Art Exhibit Bryan-College Station residents tant because I usually show new will have the rare opportunity to work in Dallas or Houston, she view a special showing of original says. artwork this weekend. She adds that she’s wanted to The artist featured in the show, have a showing of new work in the Margit Ilika, will be honored ata re- Bryan-College Station area so the ception Dec. 15 from 3-6 p.m. at people in the community, especially Thomas Johnson and Associates at students, would have a chance to 100 North Main in Bryan. Ilika’s see more of her work, work will be on display from Dec. foe Arredondo, coordinator of 15-21. University Art Exhibits, says that in Chances are Ilika’s name isn’t fa- recent years Ilika’s work has be- miliar to you, but the poster she did for the MSC Opera and Performing Arts Society probably is. The OPAS poster/painting is a stylized rendi tion of a dancer in six different po sitions.' There are two rows of piano keys, the larger keys serving as a base for one dancer and the smaller keys as backround for the other dancers. Although the poster has won Ilika fame locally, she hopes it will bring recognition to Texas A&M, too. “Every time I go to Dallas and mention to people that I’m from College Station they look at me like I’m some kind of hazing incident,” Ilika says. Her hope is that with statewide distribution of the OPAS poster, people outside of the local area will realize there is something at Texas A&M beside football and the Corps of Cadets. Ilika’s exhibit downtown will fea ture a series of landscapes focused on “newly discovered pyramids” she saw in Mexico. “The show downtown is impor- come “glitzier.” He describes her art as high-tech, -colorful, action- packed and very appealing. “If you had to call it (Ilika’s art) anything, and she doesn’t like me to call it anything, it would be neo pop,” he says. Ilika takes pictures from mag azines or photographs, makes a col lage and then paints over it. She’s a mover and a doer, Arredondo says, although her art is rarely found in galleries. Ilika says she’s not into the gal lery scene, but prefers to show her work in restaurants, calling them “cafe society shows.” Theresa Chiang, an advisor for OPAS, agrees with Arredondo about Ilika being a mover. “Margit is energetic, enthusiastic, but not pushy like a sales promo ter,” Chiang says. “She’s in it (art) for the financial reward, but she doesn’t come across as a commer cialized person.” Art fans who can’t make it to the Bryan show will have a chance to view Ilika’s work in February, when she’ll have a piece on display in the medical school gallery. Margit Ilika, artist Movie Review “WHITE NIGHTS” When his plane crash-lands in the Soviet Union, ballet dancer, Ni kolai “Kolya” Rodchenko finds himself back in the country he had defected from 10 years earlier and in the hands of a government that considers him a criminal. The dancer is played by Mikhail Barysh nikov, a role which reflects his own emigration to the West. Because Rodchenko was injured in the plane landing he was sepa rated from his manager (Geraldine Page). His X-rays are switched with some more severe ones and taken to the U.S. Embassy. The American authorities are convinced by the So viets that Rodchenko is suffering serious head injuries and cannot be moved from the hospital in the high-security military base where the plane landed. So tYie is set 'witVi a Soviet cteAeotox, aLC-C-icteotVy cAroppeci AjaeV* VnAxi vYv«s Scw\«et_ U5 tvyoy'v ixx-vc\ x j^Aaiufjej fJByj Xq ■paj jo 'Jfmip uiatp so^em ]i ji uinqp ue 35(i[ j.uop sjouajsij isom Xpeuntjoju/y ade^spuei jhdis -mu otp jo ued e amoDoq jauatsij oqt Union. The irony of the situation is that the American defector says he wants to stay in the Soviet Union and speaks of the persecution he re ceived in the U.S., while the Soviet defector is doing everything he can to let the U.S. Embassy know that he’s alive and being held. While the movie contains some impressive dance scenes it’s not your average dance movie —there’s still a hearty plot. There’s no super fluous dancing because each num ber emphasizes an idea in the plot. Greenwood tap dances as he ex plains his life and why he defected to Rodchenko. He taps out being a black child in Harlem, being an un employed teenager, joining the army and going to Vietnam. He dances until he breaks down and cries and his Soviet wife Darya (Isa bella Rossellini) comes to his aid. Oreervwooc\ defected from tYie U iViAect States in protest of \J.S. in- Vn. rVve 'V W ixir jaXauiffej fXq •S77 JOU JU3CfJ JOf )WM SOJIJ SJl ‘JJ91J F SI 9J9lfl JJ ‘(jSUlJJ snsof jo siuEU 9L[i ui) sdoodiuoD -inu SuijiEiu-jJdifD jo uopvu e ojui v>~>rianT\s IIIIOISUEJI O] ldlU9]]F JI9l]J ner, Galina Ivanova (Helen Mir ren), to show her the freedom of style he’s been able to develop since his defection. The Soviet government assigns Greenwood and his wife to be Rod chenko’s guardians. The Soviet government wants them to con vince Rodchenko to stay in the So viet Union and dance so the Soviet government can show the world their defector who came back in to the cold. Rodchenko is restored to his for mer way of life by the authorities. His luxurious apartment had been left exactly as it was when he left ex cept for the hidden microphones, the guards and Greenwood and his wife who have to live there with him. Greenwood is promised a better life from the Soviet authorities if he can convince Rodciienko to remain Vn Ryyss\2l. T^ecavise of a personality ccsxrvEYxcrt. \YT-e?ss.viT'e- Eyotyi ixvxt YaottI- -sp jeifi Suos e ,/meSy Surujnj^ 3/W„ qiiw smSaq mnqfB msu aq l •Eououiy s ( UE.§E3y{ pun XSojouqaaj ‘uia^sXs uosud oq) ‘uispEJ ‘uoi£i| -3J ‘sduud Disnui ‘stsxpSuEAa ax ‘said -dnX ‘Xempeojp uo ^depe SuiqtEDS Greenwood’s newly-pregnant wife out of the country. Rodchenko gets some help from Ivanova whom he had abandoned when he defected. In order to help him, she has to risk her position in the theater by telling the American consulate Rodchenko is alive and well, and arranging for him to be picked up. The title “White Nights” is drawn from the beginning of the movie which is set in Siberia, as well as from the climactic escape. In the Artie Circle, during the summer, the sun shines 24 hours a day and since Siberia is so close by, it also has an extensive period of 24 hour sun- light. The movie is over two hours long but never gets bogged down in de tails. The dancing isn’t overdone and the numbers themselves are short and impressive. As far as the poetrayal ol‘ tUe Soviets they as wetl V... worn t .la, U coats ■laXauiqej jjvjj Xq •unj jou Xutxnj jaqtpu si uinq -[E aqj jEqi si tuafqojd jsaSSiq aqx •3E§S9J Xsjd ued ssaupEj\[ ‘oj juem Xaqj uaqM lEqi Moqs ppij-j n OA SJE3X,,