roughly tooled, primitive look, yet they are complex in their catalog of expressions. All that can be said of the works of the sixth M.F.A. candidate on exhibit, Edd Schwab, is that they are bizarre. Schwab is as funny as he wants to be, an art comic, a satirist of a kind. Each individual work may not overwhelm the viewer by itself, but the overall effect of his mixed media "Objects" is very amusing. A group of cheaply constructed and laminated briefcases, some stained and some not, some kicked in and some undamaged, is one of Schwab's "Objects" constructions. The wooden briefcases, littering the corner of the Cente Gallery, appear abandoned as they would on the floor of a men's room in a New York subway. Next is a table full of individual items which are little more than a group of one line gags: a plastic soldier caught in a mousetrap baited with a dollar bill, a few pieces of barbed wire wrapped in cellophane and labelled like produce at the grocery store, to name a few. Perhaps the most interesting of Schwab's artistic stunts is another "Objects" display, involving an old television console and case full of artifacts on top. The old Zenith TV, circa 1960, shows strands of barbed wire adorned with little yellow "happy faces" attached. Above the television, in the glass case, are a packet of transparency sleeves (painted gold), a Mother Mary (with a gold sleeve stuck to her head), a gold trophy holding up yet another transparencey gold sleeve and a war medal made from a gold transparency sleeve. What is the message, one asks? Goodbye to the golden era of home slide shows? Hello to the television wasteland? Schwab invites you to find out for yourself. The Master of Fine Arts Thesis Exhibit is on display at the Ackland until April 27. WWW- - . -V WW. m j n'.j(m -a (on 50$ "THE ROSE" HAS ALREADY BLOOMED INTO THIS DECADE'S I W NUMBER ONE 'ROCK CLASSIC DON'T MISS IT-8:00Mon.-Fri.l 5X5! 'HELD Like you've never seen them before I VVy iii-n starring in alphabetical order I )QQC UVCrt NADIA C0MANECI EMILY LITELLA LISA L00PNER I XXX) JUDY MILLER ROSEANNE ROSEANNADANNA CANDY SLICE RHONDA WEISS m THREE I m 1 YEARS I m I 1 THE I m it ? making! $ w Technical S5x mlcrophonal 300( mlreclas 1 K that put i XXX' . . , I Oo5 r?;'i?VJ ttaged. I a1 happens I 005' - ' It I &Sj put you I xjoC thera 1 XXX .Grst . I rmj toundtrsck I llilTlDHj piM7:00 900j l01 BUSY EtU)0AlL c Award winners Next year's Broadway on Tou r series will be highlighted by award winning dramas Da and The Elephant Man and the musicals Dancing and Chorus Line. Reservations can be made now by making a deposit at the Carolina Union box office. Children perform 'Alice9 The Art School . will present Alice Gerstenberg's adaptation of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland at 8 p.m. Friday and 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in Carr Mill Mall. This all-children production stars area children from as far away as Hillsborough and is directed by Brian McNally, who holds his master of fine arts degree from UNC. Call 942-2041 for reservations. The school will also be hosting their Monte Carlo Night Saturday from 8 p.m.-midnight. The evening, the organization's major fund-raiser, will be highlighted by gaming tables and entertainment. Woekeod Fare Cinema Same Time, Neit Year Village Dinner Theater presents Bernard Slade'i comedy Tuesdays through Sunday evenings. Call 787-7771 for reservations. LOSE 20 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS! Famous U.S. Women Ski Team Diet During the non-snow off season the U.S. Women's Alpine Ski Team mem bers go on the "Ski Team" diet to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. That's right -20 pounds in 14 days! The basis of the diet is chemical food action and was., devised by a famous Colorado physi cian especially for the U.S. Ski Team. ; Normal energy is maintained (very im portant) while reducing. You keep "full'' no starvation - because the diet is designed that way. It's a diet that is easy to follow whether you work, travel or stay at home. This is, honestly, a fantastically suc cessful diet. If it weren't, the U.S. Women's Ski Team wouldn't be per mitted to use it! Right? So, give your self the same break the U.S. Ski Team gets. Lose weight the scientific, prov en way. Even if you've tried all the other diets, you owe it to yourself to try the U.S. Women's Ski Team Diet. That is, if you really do want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. Order today. Tear this out as a reminder. -Send only $2.00 ($2.25 for Rush Ser vice - cash is O.K. - to: NORTH WEST PRODUCTS, P.O. BOX 78232, Seattle, Wash. 98178. Don't order un less you want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that's what the Ski Team Diet will do. CAREER OPTIONS Considering career options? Consider RESPIRATORY THERAPY-a versatile and challenging health, care profession dedicated to diagnosing and treating cardiopulmonary disorders under the supervision of physicians. Job Market? Few health care professions are in greater demand than respiratory therapists. Salary? In most areas of the nation the range is $12,000-16,000 per year. Career Mobility? Unlimited and rapid. New areas including pulmonary rehabilitation, neonatology research, physiologic monitoring, critical care, and more speciality areas. Requirements to practice respiratory therapy: Two year associate degree or bachelors degree in respiratory therapy plus eligibility for credentialing. For more information Contact: Mr. William Byrtus Sandhills Community College ' Route 3, Box 182-C Carthage, N.C. 28327 Phone: 910-692-6185, Ext. 261 I'm No Angel With Mac West and Cary Grant. At 7 and 9:30 p.m. today in Carroll Hall. Free with UNC student ID. Rock 'N' Roll High School One of the cult films of the 70s, the Ramones come to play at Vince Lombardi High in this humorous look at the importance of rock in the lives of American teenagers. At 7, 9 and 1 1 p.m. Friday in Carroll Hall. Free with UNC student ID. Music Theater Two Nights One Acts The Actors Co-op of the Art School presents a series of one-act plays at 8 p.m. May 2, 3, 9 and 10 in the Gallery Theater, in the Can Mill Mall. Call 942-2041 for reservations. Toys In The Attic Duke University Players presents Lillian Hellman's play at 8:15 p.m. today through Sunday in Branson Theatre on the east campus of Duke University. Call 684-3181 for reservations. Getting It Back Together A cabaret revue on the theme of personal analysts. Performances at 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays through Saturdays in the Chez Condoret Restaurant 143 W. Franklin St. Call 942 7996 for reservations. unve uur vuio. ALMOST FREE to most U.S. cities S AUTO DRIVEAi'JAY 919-272-2153 520 V. Friendly Ave Greensboro, N.C. Arrogance At 8 p.m. Friday in Memorial Hall. Lena Home At 8: IS p.m. Friday and Saturday in Page Auditorium on the Duke University campus. Planetarium Fir From The Sky A light-hearted look at falling objects from outer space. At 8 p.m. today and Friday; at 1 1 a.m., 1, 3 and 8 p.m. Saturday; and at 2, 3 and 8 p.m. Sunday. Laser Fusion A light show at 9:15 and 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Morehead Planetarium. Classical Laser A light show performed to classical music at 4:15 p.m. in Morehead Planetarium. Gallery iu urn mm Ackland Art Museum "Sand Creatures," photographs by Ray K.. Metcr through June I. Morehead Planetarium Gallery -The Art of Surgery," a collection of medical drawings by Phyllis Goldman through May 31. Art School Gallery: Carr Mill Mall Sculpture by Nancy Brown through May 12. Some rh ill Gallery: 5504 Chapel Hill Blvd., Durham Paintings, drawings and ceramics by Ray Elmore. Art Haney, Paul Hartley and Ed Reep. High ammca ptua CoflaVTuon Progrtn Caan prust lor ttudwita A company nmcmcMkI naflomJ ? -aflh!B- ia"." mm1 '"imp. mT ,bAHUAINMATINEE 1 $2 00 TlL6PMMon-Frl ' .. Held over' 7thBig Week 2:-9. 7:00 2 lL PETER SELLERS AAwaerdy I f SHIRLEY MacLAlNE NSd!r BEING pefe' N 'THERE -" I 1 Untt4 ArtUt NOW SHOWiNG 2:00 5:00 8:00 Nominated For 8 Academy Awards Including BEST PICTURE 1 I H jhmiinP. . . -rjg 'Jl-.M...A.S,. & fa :t 4. Ji, & A. M, A' rm rw 2 YEARS IN CHAPEL HILL Ji Part an FvJI Bm J JtetH houa Car hti Z. Dborah BatfiiTDIan lon "TOUCHED BY 10YE" 3 15 5 15 7;15 and 915 Caroljna Closslts Sarlat "BEEEL WIIKC'JT A CAUSE" Matlnoo at 3:C0 and 5:03 5 HELD OVER 4th Big Veekt 2:15 4:35 6:55 9:20 2 Academy Award Nominations Best Sup. Actor-Mickey Rooney FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA'S "w--... v . a a Dolby Stereo Held over th Smash Week 9 2:15 4:40 7:05 9:30 Nomon 1 All that picture cr aiy rhythm. ii4iciu tat t taw j 67 Kiiin(-iinidl L - if "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE? Poolmo 2:1 end Acto 425 Webster said a heathen is one "who does not believe in thou shall worship no other God, for the Lord, WHOSE the God of The Bibl." This definition fits in with what God says in the 2nd Psalm. The first recorded words of Christ after His baptism were: "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." Matthew 4:4, and repeated in Luke 4:4. The purpose of this article is to consider some words that have proceeded out of the mouth of God concerning "JEALOUSY." A woman came to Luther one day complaining of how hard It was for her to accept all that was in The Bible. His reply was about as follows: "Praise the Lord! I thought I was the only one that had that trouble, but now I see I have company. There are things In the Blblo I don't believe, 'BUT I KNOW THEY ARE TRUE!' My unbelief don't make the Word of God without effect! My unbelief, sin fulness, ignorance, and darkness don't nullify The Truth. The Light, The Wisdom, and The Holiness of God Almighty! 'The Wisdom of man is foolishness with God.' So, I reject, renounce, and repent of my unbelief, and act upon what God says." In the Second Commandment in forbidding idolatry, and bowing down to any image or likeness of anything in heaven, earth, or in the water under the earth. God says: "For t the Lord thy God am a jealous God, visiting the lnl qulttas of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generations of them that hate me, and shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love me and keep my Commandments." I have visited churches where the people bow down to Images, statues, etc.! In Exodus 34:24 God says His name is "Jealous!" "For NAME IS JEALOUS, IS A JEALOUS GOD!" Search from Genesis 1 to Revelation 22 and you will find this solemn truth confirmed over and over again as God deals with men! God likens His relation to His people to that of husband and wife. Those who have accepted Him Lord and Saviour and are unfaithful are called spiritual adulterers, for nicators, harlots, etc. In tha 19th chapter of Revelation fourth chapter from the end of the Bible there is the vi sion of great Joy and rejoicing in heaven: first, because "he (God) hath judged the great whore, which did corrupt the earth with her fornication, and hath avenged the blood of His servants at her hand; secondly, heaven is greatly re jc icing and saying: "LET US BE GLAD AND REJOICE, AND GIVE HONOR TO HIM: FOR THE MARRIAGE OF THE LAMB IS COME, AND HIS WIFE HATH MADE HERSELF READY. And to her was granted that she should be ar rayed In fine linen, clean and white: for the fine linen Is the righteousness of the saints. Are you concerned about being righteous and arrayed In fine linen, clean and white? Are you grieved at the evil and wickedness in the earth, and fighting the "good light Of faith" to establish righteousness? "Righteousness ex alteth nation, but sin is a reproach to any people." Prov. 14:32. Y that love The Lord, hate evil." Psalm 97:10. Qoo"i Seventh Commandment says: "Thou Shalt not commit tdultiryl" "Forbear thee from meddling with God." and don't forget He said His name was "JEALOUS." P.O. BOX 405 DECATUR. GEORGIA 30531