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' 1'''i...;,.,,:L.,, - For ,. t vuttg...11 . - your coffee table: kitsch curio. Grotesque Iti..krr.rr'T.',15T's.1".,,,M10..,e,v.,,,,,,:,,Rt :.,:::.:.,:,:, .::,.. 'tr.., .......... .:. ;.:;::::..........t '. ....'.2V....',1.:......:0: 0.: N:'. ....::1:.)t, i V,,,:.::'0.::,:::::.',i;i'.:' :,,,.,?:',i.:4P 4",'I- , :::A: .4 Ir'''''...' 2: A .:...'' 1:...;:1'.... ''.......Xl:.i.,.. ,.:',..., ;. ,,:'''' "'..::.4...:..:n..c....::..7i,..'t ..'..1 !..?,... , - , i; ;;:::'.:4: .' A y, t ,,,, 1 )1 .:...., lit , :::::. ::',...,:l5::!::::::;.:::::::::;:i. ,I.'.:::.!.1.::::::;:i.:::::::,...:::i::::::.:.::::1:sci::::i. .::.:::::::'::::;g1 .iii3O Ati:;::.........1.:......:.............,,.-.,?.....?.,..- 5..x4:;i:ge&. art" kitsch cone but a a is isn't camp. rrr.'1",'"7:irrrtkl'911 i t I .., 7.5 "Pop 7 ::, ....;''...::.'...Y...!.:...:. '.. :.:''',:........:::::SP.:.,.':?:...':.'''''. 1 ,14::i' ...5 ,.::Vt::: ' ) '. '...4 " ' t t ,::6,:',..:::, 3:,',...:: 1::z. ? ' 44,,.., i ,e(::;.:::" ' :::.',' 4 :.; .:.:,''...k:i;.11: 1 k '''",';''',ro' ::14 i V:;;;;1111. i .c...:"".4.' 1, ...U.4.,L..!:... I ammume,, cvslINT, i ....4':"...... 1 1 .", ''''. t...: i Iafifit$4, velveteen: "Mon fun for a while, but before and "pop" became very serious terms, indeed, and the movemert became infected with a certain pretentiousness. Now a man named Gillo Dorfles, who teaches aesthetics at the University of Milan (Italy), has written and compiled a book about "kitsch" a re- lated phenomenon. Kitsch is ersatz art that is often beyond redemption. The word, in German means "trash" or "cheap finery." One of Dorfles many definitions notes that kitsch is saturated with "the falsification of sentiments and the substitution of spu- rious sentiments for real ones." The mediocrity of kitsch pollutes the modern urban aesthetic environment from backyard (fake statuary) to living room (cheap figurines) to sup-ermarket (Musak). It can be described as a sort of creeping Rod McKuenism, where real feeling is perverted to pure sentimentality. . There is some disagreement about what con- stitutes kitsch, and as one writer observes, "one man's kitsch is another man's living room." But there are also clear lines of demarcauon. Banal, shoddy and sometimes grotesque elements may combine in a wax museum, for example, e where the figures are invested with enor- mous religious or historical siguuticance and wan a pretense of drama and art. Danes found kitsch in advertising. movies, architecture, tourism, pornography, politics, mon-- I uments, paintings and in the cheap trappings with which man's most personal monuments are often surrouded. "Love, grief, birth and death are transformed into superficial emotions or hedonistic witti- cisms," Doilies laments. A quick photographic tour of Salt Lake City The inability of Dorfles to laugh a bit at those kitschy items that can be reclaimed by humor detracts somewhat from the strength of his judgments, some of which have an unbecoming solemnity. "Something different" offered at the shop this year includes a "tee" of natural wood to which five coats of lacquer have been applied. The branches are hung with orange plastic flowers. His range of targets, however (from the funeris al profession to the Beatles to the avante-garde- ) courageous and he often nails his objectives with The statue becomes amusing and acceptable because of the "live" colonel's manner on television and the awareness- on the - In Golden Helmet." When a child's book bores Mom and Dad as they read it to the kiddies, its piobably boring the children too. Anne Smith, assistant professor of library science, Utah State University, expressed this opinion recently. Mrs. the about knows Smith she's been helpsubject. ing children select books for years. Mrs. Smith joined the USU faculty in 1948 and has been children's librarian at the Edith 3rown Laboratory School. She has also taught classes in children's literature and library science. "I've been reading to children ever since I can remember. and a really good hook can be read over and over again," she said "'n fact, chqdren make friends with certain books and come into a library looking for the same book again and again." She advised parents to take an interest in the books their children bring home. "If your kindergartener checks out a book from the library, and nobody reads it to him. he won't want to bring boos home again. Take Ume to go to the library with yeur Clildren." s urged Mrs. Srri1i, who practice cf. E:ving bcos as gifts, even to irbiel:. Parents who use the televir and spend sion as a little time co:nmunicating with their children are depriving thtal of some beautiful rv-1.e- baby-sitte- school these , "Kids come to days not even knowing 'The Three Little Pigs' and other traditional stories. Set aside an hour or a night when your family reads togPoler and doesn't watch televismn Sharing is the best part of reading," Mrs. Smith advised. The librarian is convinced that reading aloud to a child is important if you want him to enjoy reading. "In college classes I have taught, I find that the students who don't enjoy reading say there was no example of reading in the home and no books ever given as gifts. The students who like to read have had parents, grandparents or teachers who taught them to enjoy books or who took time to read to them." When should mom and dad to their children? start reading "StaL telling them nursery rhymes when they're about six months old. Get them used to the sound words. When thcy're about nine months old, or when they can recognize objects like shoes and cups. they're ready for a picture the librarian dictionary," said. Before t,9 of putting your bed at night, recount .' .' ,'' '' ....'', '4' - ' ' .4 ' ';.,.: l',...,''':. L .. '' :'- 4 ''.'. .i.''' :::. i::Z.'::',::::.,0.k '' 4sl.''':':;'- A V 1,.'."7:.;N:. ii.,t'..hH',.:.:,::;f:',;.;,, .; .b.,'': ,, :;.' .,,,, - ' .' f ... 4.; C:). ; '''..''::' ' ' - ::;',:li;;.::',..1:''F' ': '':'' ' ':.: ''' At';''''::;.:'":::::".. ''''':: '''''''::::':::. '..,4..'1':.:.......''T r..... ',;'..:i '': '.:':'''t k,.''''',,I '. ''''' :J:: '', ;'''. ''i '.' :1;;'; ':::',, ';;X:'..i','','''-'''';:. .... ' ' ,r';.,',.'';,,,t,t''''':.: '. ,' :K:''::::: 4 :' 4'q,4i :11.4' :',...:' '' .., ': ''' ': ..N.:. T!': '''111,,, iii,o..Zvt,aviim44.0.....V '4411.1WA"!6161"6411,116'V'''!'J"r':::,' WiTh A ''''' ; - '' :i::i ik;'"'", :,41'4,C' ...... ', ''. ........."'140iN:' '......'n -- ) '' -' ', , .; .. - -' .. - more diligently. ,: :- ;- f;::', , radato011; '',' 11 , '. MusicAt FLAshbAcks ' 71 fil,,. M,r: t :, ,,.. , 4 ',i: . 77,,,, , ill l i 1: ,..::..;;. , ' ,'''... t'e::::!;!.:firV4. 'r.l::;.:' s',. ::;t'1,,,,,''';,:;,1, r,.......,, ; , ' i k I :;:,,.: ::';' :: ;,.7. . 0 ? ,i).?!..it , 4.071 ,,,,, !.?!.;:':!...jr",;.:::t...::;,...:, ,. .1 4.''..'.& '7;, 4'!::','.'14:''': .. ,s,...:.,:.:..,:. ' :,,,..'.. c. 4i;:.1.7,.....;4,.,,,!.,,4 ',:?..:'':, , . :,1r,..:7v1iir,,,,,,...,!:1.....,.i',,,.1...;,,.,"..:.,..,',:.,:'.:I..."t.' ..;':..;:,..'..,:::,!.;'?. ;::,:::4 V, AV.44.1 '''.., "::' l' ) i ,!F,3 ' 1 , C.. - , , , ' ...:.. :,., .i.t:.,,:i, ::. ' :' ,...,: ''.'!: '.J.: ' , ':, .:'; :. '.,, 4 ,, r.:?::, .:, ' .1- - ,I, ,f': Ifi:fr''' 1.4 ,y7S', ...,.. ::,.,....:,,,,,0 t -, ;4,,,,,s,.- t.;:..4.:::::; ',143 s'....;,,,,,,-.:- ;". :,.,,:::.:,,:,::::':;,::,-,.:- :.,:::::::::1 ::.,..:,,::.,:,:. ,!:;14.,,,..,01 , ' Those were the days, my friends, the Sixties. And gathered here in one volume are many of the best songs of the Sixties. Instant nostalgia for a decade barely passed. There's the dreamy "Moon River." And the insistent mee. Iodic line of Jim Webb's "By The Time I Get To Phoenix." And remember "The Girl From Ipanema" And "Those Were The Days?" It would cost quite a sum of and involve much money searching for an individual to acquire such a selection of top music. The book would be an ideal gift for that musician friend of yours. Charles Old :,k70..:9,,,,....t4F,x , ..1. ,...,.: . .,:,;: 1: 1 :'-f '1,':a4f,:l:':igR,F: o, N.44,,,..,,,.,,..,,.,,,. , II , ' .,..,,..,i,.., i ,. ''';:!;:''' .4.c .14,. ' t $11.95. ' I . IANitili'4,:,, 4' "I, I ,; :t';,' :'...;;;;4. , , ,::.,:,,,.,.,:,,,,,,,t,,;..,,,,,,:,4t,.. ''!4 1 : .1, :. , '4' i "Great Songs of the Sixties"; Edited by Milton Okun; Quadrangle Books Rol Random House; 328 pages; 4 t., ..,ii ,..45, '4'.$,& .,...:, , :,,,,;: , ',...,.. , . ., '' , ' , ,,, :'..,....". ..4;,',4'''.! ,'' , ' , ". :"'" , ; , - t f, , Gordon Allred, left, and Steven Nelson have found reading a good book while tucked in an inner tube is fun. his experiew7es of the day, the librarian suggested. This will prepare them to listen to stories. When should children books of their own? have "From the time they're interested in being read to, let them have book f of their own. t But teach thm not to tear books. to halide them carefully." Mrs. Smith advised. If you ikant your child to appreciate art. buy good books to brgin with. "Many of the best nrtists in the world children's illustrating books. to liandle them careful-bu- y are one book It Mormon Tabernacle Choir CBS radio and TV broadcast ;., the Tabernacle, 9:30 a.m., Nov. 1; rehearsal, 7:30 p.m., Nov. 5. Free. Utah Symphony Orchestra Pianist Van Cliburn, guest soloist: Weber State College Fine Arts Center, It "ov. ei Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle, 8:30 p.m., Nov. 7. Liberace Valley Music Hall, North Salt Lake, 8:30 p.m., Nov. 3 through 7; also 2:30 p.m., Nov. 6 and 7. Snow College, Ephraim, I p.m., Nov. 2; George Zukerman, Bassoonist University of Utah Museum of Fine Arts auditorium, 845 p.m., Nov. 3; Brigham Young University Madsen Recital Hall, 8:15 p.m., Nov. 4. University of Utah Symphony Kingsbury Halt, 3 p.m., Nov. t. Moscow Trio Chamber Music Society of Salt Lake series, University ht Utah Fine Arts Museum auditorium, 8:30 p.m., Nov. 6. "Celebration of Fools," University of Utah Babcock Theater, Nov. 3 through 7. "White Sheep of the Family" d Theater 138, East, 8 30 p.m., Nov. S through 7; Underground productions, 11:30 p.m., Nov. 6 and 7. Rocky Mountain Regional American College Theater Festival Eight plays, Brigham Young University Pardoe Drama Theater, various hours, Nov. 5 through 7. Free. Lecture Celebrity Artists Series, Weber State College Fine Stuart Udall Arts Center, 8 p.m., Nov. 5. ..1VIn r BYU-S.Houseman, Forum lecture, Assemb!Y Hall, Temple Square, p.m., Nov. 5. "Londontown" University of Utah Travel Club Kingsbury Hall, I p.m., Nov. 2. a. 4, . I I r ..A1WIt 1 a. T i i 1 O. ' N do, I 'IP e it ta At lf REMAINING AT ' I Ae, Music Hall CASTIETONS AND SEARS. THE KEITH Q BRIEN MERC. teket ethecs It Day's Murray - 4914 So State. S. I, Main.'Strioole A in Ogden. loolltablelogen. .Music. Theatre Do s To ' call:95.34$7 Mail Orders 'Pled Premell womp, 't 27 months silo he was here. at least 11 moans until he return PRICES: (ipcluding parking) re :TsAirl .'" . CHARGE YOUR TICKETS Al ICH!. . . ,,,,,, LAST ANC CNLY rE . . A opf (IIji Tickets are going fast! mANI 1 ...' a II 0 00110 Hurry! Hurry! Other . ..'. .. to fith I fib " Vov. 2rd Evenings 8:30 p.m. , 0 a O Matinees hi. 2:30 ----- -, 4, ENOMAD.40.1101,.. 0 .- -.,40 iiII with Demman! Pd. Adv. Citizehs for Demman Alton Dean Jensen, Chairman 0 lp LW MUSIC HAI" .: I. County ed-icar- we. ov 401 Commissioner who has specific proposals for specific problems. Win he will teastre and per. hap s hand dom1 to his children, than 10 m books," advised 'Mrs. Smith. "Don't waste your time on poor books when you could be reading children something they will long remember," she advised. Calendar Elect a that , ow Camp and kitsch joined in portly Col. Sanders. - a .. ..::, 00k as-ev- who-duo-i- .... , ...... theater. Marquee I" ',':: :14:.1 ,. offers cogent architectural comment. LE ,,,;:':' .11710.:: ::::::.:;k, .. ,. movie I :' , :::'' '';' 4t,:,i0,s,:i;:$;,-.7r- '.:: "Modere quonset styling for 41, .: ..',, ,'' ', l' ;c);;;1111 ,?; ik', ''''."I't''' 7;r:',.''.4 ' 4. ''1.:- ;'''.'4if.r. :1 ', ' ' ,,,..,'.....:,:, it 4;.'l '''':1,' .:.!.,:'''''''' k11 0 I 1 .''.' I...o...dom,ig,00vreo-'''''':'l- i ,..z., '.....'1':.,,..:'':.11:: I ,. .; 1 1:4;;4::.i'A'.;:,.',,,ii:,1:::',' I ... ,,.... '' ,:;');. ' 1;f;.'.',..'?.?'. I 1., '' ":. :., :'.:..,; : '.':.:'&,,.,, l',...' 1." ..; :,,,:'''t '''',, :.;:..';:i::$;:i.:;;:et':::''':!::.r.:-'':i4::.;:;- 1 :'...'''. , r ' 1:1;0;;;1!-- ;:, ....., 4' r.,, 1 ,,,,,7,,,:';':',, r 7.: ktrt i:, !.: .' ,''' News Photos by Dev Iti Conley :;'''::::;:::rfli:::;;':-.::,;,-'-': ,,. N,..., t,...kt,4144..la. '', .' '''' :'!4:.:'..:.;';'.,''t. t:'.....E;R1 .: still-as-th- N, 4 t.'.N ..'"-- ;;':: ':.:' ' f, r:71 ,i,, -- Tr- ! When it comes to ticker tape parades, he is in a class with the astronauts. When it comes to fan Clubs, he's in a class equal to the Beatles in size and far more enduring. But when it comes to classical piano, Van Clibum is in a class by himself. Even the Russians, who avoid praise for things American, ungrudingly have called him "successor to Rachmaninotr since they set his concert career in exciting orbit in April, 1958. This coming week tempos fugit! the Texan will be making his seventh Utah appearance. As a part of the worldwide observation of the 200th anniversary of the birth of Beethoven, Cliburn will perform two of Beethoven's five piano concertos with the Utah Symphony Orchestra and Maurice Abravanel. The concerts in Ogden at the Weber College Fine Arts Center, November ana in the Tabernacle on Temple Square November 7, will include Beethoven's "Piano Concerto No. 1" and the "Concerto No. 5" ("Emperor"). The occasion will also mark Van's first concert performance of the "Concerto No. I." lila hns, as well as the concertgoing public of the world, know Van Cliburn as a taciturn celebrity. It is correct to say, I am sure, that he is this way because he ta willing to let his accomplishments speak for themselves. , He was the first American to win Russia's famed Tchaikovsky, the first foreigner to play in the Kremlin's Palace of Congresses, and the first classical muto receive a ticker tape parade from sician blase New Yorkers. Van Cliburn, despite his meteoric success as a pianist, is also a storehouse of wonderful stories and anecdotes, a competent citizen intensely interested in the political and economic affairs of his country and the world, an individual of deep religious convictions as a member of the Calvary Baptist Church, a fan of old movies and every Perry Mason TV t, a man with an appetite who eats a thick, rare prime rib with a New York steak as a side oilier, a human being so interested in youth and talking with them that his mother, first teacner, and traveling companion sat down three times (each nearer the door) in the Tabernacle just waiting for him to get to the exit door after his rehearsal with the Utah Symphony last year. and he is an artist to whom all younger musicians are indebted for revitalizing the corr-Tr- t hall and inspiring thousands of youngsters to practice ':, s Child Cud ere ture, she said. "If parents realized the importance of reading, they would take time to read to their children," the librarian stressed. Deseret " : .. By HAROLD LUNDSTROM Deseret News Music Editor been able to wrap their most sacred relationship in a thick veil of bad taste, dragging them down to the level of perverted rituals" The misplaced values that accompany kitsch were graphically illustrated by a woman who buried her pet monkey at a private Salt Lake pet cemetery a few years ago, complete with gravestone and a precious inscription. The cemetery proprieter confided to this writer In a pained whisper that as she knelt by the graveside on a sunny Memorial Day, attaching a bouquet of plastic flowers to the tomb, her reverie was invaded by an unsettling thought. "I should really go up to the city cemetery and do this same thing to my husband's grave," she mused. Then after a portentious patise: "Oh, the beck with it." e. s---' ' SymphoNy ANd VAN ClibunN tart precision: "It is hard to believe that men have "Camp" and "kitsch" meet in the familiar, Portly figure of Col. Sanders, the bespectacled mannequin that decorates every Kentucky Fried Chicken take-hom- , i v? ';',..;',', of pianist Van Cliburn. "Ws sell to many families who like to change Christmas trees two or three times during the holiday season," the proprietor of a display and decoration shop explained. "That way, they can continually have something different." Import shop shelves are crammed xith bronze busts of Julius Caesar and John F. Kennedy and obscenely garish fluorescent paintings on velveteen. The "big eyes" of children in Thomas Keane's paintings now hug out of plastic animals in variety stores. long, "camp" v - 4P ' .1'..-.)- tot t! ; - ,,F; UTAh In the window of an exclusive downtown store, among the m.niature imitations of Rodin's "The Thinker" and other pretentious curios, perches a grotesque ape, sitting atop Darwin's works and examining a humEa skull. When Andy Warhol reprod-IceCampbell Soup - life detail, it was a step in cans in larger-tha- n the development of the "pop" or "camp" trend toward salvaging some elements from the bansli- ty cf everyday objects and existence that would otherwise be of scant cultural or artistic interest. LET YOUR I to' , Pencil sketch by Utah artist Jeri Char lier part of most people that the mythic qualities that surround the figure are not to be taken entirely seriously. life-siz- s , .......41,0x,,,,,,,, , i,.. rt'Ai ;f1,,a7- av . r At) this week indicated that the same kind of objects glut local stores and are taken for granted as products of geniune craftsmanship. , :.I ' "We thought he was kidding," Snow said, "but . in all seriousness, he turnai to us and informed us in fact, of 'museum quali- that the cone was art ty . Pt It was amusing and i',',.......r:;:.:.,....:..:.,:1:.. t-l- t.: '' ot d .....:!:N.: .,,, - As they approached Snelgrove's Ire Cream Parlor on 21st South, the guest, a member of the faculty of the San Francisco Art Institute, became fiber- wildly excited whet, he noticed the in the dominates owe that cream ice sign glass front of the sho p. 1 (....:: r,..31:::::::,,,,,:,,:(.$,'" I li.,' 41 9 '.444 -': 47,4,. iie 2:I . ; ig.. .... 't. ME WOrali At the height of the "pop art" mania a couple of years ago, Douglas Snow, professor and chair- man of art at the University of Utah, took a visit- ing guest artist on a tour of the city. :., r i , ,. 4104e,,, Backyard primer in bad taste. By PAUL SWENSON, Deseret News Staff Writer 4 ..,...,,g..,.,,,,:,.,,;, ..............,,v,:. gr. ,,,. re , Of BM TASTE KitschAnd How To Acquire it ., .'3. . 0.., ,S. '''''"' .. , -- '..6'.. .,,....,v A .,:1;:,,,;,:,:, , , ' ,AfttK. ..,1 t:' ':,,0I ' '''.', s'!t,,'"i'liA .:1744 .:,.:.: . , w ::VSIrit, . 4 ( i d , ) :,,,....0,1,,,ottei:t . t loot::164 , 17 .0, ay. - ,:: I , 0, ' ..: er4 N.,..? i :14 , ,:; :,,, ':: i:4, i, -- A.?. e 4:4 i, .4:,: ',., v 7(11;it . 7 ' ,, 4ii , g ;,':' 4, ,,,....e,,,.., ,rif.',..I, ,,.' .,,, kitsch. " "Avante-garde- ,, ! , , t-,;-;-, .),,.,.44,,,,.-1,.,4!' 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I Saturday, October DESERET NEWS, ... ... .. ?k ,, cats, cheap "art." d :, i i t''f. Vt., ',ItiaiAtlita Alf :,:,.. 1 ,if 11(6131i,,Ngia,islIghE:.,,',. '': I'' t, V,:: - 4, , I:6AI' f' 14' 't .:', ...:....... ' I , , .: ;:::.-- ,4-77:- .,1 .. T Sad-eye- ' :". .. .: ...:',,,,:'--:-- Nt. ,,,,,,.,':', ,',.,b,,,...4., t ,,,,, 1,: ..,,,P;10-1'40.4- , .,,. .. ti 4T - r tri4tit ,s.. A ' ' ... L:I.: ::: !':.: ;,,, r.4).'';.:!,.' : ,):::----- 's ' r' i.: .- " I ,f9"'1,- At 'k, , 4.':,'....;: Vct ',..,.:' :,,,!: i'' .':::::: r, ... ..1 ': ..1.::'....:iV444. ' s.:.'S: :,4,:,;,,.., ::, :,,,,,,::,.., , :,:, .: er, ' ',':1:1 li:o..,7;;, - !...:';.:'"M.:.,4::.::.,.: :,,,0, '.''' :''.1:..A':': : ".,4WkriMmoll 1 '' 1 1.1,101.00.... A, t ii rt t'; .Nii,i: ...!.: .....:.: .,':,7- 0:3.:.:1... li '.;::::V...; ..,,.,.:.::?..'.:,.!.,:?...: to.:0 :: j.,4 't.: C.: v'd....rtk-.- , , : 1444;:;,;!' '"4 , i.' 1 4 '. 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