PRESENTED BY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SEPTEMBER 10,2010 CULTURES e shift digital energy saturday. AGE IN WIND eries alleries for times. Artists showcase work at Indian Art Market The annual event was a success during the weekend. CLUBS|2A Cultural Indian Club to host events for Ganesha Club will celebrate Indian festival for Hindi god this week in Lawrence INDEX Classifieds...7B Crossword...4A Cryptoquips...4A Opinion...5A Sports...1B Sudoku...4A Artist-In-Residence Dan Perijsvog, works on his exhibit in the Spencer Museum of Arts Central Court Friday afternoon. Romanian-born Perijsvog will be at KU until Sept. 16th. While here, he will share his art and reflections with students and the community through his exhibit and artist talks. WEATHER Sarah Hockel/KANSAN Partly cloudy All contents, unless stated otherwise; © 2010 The University Daily Kansan Thunderstorms WEDNESDAY Partly cloudy Simple drawings, complex ideas Exhibit at Spencer illuminates artist's social philosophies BY NICOLAS ROESLER nroesler@kansan.com nroeslerkansan.com A man with a thick black and gray beard stands 20-feet high on a cherry picker in the Spencer Museum of Art, drawing on the walls. He wears a green fly-fishing jacket, which holds everything he needs — a few markers and a notebook. His arms move quickly and deliberately, like a teacher at a chalkboard. He draws simple figurines, as if the walls were just a giant comic strip. Somehow, a clear message comes through. 8 Periiovschi is the artist-in-residence at the Spencer Museum of Art. He has been drawing in the central court of the museum for almost two weeks now, creating walls of statements and observations through cartoon-looking, graffiti-style art. His exhibit, Dan Periiovschi Central Court, will officially open Thursday and run until Feb. 6, 2011. His artwork will stay on the walls until the end of the exhibit. "I have my own language," Dan Perjovschi said. "These are my words, and I recombine them into new phrases." Periiovschi mixes political messages with simple observations of life. One of his favorite and recurring drawings depicts a man in a business suit pointing and yelling at a young skateboarder. The speech bubble coming from the man in the business suit reads "I was at Woodstock". "It's not conventional art," Rachel Schmidt, a freshman from Paola, said as she looked up at the walls of the Spencer. "It's just true, he puts things in a way that can relate to." It is that connection that Dan looks for. He said that everything he writes or draws, we have all thought about at some point. He said he has just trained himself to capture those thoughts in his notebook. Walls have always been a part of Perijovski's life. He was born in 1961 in the city of Sibiu, Romania, the same year the Berlin Wall was erected. Perijovski said living in communist Romania was a life of restrictions. The government controlled all sources of information, blocking what Perijovski starved for. He said he survived some of the worst dictatorial regimes of communist Romania where there "It was a culture of missing." Periwoski said. There would be periods where his family had no milk or bread. His working-class parents somehow managed to send all three of their children to universities, where Periovschi studied painting. "It is new all the time," Lia said. "We had a common idea to do what we want, a kind of ambition to contribute to our context." While there, he started a sort of underground art project with his wife, Lia, whom he met at a special art school when they were 10 years old. was no freedom to travel or read certain books. Because of censorship in Romania, each of Dan's art shows went through three different censorship committees before the public could see it. So, he began private CENTRAL COURT The exhibit will run from Thursday to Feb. 6, 2011. Dan Perjovschi's "Central Court" exhibit will officially open Thursday night. Perjovschi will speak at 5 p.m. at the SMA Auditorium inside the museum. showings in his loft in Bucharest. Then, in 1990, Perjovschi helped begin and run the first independent magazine in Romania called "Revista 22," named after a key date in the Romanian revolution; Dec. 22, 1989. 北 SEE ARTS ON PAGE 3A Q