Arts & Entertainment * m Businesses paint pretty picture for artists By Mary Nell Westbrook Staff Reporter About 30 Lincoln businesses sup port local and regional artists through a leasing program set up by Haydon Art Gallery. The program allows businesses and individuals to lease pieces of art for three months or more. Many busi nesses are on a perpetual leasing pro gram in which they trade in different pieces of art abou t every three months, said Diane Martin, director of the Haydon Gallery', 230 N. 7th St. The artists represented are all pro fessional artists f rom the state or re gion. The regional artists all have some tic to the University of Ne braska-Lincoln or Lincoln, Marlin said. The 91 artists are all members of the Nebraska Art Association. The gallery acts as an agent for the artist, Martin said. About 60 percent of those leasing art eventually buy the piece or pieces they are leasing. “The artists love it,” she said. “It expands their visibility.” Not only do the artists love the program, so do the businesses leasing the art. DaVinci’s leases art continually for its restaurants, said Kent Knudson, DaVinci’s vice president. “We really enjoy the program,” he said. “We change 75 percent of the art in four restaurants quarterly.” Replacing art gives the restaurant a face lift, he said. Customers notice and comment on the art. FirsTier Bank leases three or four paintings for the various branches, said Ross McCown, vice president and manager of customer service. “Thousands of people see the art and sometimes ask where it comes from,” he said. Barbara Kastncr, an artist whose work is leased through the Haydon Gallery, has lived in Nebraska for eight years and said Nebraska busi nesses are great supporters of local artists. The program educates the public about what is going on regionally in art, she said. Karen Dienstbier, a still-life artist, said that the program gets artists’ work out in the community and Ha ydon will put clients in contact with the artist. “Good exposure is very important for making a living,” she said. Art association celebrates 100 years The Sheldon Memorial ArtGalleiy at UNL will celebrate the 100th anni versary of the Nebraska Art Associa tion with a series of exhibits from the gallery’s permanent collection. The “Sheldon Sampler” series, which continues through next spring, will feature the art gallery’s most significant paintings, sculpture and works on paper. The first two exhibits opened Sunday. They are entitled “Masterworks” and “More than 100 American Prints.” Future exhibits will be titled “The Nebraska Art Association Remem bers,” “European Selections,” “Ne braska Collects” and “100 Photo graphs.” “The Sheldon Sampler” now on display is representative of the 19th century landscape tradition. Ex amples include works by Hudson River School painters such as Thomas Cole and panoramic vistas by Albert Bierstadl. Impressionist paintings include those of Childe Hassam, John Twachtman, Theodore Robinson and J. Alden Weir. Early 20th-century works will include those by Robert Henri and the Stieglitz Circle mem bers Georgia O’Keefe and Arthur Dove. Cubist works will include paintings by Max Weber and Patrick Henry Bruce. American modernists Marsden Hartley, John Marin and Alfred Maurer also will be repre sented. The realistic tradition will be rep resented by such diverse artists as Thomas Eakins, Thomas Hart Ben ton, Edward Hopper, Wayne Thic baud and Philip Pearlstein. Abstract artists will include Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman and Frank Stella. In addition, sculptures by Elie Nadclman and David Smith will be relocated inside the gallery through out the year long commemoration. The Nebraska Art Association is the oldest continuous arts-support organization in the country. Its parent organization, the Hay don Art Club, was founded in 1888. In 1900 the club’s name was changed to the Nebraska Art Associa tion, and the success of its early exhi bitions prompted Mary Frances Shel don to bequeath her entire estate to the construction of an art gallery. The Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery stands as a memorial to her and to her brother, Adams Bromley Sheldon, who added money to his sister’s gift. UNL and the Nebraska Art Asso ciation have shared a century of part nership with separately owned, jointly housed art collections. I J Butch Irelar i/DaiIy Nebraskan Kent Knudson, DaVinci’s vice president, with “Landscape #5” by William Lyberis, in the store at 14th and Superior streets. ■ —-1 Pre- f Wear Sale At Gerry’s Sport and Ski Lowest Prices this year ★ Down-filled ski coats starting at $74.95 ★ Ski coats starting \\ at $49.95 ★ Bibs starting at $39.95 $ ★ Gloves starting 4 at $14.95 ★ Turtle necks starting at $11.95 ★ Goggles starting at $9.95 ★ Caps starting at $6.95 i Look for brand names like Gerry, Skyr, White ~ , stag, Aiien-A, and Wigwam. Downtown Store Only Sale Ends Sat., Oct. 17th Gerry’s Sport and Ski 1120 P St. _Visa, Master Card, American Express, and Discover are accepted, / To live your life as a dog is a way to deal with fate By Kevin Cowan Senior Reporter “My Life As A Dog,” Swedish (English subtitles), Cinema Twin. Lasse Hallstrom’s “My Life as a Dog” shows fate in a way American films do not — seen through the thick persona logic of the child mind. We get complacent, thinking that life surrounds us with peach-fuzz protection, thate veryone is happy , dial we need to smile and suggest to all the idea of having a “nice day.” Movie Review But fate holds a separate notion. Fate twists life with every opportunity. If we don * t keep a world to ourselves, distance our inner world from the outer, our mental rope will fray and snap. “My Life As A Dog” suggests that we need to keep the rope taunt, though not stressed. Sometimes maintain ing a certain distance from love and death is essentially important Sometimes you just have to be a dog. Dogs loyally coexist with fate. One day they chase rabbits through a barnyard; the next day they lie severed on a highway. Fate works that way. “My Life as a Dog,” with all the exquisite technique accompanying so many foreign films, lets us know that if we keep a “tight rope,” we‘ll win the round in the end. The film holds light focus on the intro spective mind of Ingemar, a 12-year-old, and the events that take place in a year and a half of his life. He struggles through early adolescence chastised for his odd outward behavior. The only companion he can truly relate to is his dog, Sickan, not an uncommon scenario. What makes the film interesting arc the behavioristic quirks of Ingemar and the inner rationale he uses to keep himself strong. If all children could see and under stand what Ingamar adheres to, adolescent rip-tide hysteria could easily disappear from childhood. It’s hard when you love people and fate stands in the way, barring outward expres sion. Ingamar loves his mother, but all his acts of good gesture get lost in domestic haywire and his mother’s attempts to cope with cancerous lungs. No matter how hard he tries, fate walks first and destroys the noble act The advantage of film is knowledge shown to the audience, while the characters see only the surface. Ingemar’s relationship with his rifle-toting brother, for the audi ence, appears as an adolescent terror where the unbalanced scales of punishmental ways end up against Ingamar. It seems dogmatic to comment on the performances given by a cast of people who could very easily live in the setting they create. Of course, the performances are superb. It’s obvious that Hallstrom took the time to find the faces and the abilities re quired, rather than hiring a load of meticu lous professionals who would overplay everything. “My Life as a Dog” is subtle. With mother’s fingers in potato-sack gloves, it approaches the subjects that children all over the world experience, but Americans don’t like to admit. For example, a pop-bottle introduction to sex — a sexual explanation given by an older child thatends up with Ingemar'spenis stuck in a wine bottle. Tomboy girls whose breasts are beginning to give them away. A first love with an older woman and the curiosity adjoining. These topics, if at tempted in American cinema, would be labeled as pornographic grunge. But Hall strom shows the naturalistic way that adults treat youth — understanding and compas sion rather than superficial scolding and paranoid fear of social taboo.