| Desperately seeking shoulder padsAmy Arbus and ’80s style at the Schoolhouse, Hung-Chih Peng’s video at MIT, and ‘Drama and Desire’ at the MFA August 14,
 2007 6:23:07 PM 
In the glorious fall of 1980, young photographer Amy Arbus approached the Village Voice looking for freelance work and was given a monthly street-photography page that the Voice called “On the Street.” With a year’s study at Boston’s Museum School under her belt and perhaps some of her mother Diane’s fine artistic abilities in her genetic make-up, Arbus headed out with her camera to capture the downtown scene. Her images of Astor Place haircuts and full Mudd Club–going regalia recall an era with great attitude and ridiculous hair, and they include now-infamous portraits of ’80s scenesters: a young Madonna, the Clash, Anna Sui, the dandy-artist duo McDermott & McGough. Arbus is one of four artists whose work will be on view in “AMY ARBUS, MARTY DAVIS, PAUL STOPFORTH, VICKY TOMAYKO,” which opens at the Schoolhouse Gallery in Provincetown on August 17, and she’ll be giving a talk at the gallery on August 23 at 3 pm. Black and white prints from her recent book On the Street (with its cover shot of Madonna) will be shown alongside new monotypes and aquatints by Marty Davis, seven diptychs by painter Paul Stopforth, and one-of-a-kind prints by Vicky Tomayko.
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Amy Arbus, On the Street 1980–1990 (cover)  
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Taiwanese artist HUNG-CHIH PENG finds contemporary relevance in the way that man’s best friend sheds light on human behaviors and spiritual aspirations. Through September 7, four of Peng’s contemplative videos will screen continuously on MIT’s Media Test Wall. In “One Black/One White” (2001), Peng invites viewers to consider two dogs who cannot stop coveting each other’s meal. And in three excerpts from his “Canine Monk” series (2004–2007), dogs appear to write Zen Buddhist and Daoist meditations and protective charms on a white wall with their tongues.
 
Flamboyant actors, alluring courtesans, and gorgeous geishas were the picturesque subject matter of the daring ukiyo-e paintings made in the Japanese city of Edo (modern-day Tokyo) from the late 17th through the mid 19th century, when Hokusai, Utamaro, and Hiroshige created paintings that depicted the “floating world” of the kabuki theaters and high-class brothels of Japan’s urban entertainment districts. “DRAMA AND DESIRE: JAPANESE PAINTINGS FROM THE FLOATING WORLD 1690–1850” opens at the Museum of Fine Arts on August 28 with painted screens, scrolls, banners, and theatrical signboards from the MFA’s extensive ukiyo-e collection.
 “Amy Arbus, Marty Davis, Paul Stopforth, Vicky Tomayko” at Schoolhouse Gallery, 494 Commercial St, Provincetown | August 17–September 5 | 508.487.4800 | Video by Hung-Chih Peng at MIT List Visual Arts Center’s Media Test Wall, 21 Ames St, Building 56, Cambridge | Through September 7 | 617.253.4400 | “Drama And Desire: Japanese Paintings from the Floating World 1690–1850” at Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave, Boston | August 28–December 16 | 617.267.9300
 
 On the Web
 Schoolhouse Gallery: www.schoolhouseprovincetown.com
 MIT List Visual Arts Center’s Media Test Wall: //web.mit.edu/lvac
 Museum of Fine Arts: www.mfa.org
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							 Lessons from the build-them-up, tear-them-down Boston firefighter backlash
  Evangelicals are speaking in bubbles — and fighting God’s war on pop culture
  Comic timing
  Zeitgeist’s compelling Kentucky Cycle; Double Edge’s Republic of Dreams
  Josh Homme’s lullabies of love
  Rethinking design at the ICA, and City Hall at Pinkcomma Gallery
 
				
					
					
							 Return to modesty
  Lessons from the build-them-up, tear-them-down Boston firefighter backlash
  Why steroids, spying, and all those other sports scandals are actually good for fans
  Zeitgeist’s compelling Kentucky Cycle; Double Edge’s Republic of Dreams
  Massachusetts dot-commie spotted torching the decks at Burning Man
  Jonathan McPhee and the Longwood Symphony perform Beethoven's Ninth
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												Napoleon at the MFA, Samuel MCIntire at PEM, and Local Food in Union Square 
												Sound and video at MIT, “Eyewitness” at Axiom, Carolee Schneemann at Pierre Menard, and Kaspar König at the Sackler 
												“Design Life Now” at the ICA, Tom Sachs, Steve Miller, and “Women Artists of India” at Brandeis 
												Contemporary Caribbean Art at the Museum School, “Gods In Color” at Harvard, “Arts Of Japan” at the MFA, and the new Proof Gallery 
												Art, women, politics, and food 
												Caruso and MClaurin in Lawrence, “Belief in Paint” at the New Art Center, Benefit Auction Exhibition at the PRC, and Visiting Faculty at Harvard 
												“Cosmic Energy” at Tufts, Aerial Photography at BU, Dawoud Bey at the Addison, and 2007 Photo Biennial at the Danforth 
												‘Trainscape’ at the DeCordova, ‘Merging Influence’ at Montserrat, and more 
												The Collision Collective at AXIOM, Stencils at NESAD, and Alice Neel on film
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 | Rethinking design at the ICA, and City Hall at Pinkcomma GalleryKerry Stuart Coppin’s images of Africa and beyondPeruko Ccopacatty’s fresh perspectiveClaire Beckett looks for the 'human level'Nick Cave’s wearable mash-upsMexican street graphics at MassArtGraphite group show has scattered gems'Global Feminisms' turns sexism inwardOld and new images meet at the RISD MuseumTrains at the DeCordova, the Kabakovs’ Utopia at Tufts
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