Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 06, 1953, Page Eight, Image 8

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    Million Dollar Exhibit Now Featured by Arts Festival
By Richard Koe
Emerald Reporter
The one million dollar art ex
hibit currently on display in the
gallery of the school of architec
ture and allied arts represents an
unusual opportunity to see what
has made contemporary art the
"most discussed and misunder
stood developments in our time,”
according to Andrew Vincent, pro
fessor of art.
Another attraction of the JJni
versity's Festival of Contemporary
Art, the display is a representative
selection of 30 paintings and eight
sculpture pieces obtained through
cooperation of the Portland Art
museum and its director, Thomas
Colt.
Colt made a recent trip to New
York where his personal knowl
edge of private collections and
dealers permitted the selection to
be made available. The exhibit will
continue through March 20.
Among the sculpture exhibition
pieces is “Woman’s Head" by
Pablo Picasso, Spanish painter and
sculptor Loaned by the Portland
Art museum, the work is an ex
am; i icasso's early attempts
i the cubist painting
ideas which he initiated to the
three dimensional medium.
his bronze piece was done in
It’s the
size of the
in the
man!
That’s right! In the U. S. Air Force, it’s not the
rize of the man in the fight-it’s the size of the
fight in the man! And Aviation Cadets must have
plenty of it. For Cadet training is rugged. If you’re
?°°d enough ... tough enough ... smart enough
f you can take it while you’re learning to dish it
3ut, you can have one of the most fascinating careers
tn the world. You’ll be equipped to fly the latest,
Hottest planes. You’ll be prepared to take your
position as an executive, both in military and com
mercial aviation as well as in industry. And while
you’re helping yourself you’ll be helping your country.
WIN YOUR WINGS! It takes little over a
year to win your wings as a Pilot or Aircraft
Observer (Navigator, Bombardier, RadarOperatoi
or Aircraft Performance Engineer). But at the end
of your training you graduate as a 2nd Lieutenant
in the Air Force, with pay of $5,300.00 a year.
ARE YOU ELIGIBLE? To qualify as an Aviation
Cadet, you must have completed at least two years
of college. This is a minimum requirement—
it’s best if you stay in school and graduate. In
addition, you must be between 19 and 26 H years,
unmarried, and in good physical condition.
New Aviation Cadet Training Classes Begin Every Few Weeks!
HERE’S WHAT TO DO:
Take a transcript of your college credits and a copy of
your birth certificate to your nearest Air Force Base or
Recruiting Station. Fill out the application they give you.
2. If application is accepted, the Air Force will give you a
physical examination.
3« Next, you take a written and manual aptitude test.
4. If you pass your physical and other tests, you will be
scheduled for an Aviation Cadet training class. The
Selective Service Act allows you a four-month deferment
while waiting class assignment.
WHERE TO GET MORE DETAILS:
Visit your nearest Air Force Bate, Air Force Recruiting Officer, or
your nearest Air Force ROTC unit. Or write to: Aviation Cadet,
Headquarters, U. S. Air Force, Washington 25, D. C.
1909 when Picasso was engaged in
what has come to be known as
analytical cubiam—cubism which
“analyzes,” breaks up and takes
apart natural forms.
In the painting series, “The Kog
Lifts" by John Marin is typical of
the subject matter in which Marin
works extensively. A pioneer of
modem art in America, Marin
concentrates principally in water
color with landscape subjects.
KouauJt
"The Head” is one of two works
on display by George Rouault.
Rouault, born in Paris in 1871, is
ranked as an expressionist because
The million dollar art. exhibit
currently being displayed in the
gallery of the architecture school
h> open from 9 am. to ."> p.in.
.Monday through Sunday and
from 0 a.m. to 9p.m. on Tues
day and Thursday.
of the simplification of hm forms
and the intensity of his state
ments. Ranked with Picasso and
Matisse as one of the greats of
contemporary painting, Rouault s
works are considered deeply re
ligious and he himself is spoken
of as a man of great piety.
Max Beckman’s "The Mill’’ has
been proclaimed by critics as an
excellent example of his matin e
work. The heavy black outline is a
Beckman trade mark and the
powerful compositional scheme
rleo is characteristic of his paint
ing. Bookman, a native of Leipzig,
Germany, came to the states in
1917 and taught at Washington
university in St. Louis and Mills
college near Oakland, Calif., be
fore h*s death.
Modern
These are only a few of the
contemporary works r.ow on hie
play in the architecture gallery.
Works by such modem artists as
Cezanne, Kandinsky, Modrian,
Klee, Dali, Gorky, Calder and Ma
rini are also on exhibit. Period
ically, through the extent of the
exhibit, special gallery talks j>< r
-aimng to the exhibition will bu
given.
€> Campus Briefs
9 The last Cosmopolitan Club
meeting of winter ter m will take
place from 8 to 12 p.m. today at
Plymouth house. Refreshments
will be served.
q International Relations club,
which had scheduled a meeting for 4
last night, will hold it on Wednes
day instead. E. B. McNaughtonj
will speak at that time on "The
Economic Problems and Rehabili-I
tation of Japan.” The meeting will,
be held at 7:30 p.m. in the SU,J
with room number to be posted.
We've got what
it takes!
We’ve got (lie equipment to
do just about any job that
needs doing — I’I,US the
best artisans in the business
—men who won’t let your
watch leave our shop until
it is right!
BRISTOWS
620 Willamette