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The Daily Herald from Chicago, Illinois • Page 15

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PADDOCK PUBLICATIONS Friday, July 31, 1970 Section 2 --3 Andy Warhol Tops Pop Art Boom by GENIE CAMPBELL Andy Warhol needs no calling card. As one of the most celebrated and well- known of the pop art figures to emerge in the sixties, his giant Campbell soup cans and multiple Brillo boxes have gained national prominence. But while it's not difficult to say who "I HtL I'M vtry much a part of my of my culture, as much a part of it at rockets and television," Andy Warhol, pop artist, comments. His Campbell toup cans are very much a part of the American way of life. of Suburban Living A I A Corinne Hugh Weds Grad Student It was while they were working for Searle Chemical Laboratory at the University of Chicago that Corinne Ann Hugh of Mount Prospect and Kayson Nyi of Forest Hills, N.Y..

met and fell in love. They were married June 21 in Mount Prospect's Community Presbyterian Church in a four o'clock ceremony The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Frederick Hugh of 615 N. Prospect Manor, was valedictorian of the '87 graduating class at Prospect High School She is in her final year at the University of Chicago Department of Chemistry, doing wider-graduate work on a research grant Next June she will receive her degree with highest honors and with special honors in chemistry. She is also a member of Phi Beta Kappa.

The groom's parents are Mr and Mrs. Nyoen-Chung Nyi of Forest Hills He has a degree from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and will complete his PhD at Chicago in December. THEIR WEDDING WAS solemnized in candlelight by the Rev. Gilbert Bowen and the Rev. Thomas Ho well.

Immediately afterwards, champagne punch was served to 400 guests on the church lawn and later there was a buffet dinner in the church hall Corinne Ann made ber own wedding gown of eggshell satin trimmed with French lace, styling it with an Empire bodice, high neckline and long sleeves A Mrs. Kayson Nyi lace headpiece held her fingertip veil, and she carried a cascade bouquet composed of a white orchid, stephanotis, starburst mums and ivy. Mrs. Hugh made the gowns worn by the bridesmaids. They were Empire styled in aqua organza over taffeta with blue velvet ribbon trimming the waistline The girls wore blue velvet ribbons in their hair and carried round bouquets of blue daisies, white gypsophila and ivy.

Elaine Carol Tun of Chicago, cousin of the bride, was her maid of honor, and bridesmaids were another cousin, Nancee Jane Hwa of Stamford, and Mrs. Robert Hansen of Chicago, a classmate of the bride. A COUSIN, Karen Lee Drewke, 3, of Chicago, carried a basket of blue daisies down the aisle, attired in an aqua and white dotted swiss dress trimmed with daisies. The groom was attended by fraternity brothers, Jerry M. Kramer as best man and Dennis Ulrich, Douglas Haffner and Michael Adler as ushers i making the bridesmaids' gowns, Mrs.

Hugh designed and made her own four-piece ensemble for her daughter's wedding. It was a peach and white brocade and was complemented by a corsage of phalaenopsis orchids Mrs. Nyi chose a white lace over lavender floor-length gown and also had a phalae- nopsis corsage. Special guests for the festivities were the the bride's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Frank Hugh of New York City. After a week's honeymoon in Estes Park, the newlyweds are living at 7215 Yates, Chicago, while still studying at the university. The groom is writing his doctoral thesis and in September will go to Philadelphia to work for Rohm Hass. he is, it's another story to distinguish exactly what he is. His art is almost indifferent to interpretation.

A restrospective showing of Andy Warhol's paintings is now at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago through Sept. 6 At the artist'-: request, the exhibition concentrates on the Campbell soup cans, the Portraits, the Disaster series, the Bnllo boxes and the Flowers. Most of these works were produced between 1961 and 1967, before Warhol turned to filmmaking exclusively. DURING THE EXHIBITION, Andy Warhol films will be shown on alternate Thursday nights. Using a mechanical silk-screen process, Warhol has recorded the everyday American world through a series of what resembles blowups feeding on mass production and mass consumption.

Who can ignore the soup cans. Brillo boxes, dollar bills that are very much a part of our world? The 32 different Campbell soups mass- marketed are individually labeled chicken and noodle, vegetable, tomato, etc. As John Coplans writes in bis Andy Warhol catalog, "so much diversity within multiplicity. Campbell's canned soups, Warhol ironically seems to assert, are like people. Their names, sexes, ages, origins, tastes and passions may well be different, but an advanced consumer-oriented, technological society squeezes them all into the same vat." WARHOL DOES NOT restrict himself to the common red and white label.

On the contrary, his soup series, like most of his other silk screens, is a kaleidoscope of brilliant colors. One is simply prone to ask himself, well why not? Even the au- merous blowups of Marilyn Monroe lack any real sense of true pigmentation. Death is central to a lot of Warhol's more recent works. He does not intentionally moralize or censor, yet by choice of a subject Jackie Kennedy's stricken face, a waiting electric chair or gory car crash he forcefully drama- Hell Teach His Bride How To Cook Gerald Gianini of West Haven. was a chef at a Girl Scout Leaders Training camp when he met Pamela Novatny of Bensenville.

Miss Novatny was assisting in the training of leaders from throughout the nation last summer at the Pleasantville, N. camp. Now his dinner menus will serve just the two of them. The couple was married June 20 at St. Alexius Church, Bensenville, in a 12:30 double ring ceremony.

The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gianini of West Haven, Conn, and his bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Frank R. Novatny, 238 Judson, Bensenville Tiny white mums and baby's breath were carried by the bride in a white basket crocheted by her mother.

The bridal gown was of Schiffli embroidery with Venetian lace enhanced with satin ribbon and peko edging The gown featured a sculptured neckline, fitted bodice and two-tiered angel sleeves. Her fingertip- Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Glanlnl Complete color selection now that the truck strike is over Shopping Center at the corner of Campb.llWHU 1547 W. Campbell Hts.

2S9-5I76 length illuson veil was attached to an embroidered Camelot bonnet crown highlighted with peko lace. "Something old" in the bridal ensemble was a lace- trimmed petticoat her grandmother wore on her wedding day, 50 years ago. THE MAID OF HONOR was JoAnne Meyer of Bensenville and Anna Bronecke of Downers Grove was the bridesmaid. Both girls wore gowns which featured skirts of shear lavender over taffeta. Their white lace bodices were accented with violet.

They carried lavender mums and white baby's breath arranged in baskets similar to the bride's basket. The bride's mother wore a yellow chiffon coat dress with silver trim and an orchid corsage. The mother of the groom was dressed in a mint green peau de soie coat dress with jeweled neckline and an orchid corsage. The groom's brother, Jeffrey Gianini, West Haven, was the best man. Kent Novatny, brother of the bride, and William Capodagli were ushers.

Both men are from Bensenville. A reception was held for 100 guests in the Bensenville VFW hall; afterwards the couple left on a honeymoon to the east coast. Mrs. Gianini is a graduate of Bensenville's Fenton High School and the Illinois State University at Normal. Her husband was graduated from West Haven High School and completed a tour of duty in South America with the U.

S. Navy. The couple will live in New Haven where the bride plans to teach socially maladjusted children. The groom is a chef with Southern Connecticut University at New Haven. Attends Convention Of Delta Gammas The Nordthwest Suburban Alumnae Chapter of Delta Gamma was represented at the annual convention at the Lodge of the Four Seasons, Lake Ozark, Mo.

Mrs. Thomas Hentschel, president of the local chapter, was the area delegate. The chapter last year purchased braille writers and a tape recorder for the blind unit at Little City, Palatine, and provided scholarship aid to a blind college student. The women also spent over 70 hours taping textbooks for this student. At St.

Paul Meeting Mrs. Allan Schoeld of Hoffman Estates, a member of Gamma Theta Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha, attended the recent international convention of the educational and service organization in St. Paul Minn. Her husband accompanied her. THE "FLOWERS" were first shown in 1964.

Even though brilliantly colored, the viewer's gaze always gravitates tizes some of today's pressing issues. The car crashes and racial confrontations are lifted from newspaper photos without subject alterations. Here again, however, color is an important criterion for Warhol. It is a curious thing how one's reaction to a picture changes by using different background shades. THE FLOWERS were first shown in Storkfeathers toward the surrounding blackness as though the flowers held a sense of foreboding.

1964. They consist of many series of different sizes within two main series, one of which has green in the background, and the other, black and whie. But even the colorful splashes of simple flowers carry a sense of foreboding because of the bleak backgrounds. When one approaches closely, the flowers fade out and the background is all that remains. Big Name For A Lit Girl Blythe Laura Elizabeth Petersen may well have a name that is bigger than she is The 7 pound 6 ounce baby arrived at Northwest Community Hospital to Mr.

and Mrs. Michael Petersen. She has an older brother, Michael, Blythe's birthday was July 25. Grandparents are Mr and Mrs. Henry Petersen and Mr.

and Mrs. Henry Schaefer, all of Palatine. The family lives at 660 E. Palatine Road, Palatine. NORTHWEST COMMUNITY David A.

Tresnowski is the sixth child in the family of Mr and Mrs. Bernard Tresnowski Mark Bernard is 11, Thomas Paul, 8, Linda Marie, 13, Judith Ann, 12, and Mary Beth, 4, are the other children. The newest addition to the Tresnowskis arrived July 20 and weighed 8 pounds ounces. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.

A. Tresnowski of East Chicago, and Mrs. Marie Gesmond, also of East Chicago. The Tresnowski family lives at 616 W. George Arlington Heights.

Christopher Scott Dion is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. Paulsen of Arlington Heights and Mr.

and Mrs. L. Dion of Decatur. The baby weighed 7 pounds and arrived July 25. Mr.

and Mrs. Richard L. Dion and their first child live at 614 S. A i Heights Road, Arlington Heights. Anne Elizabeth Wegl was born July 27 and is the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Dennis Wegl, 121 W. Hintz Road, Arlington Heights. Anne weighed 7 pounds 2 ounces at birth. She is the sister of Laura.

2. The E. A. Heppners of Round Lake and the John Wegls of Glenview are her grandparents. Daniel Bernard Dolan's birthdate was July 23.

He was born to Mr. and Mrs. Dean B. Dolan of Arlington Heights. The 8 pound ounce baby has three sisters: Karen, 11, Susan, 9, and Linda, Mr.

and Mrs. Harold Gain and Mrs. Bernard Dolan, all of Aurora, are the grandparents. DU PAGE MEMORIAL Rodney Paul Ckdone Jr. is a new brother for William, S.

Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Ciccione are the boys' parents. The baby was born July 18 and weighed 7 pounds 14 ounces. Mr.

and Mrs. George Walters of Roselle and the Sam Ciccioncs of Roselle are the grandparents. The family lives at 48 Devon Ave. James Andrew Terpstra makes it four for Mr. and Mrs.

James Terpstra, 23W765 Walnut, Roselle. The new baby's sisters are Cindy, 13, Linda, 10, and Terry, 6. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. N.

Thomson of Algonquin and Mrs. Grace Terpstra of Des Plaines. James weighed 9 pounds 7 ounces at birth Jury 19. Jeffrey Wayne Ugorek weighed 6 pounds 13 ounces when he arrived July 13. Mr.

and Mrs. Wayne Ugorek, 941 Carswell, Elk Grove Village, are Jeffrey's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Ugorek of Franklin Park are the grandparents.

Jef- River Grove and the Robert Rynkuses of frey is the first child for the Ugoreks. Crlsty Ann Nordstrom was born to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Nordstrom, 455 Green Oaks Court, Addison, on July 17. She weighed 7 pounds.

Cristy's grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. James Janet of Addison and Mrs. Ralph Nordstrom of Chicago. Katherine Elizabeth Hensley is the third child at the Hensley home, 951 S.

Addison Road, Addison. P. and Stacey, 1, are Katharine's older brother and sister. The baby weighed 4 pounds 6 ounces when she arrived July 16. Her parents are Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Hensley. Grandparents toe Mrs. Alice Gilles, Elgin, and Mr. and Mrs.

Roy Rugaber, Fox River Grove. ST. ALEXIUS Christine Marie Flam was born to Mr. and Mrs. Richard J.

Flam, 221 Salem Drive, Schaumburg, on July 18. She weighed 8 pounds 9 ounces Christine is the sister of Julie Marie, 21 months. Grandparents are Mrs. Rose Kimball of LaCrosse, Wis, and Mr. and Mrs.

Michael Flam of Chicago. Paul Oliver Buffingfam Jr. weighed 6 pounds 2 ounces when be arrived July 19. Paul is the first child for Mr. and Mrs.

Paul 0. Buffington, 1037 W. Glencoe, Palatine. Mr. and Mrs.

William E. Hansen of Bensenville and the Robert Buf- fingtons of Quincy are the grandparents. Marjorie Denise Perry is the newest Perry in the family of Mr. and Mrs. James L.

Perry, 610 E. Orchard Roselle. Marjorie was born July 18 and weighed an even 7 pounds. The Perrys have two older daughters, Ann Marie, 5, and Susan, 3. Mr.

and Mrs. Oscar Perry of Roselle are the grandparents. Aaron Keith Johnson is the first child for Mr. and Mrs. Dale Keith Johnson, 145 Oakwood Drive, Wood Dale The baby weighed 9 pounds 3 ounces at birth July 19.

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Johnson of Roselle and Mr. and Mrs. Don Wilkinson of Greenville, bhio, are the grandparents.

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Levin of Wood Dale are the great-grandparents. Our Specialty HARD-TO-FIND SIZES Don't take our word See for yourself! DRESSES EXTRA URGE Hoisery, Slips, Sleepweor to SIZE 52 RIVERSIDE RETAIL OUTLET West End of the Old Iron Bridge on Riverside Drive McHenry, Illinois Tel: 815-385-5900 OPEN DAUY 9-6 Friday 9-9 SUNDAY 9-5 For a carefree Rely on L-NOR CLEANERS Let us take over those cleaning duties on the family's clothes household items like sheets, towels, etc. We like to make your summer easier for you and know that you'll be satisfied with our work.

PROSPECT HEIGHTS CL 5-6174 StRVE 7 N. Elmhurst Rd. (Rt. 83 McDonald Rd.) TOD! Piwnpl Pickup 1 Ddhtiy For Over 25 MT. PROSPECT Cl 5-4600 662 E.

Northwest Hwy. I At Choice of Norrfi Suburban FomWts.

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About The Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
470,083
Years Available:
1901-2006