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Art Capsule ReviewsOur critics recommend these shows.By Theresa Bembnister and Gina KaufmannPublished on September 16, 2004Avenue of the Arts "Silly" seems to be the overwhelming theme of this year's Avenue of the Arts, a temporary installation of six public-art pieces along Central Avenue downtown. Kansas City Art Institute printmaking teacher Laura Berman's "Cowboys and Indians" has a 'zine-aesthetic-meets-the-USDA's-latest-fruit-campaign feel, along with a 1950s-nostalgia twist: Large-scale, black-and-white, photocopy-quality images of children in cowboy and Indian costumes are attached to the walls of a parking garage between 10th and 11th avenues, though they have been holding fruit instead of toy weapons. (This piece is reportedly supposed to change as the summer goes by, so keep an eye out.) Mark Cowardin's "Out in the Open," between 13th and 14th streets, consists of (nonworking) kitchen, utility and bathroom sinks rising above the sidewalks with the support of their plumbing. Described as a "tourist viewer," Maria Velasco's "City With a View," a replica of the pay binoculars (free here) often installed near the edges of scenic vistas, sits near the corner of 11th and Central. A look through the piece reveals notable downtown architectural landmarks, such as the Lyric Opera building, with office workers scaling walls and lounging on rooftops. Hesse McGraw, Rachel Hayes and Michael Jones McKean also contribute works. Through September on Central Avenue between 10th and 14th streets. (T.B.) Black and White in America: Photography of the Civil Rights Era The essay accompanying Black and White in America: Photography of the Civil Rights Era reminds readers that before television became commonplace in the mid-1960s, Americans received their visual news through newspaper and magazine photographs. The stillness and detail of the images on display in this exhibit invite contemplation of the meanings and repercussions of the moments they capture in a way that today's TV coverage cannot. The photographs include portraits, photojournalism and more personal artistic endeavors, but each of them embodies an element of the struggle for racial justice. Roy De Carava's "Hallway-Harlem, New York" depicts a long, narrow corridor lighted with a single dingy light bulb and disappearing into a black hole of a shadow. He writes that the photograph reminded him of the hallways he walked through as a child in Harlem. "They were poor, poor tenements, badly lit, narrow and confining, hallways that had something to do with the economics of building for poor people." Through October 3 at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak, 816-751-1278. (T.B.) Good-Time Mix Machine Scrambler Drawings One Saturday afternoon in early September, at a gigantic empty warehouse, Rosemarie Fiore turned on the hair-band tunes and set to work creating a massive spyrographic drawing in front of an audience of art enthusiasts. Using a remote-controlled timer, Fiore directed a gas-powered spray mechanism attached to the passenger car of a Scrambler carnival ride. As the ride spun, the car left behind a trial of blue, red and yellow loops on the canvas and vinyl covering the ground. Unfortunately, looking at the drawings that resulted is not nearly as much fun as seeing the Good-Time Mix Machine in action -- the process involved in creating Fiore's work may be more important than the product. Hurry to catch the Scrambler installation on display at the off-site temporary space September 9-11 (call 816-421-6887 for information); after that, you'll have to settle for the drawings and video documentation at Grand Arts, 1819 Grand Boulevard, through October 16. (T.B.) Interactive Systems Even though it's upsetting to think that a robot might steal your job someday, much scarier is the possibility that one could steal your boyfriend. Rarely does this second possibility occur to us. That's because we assume that robots have no personality, that they lack creativity, that they are not cute. But Interactive Systems, a display of robotic drawing machines built by University of Kansas sculpture professor David Bowen, questions all three assumptions. The cutest robots in the bunch are called "Self-Confusing Line Followers." Placed on top of a circular piece of white paper, these robots trail black ink behind them; they're trained to, with the help of light sensors, stay away from the lines they've already drawn and avoid bumping into one another. As a result, they make a lot of sudden turns, darting this way and that as people avoiding one another in a large crowd might do. When the gallery's garage door opens, the sudden flood of light overpowers them, and off they run, drawing on the floor like true artists. Other robots include a material-removal device -- which looks like a beautiful, high-tech jellyfish -- and infrared drawing devices that move charcoal pencils in direct response to people moving around the gallery. Viewable by appointment through September at 1830 Locust, 816-471-3618. (G.K.) The Korai in the Modern Urbanscape Two years ago, on a pre-sunrise walk through the streets of Los Angeles, Peggy Nichols spotted a fashion-store display window filled with mannequins glowing beneath spotlights. She was so taken by the scene that she returned to paint it the next evening. Since then, Nichols has been drawing and painting scenes of L.A. boutique windows after dark. Bright lights and deep shadows give Nichols' paintings a theatrical and voyeuristic appeal; inanimate plastic women lounge in lingerie, and armless, headless models in gorgeous designer dresses stand at attention. Nichols sees female mannequins as a sort of modern-day korai -- a Greek word meaning daughter or goddess used to describe early sculptures of the female form that represented ideal beauty. By re-creating scenes designed for display, the artist asks her audience to take a step back and re-examine representations of the female form in today's society. Through September 17 at the Pearl, 1818 McGee, 816-474-1731. (T.B.)
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