Arts ^Entertainment Wednesday, November 2,1994 Page 6 Artist exits war zone to explore creativity By >»an McCarthy Staff Reporter Though several paintings hang from Faridun Negmat-Zoda’s studio, he has worked on only one this past month. Negmat-Zoda has spent more than six hours each day on this painting. The paint ing, entitled “Aurora,” features a woman looking off into a field of flowers in the night. He is perfecting each colorful flower and the color of the sky. His work is near completion. Originally from Tajikistan, one of the former provinces of the old Soviet Union, Negmat-Zoda began his painting career when he was 11. Showing promise as a painter, he was admitted in 1970 to the prestigious Moscow High School for the Arts of the U.S.S.R. Academy ofthe Arts. He graduated six years laier. Negmat-Zoda then was admitted to the V I. Surikov Institute of Art in Moscow. Since graduating in 1982, Negmat-Zoda has had exhibits in the United States, Syria and Lebanon. Now he isaartist for the Noyes Art Gallery. Negmat-Zoda discovered the Noyes Gal lery when he participated in an international exchange program. The program, entitled “The Sister City Program,” involves locat ing a city on the exact opposite side of the world. Participants of the program then “adopt” natives of their sister city and show them their own city. Lincoln’s sister city is Dushanbe, Tajikistan. Friends who “adopted” Negmat-Zoda introduced him to the Noyes Gallery. His first exhibit in America was in that gallery. “People encourage you here,” Negmat Zoda said. “You have deadlines, but it’s a real co-op here.” Before coming to Lincoln, Negmat-Zoda literally was living in a war zone. For the past decade, Tajikistan has warred both with the old Soviet Union and with factions within the land. Negmat-Zoda said he witnessed many demonstrations in the streets. He also said it was common to have people firing at each other on his street. -—-—r “It was horrible because it's very hard to make something creative when there was so much craziness going around. ” ■ FARIDUN NEGMAT-ZODA artist “It was horrible because it’s very hard to make something creative when there was so much craziness going around,” he said. Before coming to Lincoln, Negmat-Zoda visited the United States periodically. Since 1990, he has had his works featured in Iowa, Colorado, New York City and Washington, D.C. While in Washington, one art patron paid his air fare and bought four ofhis works. Most of Negmat-Zoda’s works are oil on canvas. He said he preferred working with acrylic paints. Rich shades of brown and blue are common in most of his works. Objects in his work are clear and sharp, giving his works a Middle Eastern feel. “As for all artists, it is usual to want more and more out of your work and try different things,” Negmat-Zoda said. Each of his works either stems from a story or tries to tell a story, he said. Most of his story inspiration comes from ancient Greek or Oriental mythology, he said. Other sources of inspiration come from the smell of things around him, he said. For November, Negmat-Zoda is assigned to paint a mural outside the Noyes Gallery. During that month, he also will collaborate with other gallery artists on various works. Each work will involve two or more artists. Although Negmat-Zoda said he was happy to be a part of the Noyes Gallery, he admit ted he would like to have his works in other parts of the country. New Mexico and Cali fornia are his first choices. Michelle Paulman/DN Fart dun Nagmat-Zoda, an artist from Tg|lklstan, takas a braak from Ns work to gaza out tha window of Ns studio at Noyas Art Qallary. Tha placa baNnd Nm Is callad “Lava.” People Audience gets treat of seeing trick on singer NEW YORK (AP)—The audience at the Metropolitan Opera got a Halloween treat. The trick was played on Luciano Pavarotti. The tenor, singing in Monday night’s ’Tosca,” repeated an aria to his own great surprise. Normally, the Metropoli tan, unlike other opera houses, does not repeat an aria when applause brings a production to a halt. “That was our trick or treat for Hal loween — trick Luciano and treat the audience,” conductor James Levine said at intermission. Pavarotti received a long ovation for his third-act aria “E luce van le stelle.” “When he heard the music that pre cedes the aria instead of the music that follows it, he got a stunned look on his face,” said Joseph Volpe, Met general manager. “He walked around to the front of the table, slowly, like in disbelief.” Then Pavarotti sang the aria again. Volpe said this was the first time an artist had encored an aria since the Met ropolitan Opera opened in Lincoln Cen ter in 1966. Art director says taking risks important ■y Paula uvignt Senior Reporter Taking risks in the arts can be a danger ous game, an arts director said Tuesday, but it’s a game that must be played for art to continue to explore and reflect social is sues. John Killacky, director of performing arts at the Walker Art Center in Minneapo lis, felt the controversy of risk firsthand. He spoke to a packed house at the Howell Theater for “Risk in the Arts: A Tradition of Radical Challenges to Accepted Norms,” a discussion sponsored by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Fine and Per forming Arts. For the past 20 years, the Walker Art Center has sponsored experimental artists including composer John Cage, performance artist Karen Finley and choreographer Bill T. Jones. The center’s most recent controversy involved a performance last March by artist Ron Athey. Athey is gay and HIV-positive. Athey drew blood from himself and an other performer to expose the relation of AIDS to society. Athey blotted the man’s blood with paper towels and sent the towels on a clothesline over about 100 audience members. Killacky showed a music video version of Athey’s performance set to music by Porno for Pyros. He also showed footage of conservative talk show host Rush “Artists don’t cause, they reflect. ” m JOHN KILLACKY director of performing arts Walker Art Center Limbaugh’s reaction to Athey’s perfor mance. Limbaugh said taxpayers’ money should not go to fund something that “made audi ence members go, ‘Get me out of here.’” Killacky said the local health depart ment approved Athey’s performance, and none of the audience members panicked. But the flow of controversy continued. “There’s no way to talk about the truth of what happened,’’ he said. “Athey’s work comes from a context... Any artist does not work in a vacuum.” Killacky said certain members of Con-' gress wanted to discontinue National En dowment for the Arts funding for “trans gressive art,” art that goes beyond tradi tional boundaries. Killacky spoke of transgressive artists throughout history, such as Pablo Picasso, who were once rejected as “imbeciles” and are now considered masters. It is important that contemporary artists keep taking risks, he said, because they have to show where today’s issues of race, , sex, violence, money and class exist. “Artists don’t cause, they reflect,” he said. Transgressive artists also were “pulling out the rug” from social norms, Killacky said, and forcing people to re-examine their own values. “We’re really going to have a strong society. We can’t have this melting pot theory. That is complete bullshit, because everyone is fried,” he said. Instead, he said society should move toward becoming a “patchwork quilt.” Killacky said he wanted to complement his views on taking risks in the arts with a view from the commercial world. He in vited to the forum Kevin Fahey, director of research for SmithKJine Beecham, a Lin coln-based pharmaceutical company. Fahey said taking risks in the arts was similar to taking risks in science. As a child, Fahey dropped out of singing, art and dance classes and instead played with his chemistry set. “I started making little bombs. Then I made bigger bombs and bigger bombs. I could blow craters in the backyard,” he said, laughing. Fahey said if scientists such as Alexander Fleming, who invented penicillin, would have avoided taking risks, they would not have been able to better society with their research.