The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 02, 1998, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    t
Weekend ii
Preview
The following list is a brief guide
to weekend events. Please call
venues for more information.
CONCERTS:
Duffy V Tavern. 1412 O St.
Sunday: Gunfighter. King Construct
Duggan \ Pub, 440 S. 11th St.
Friday: Bossphilly
Saturday : Shithook
s
Guitars <£ Cadillacs, 5400 0 St.
Saturday: One More Time
Knickerbockers, 901 O St.
Friday: Broken Crown. World
Record Players
Saturday: EKG. Manifest. Decker
Sunday: The Spinanes. Holy Ghost
Lied Center for Performing Arts,
301 V. 12th St.
Saturday: Wayne Newton
Zoo Bar, 136 A’. 14th St.
Friday afternoon: John Walker and
the Loup River Nightcrawlers
Friday evening: Version 3
Saturday: Studebaker John and the
Hawks
THEATER:
Mary Riepma Ross Film Theater,
12th & R streets
Friday. Saturday and Sunday: "The
Opposite of Sex"
GALLERIES:
Burkholder Project, "79 P St.
Through Nov J "Prairie Horizons"
by Anne Bfirkholder
Gallery 9. 124 S. Sinth St.
Through Nov 1: glass works'by
Judith Andre
Haydon Gallery, 335 A. Eighth St.
Friday: opening of sculpture and
paintings by Douglas Ross, opening
of still life paintings by Robin Smith
A byes Art Gallery, 119 S. Si nth St.
Friday : opening of exhibit by guest
artists Max Cox and Ralph Spangler.
Co-op artists Virginia Clark. Sandy
Meyer. Karen Payne and Jack
Stephens shown in main gallery.
Local artists combine diverse talents
Noyes Gallery display shows trio’s differing work
By Bret Schulte
A&E editor
Ralph Spangler's "portraits-of imag
ination” are enough to make you cry.
Of course, he gets tears all the time
as a tattoo artist.
Spangler, owner of Ralph's Hungry
Eye Tattoo Studio, opens the Noyes Art
Gallery weekend exhibition with fellow
guest artist Max Cox and resident artist
Sandy Meyer.
Tonight the three artists open their
most recent efforts to the public in the
Noyes focus gallery, dedicated primari
ly to guest artists.
Cox. a Lincoln resident, showcases
! her newest pieces of pottery in the
gallery. Her glazed vessels assume a
variety of geometric and animal shapes
and come in the form of everything
from a vase to a kitchen pot.
And they are all as black as a kettle.
Brushing flowers rather than por
traits, Meyer joins the two in the focus
gallery with a display of colorful florals.
Her piece "Flowers and Lace” recently
appeared in Woman’s World magazine,
which highlighted Meyer’s career with
the brush and canvas - and her miracu
lous recovery from cancer that threat
ened it.
Now, Meyer has re-discovered life
and is sharing it with all who witness the
jubilant collections of vines, leaves and
blossoms.
"My inspirations are the colors of
life,” Meyer said-. "1 like to do paintings
that will invite viewers into them.”
Meyer isn’t limited to strictly floral
themes, however. “Rooster Party” is a
colorful and surrealistic vision of a
proud rooster surrounded by brightly
striped and stilted eggs, conveying a
sense of fun and playfulness.
Spangler's work exudes a different
sort of emotion: less of the jubilant and
more of the thoughtful.
Traditionally concentrating on por
traits, Spangler has fleshed out romantic
nudes, isolated figures and imaginative
moments of sensitivity.
Two of the centerpieces of his dis
Please see GALLERY on 8
_wmmmm '_
Art Courtesy of Noyes Art Gallery
“TEARS” by Ralph Spangler is one of several portrait pieces on display this
weekend at the Noyes Art Gallery.