ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

Today's Stories

Standup Comedy In English Is Developing An Entire Circuit In Mainland Europe

“(This is) in part because European cities are teeming with foreigners who use English as a lingua franca and want to connect through laughter. After the COVID-19 pandemic, many people who had been stuck at home watching Netflix comedy specials and YouTube clips suddenly craved a live experience.” - The New York Times

If Cinema Is Dying, There’s Still Plenty To Say

Its infirmity has a number of culprits: superhero box office dominance, short-form videos eroding attention spans, streaming services hollowing out theatrical exhibition. - The Walrus

Preserving The Gullah Songs And Spirituals Of South Carolina’s Sea Islands

A group of singers, mostly in their 70s and 80s, on St. Helena Island in the South Carolina Lowcountry has been preserving the praise songs and ring shouts developed by their ancestors over the centuries — and scholars have been taking note. - AP

Public Media’s Slow Motion Crisis

For dozens of stations that depend heavily on federal dollars, a slow-motion crisis is now unfolding; many are already downsizing and cutting programming, and some report that if new sources of funding do not materialize they could go dark for good. - The New Yorker

How Hollywood Is Pivoting To Conservative Audiences

The red-state audience that Hollywood is chasing isn’t a monolith, and there’s an experimental energy in the crop of shows catering to this newly prized demographic. - The New Yorker

Archaeologists In Peru Uncover 3,000-Year-Old 3-D Polychrome Mural

“Spanning 13-by-5 feet, the polychrome mural, … with a three-dimensional design, indicating a sophistication and artistry that is without precedent for pre-Inca cultures in the region, … was discovered at Huaca Yolanda, a site 500 miles north of the capital, Lima.” - Artnet

The Individualist Trap: Hard To Believe In The Future

If you have a world in which everyone is encouraged to be a total individualist, they tend to get trapped in that mindset. It’s wonderful when things are going well, because you, your own desires and thoughts are the centre of the world. But the moment things go wrong, you retreat into yourself. - The Guardian

Inhabiting The Machine: Make Peace Or Fight?

Machines no longer assist our lives from the outside; they increasingly define the conditions under which we think, work, and relate. And here Skidelsky joins a growing chorus of artists, poets, and writers in asking the big questions we once debated and wrote about—questions of meaning, purpose, and the conditions of human freedom. - LA Review of...

If AI Really Can Make Movies, Then What Does Hollywood Become?

Luma’s generative AI platform, Dream Machine, debuted last year and points toward a new kind of moviemaking, one where anyone can make release-grade footage with a few words. - Los Angeles Times

San Francisco Human Rights Commission Announces, Then Withholds, $19 Million In Arts And Community Service Funding

“In June, the HRC announced it would issue awards to organizations such as the ... San Francisco LGBT Center, Chinese Culture Center, Youth Art Exchange and Bayview Opera House. But the HRC rescinded the announcement in late July after a coalition called MegaBlackSF sent a letter raising concerns about the grant process.” - KQED (San Francisco)

Why The Library Model Is A Great Business Model

What if long-term success is more about building environments where people feel inspired, curious, and connected? That’s what libraries do. And that’s what the best organizations of any kind are learning to do, too. - Fast Company

How Spirituality Went From Uncool To Trendy In The Art World

The turn we are witnessing is wide-ranging, encompassing everything from an interest in esoteric rituals and the occult to the amplification of Indigenous, non-Western, and precolonial spiritual practices. - ARTnews

How Anglo Literature Lost Its Global Influence

The imperialistic premise in this idea of literature as an egalitarian conversation between national traditions is blatant: as Milan Kundera remarked, what it took for a country to be awarded its own national literature – instead of being grouped into an ill-assorted umbrella term such as “Mitteleuropa” – was a colonial past. - The Guardian

AI Really Is Replacing Voice Actors In This Country, And There’s No Law Or Contract To Stop It

“If earlier a voice actor was doing 15-20 projects a month, now it's down to maybe six or seven,” says the leader of the Association of Voice Artists of India. Worse, if you work in dubbing, you may discover your voice being used in a film you knew nothing about. - The Hollywood Reporter

Social Media Video Has Made Learning Dance More Available Than Ever — And There’s A Danger In That

“Platforms such as TikTok, YouTube and Instagram … (have) given access to many different forms of dance styles, and it’s had an impact on the years-long process of training. While students find inspiration, instructors worry they might hurt themselves by moving too fast.” - The Minnesota Star Tribune (MSN)

Linda Hodes, 94, Dancer At Heart of Martha Graham And Batsheva Companies

She went from taking classes from Graham at age 9 to dancing leading parts in Graham's works — then teaching those works to Batsheva (the only other company permitted to perform them), where she stayed for 13 years. Hodes held key teaching positions at both Graham's and Paul Taylor's companies. - The New York Times

India’s Government Is Now Banning Books In Kashmir

The ban threatens people with prison time for selling or owning 25 works by authors such as Arundhati Roy, constitutional expert A.G. Noorani, and noted academicians Sumantra Bose, Christopher Snedden and Victoria Schofield. The central government claims the books propagate “false narratives” and “secessionism.” - AP

Manhattan DA’s Office Repatriates More Looted Antiquities

The objects came from investigations into several convicted traffickers and were returned to Italy, Hungary, and Spain. - ARTnews

Oregon’s Portland Opera Appoints Music Director

Damien Geter, a 45-year-old conductor, composer (Loving v. Virginia, premiered earlier this year), and bass-baritone who was already working as interim music director and artistic advisor alongside artistic director Alfrelynn Roberts, has been given the music director position on a permanent basis. - Pizzicato

Pioneering Rock Journalist Michael Lydon, 82

“(He) recovered from a galling pan of the Beatles for his college newspaper to become a founding editor of Rolling Stone and a pioneering rock journalist, capturing the pinwheel vibrancy of Swinging London and flower-power San Francisco.” - The New York Times

By Topic

The Individualist Trap: Hard To Believe In The Future

If you have a world in which everyone is encouraged to be a total individualist, they tend to get trapped in that mindset. It’s wonderful when things are going well, because you, your own desires and thoughts are the centre of the world. But the moment things go wrong, you retreat into yourself. - The Guardian

Inhabiting The Machine: Make Peace Or Fight?

Machines no longer assist our lives from the outside; they increasingly define the conditions under which we think, work, and relate. And here Skidelsky joins a growing chorus of artists, poets, and writers in asking the big questions we once debated and wrote about—questions of meaning, purpose, and the conditions of human freedom. - LA Review of Books

Why The Library Model Is A Great Business Model

What if long-term success is more about building environments where people feel inspired, curious, and connected? That’s what libraries do. And that’s what the best organizations of any kind are learning to do, too. - Fast Company

Where Have All The Horses Gone? We Struggle To Accept The Future And Let Go Of The Past

Everything is public now, potentially: one’s thoughts, one’s photos, one’s movements, one’s purchases. There is no privacy and apparently little desire for it in a world devoted to non-stop use of social media. Every minute, every second, has to be spent with one’s device clutched in one’s hand. - The New Yorker

Should Ideas Be Free? How Big Thinkers Have Thought About Intellectual Property

Should owning an idea be treated the same way as owning a physical object, or are these two forms of property rights ultimately incomparable? - Aeon

Reimagining How To Teach In The Age Of AI

Through a combination of oral examinations, one-on-one discussions, community engagement and in-class projects, the professors I spoke with are revitalizing the experience of humanities for 21st-century students. - The New York Times

San Francisco Human Rights Commission Announces, Then Withholds, $19 Million In Arts And Community Service Funding

“In June, the HRC announced it would issue awards to organizations such as the ... San Francisco LGBT Center, Chinese Culture Center, Youth Art Exchange and Bayview Opera House. But the HRC rescinded the announcement in late July after a coalition called MegaBlackSF sent a letter raising concerns about the grant process.” - KQED (San Francisco)

Federal Judge Blocks Trump Administration’s Cancellation Of NEH Grants

“A judge in Oregon on Wednesday ordered the federal government to essentially freeze more than $200 million withheld from state and local humanities councils across the country and to halt any plans to spend the money elsewhere.” - The Oregonian

UCLA: Trump $584M Cuts Are A “Death Knell” For School’s Research

The University of California president on Wednesday said Trump administration grant suspensions at UCLA total $584 million, cuts that would be a “death knell” to medical, science and energy research and have spurred negotiations with federal officials. - Los Angeles Times

Here’s The Culture Trump’s NEH Is Funding After Canceling Previous Grants

The grants include many focused on presidents, statesmen and canonical authors, including $10 million to the University of Virginia — which the agency said was the largest grant in its history — that will support the “expedited completion” of editorial work on papers relating to the Declaration of Independence, the American Revolution and the...

San Francisco Arts Community Facing Cost/Funding Squeeze

Financial constraints in the arts in the community are responsible for much more than limiting the amount of entertainment available. - San Francisco Classical Voice

Qatar Is Using High Culture To Flex its Soft Power

“(Landing the newest expansion of the Art Basel franchise is) just the latest coup for Qatar, uncomfortably wedged between Saudi Arabia and, across the Persian Gulf, Iran, as it expands its soft power by hosting global events and securing the friendship of the rich and powerful through investment and entertainment.” - Politico

Preserving The Gullah Songs And Spirituals Of South Carolina’s Sea Islands

A group of singers, mostly in their 70s and 80s, on St. Helena Island in the South Carolina Lowcountry has been preserving the praise songs and ring shouts developed by their ancestors over the centuries — and scholars have been taking note. - AP

Oregon’s Portland Opera Appoints Music Director

Damien Geter, a 45-year-old conductor, composer (Loving v. Virginia, premiered earlier this year), and bass-baritone who was already working as interim music director and artistic advisor alongside artistic director Alfrelynn Roberts, has been given the music director position on a permanent basis. - Pizzicato

The Very Model Of A Modern String Quartet: Brooklyn Rider At 20

“There are many ways in which Brooklyn Rider isn’t a typical string quartet: its joyous disregard of traditional genre boundaries, its effortless cool in a centuries-old art form, its engagement with the broader world and politics. Even its calendar is extremely unusual.” - The New York Times

As It Ever Was: Sony Music Sues Napster Over Unpaid Royalties

The lawsuit cited four licensing agreements that allowed Napster to stream Sony Music’s catalog of recordings. According to the 17-page court document, Napster accumulated $6.79 million in overdue payments by March 5, 2025 across three of the contracts. - Music Business Worldwide

San Francisco’s Symphony Hall And Opera House To Start Screening Audience Members For Weapons

The War Memorial Opera House and Davies Symphony Hall will implement what they’re describing as “frictionless patron screening” — that is, a system using extremely low frequency radio waves, sensors, and AI to detect threats. The system, by Evolv Technologies, is already in place at venues such as Lincoln Center. - San Francisco Classical...

A Classical Record Label Like No Other: ECM New Series At 40

Many listeners know it as the label which introduced the Western world to Arvo Pärt, though its catalog ranges from Keith Jarrett playing Bach on harpsichord to Meredith Monk to the Danish String Quartet playing Beethoven and Schnittke to saxophonist Jan Garbarek improvising along with Renaissance sacred music. - The New York Times

Archaeologists In Peru Uncover 3,000-Year-Old 3-D Polychrome Mural

“Spanning 13-by-5 feet, the polychrome mural, … with a three-dimensional design, indicating a sophistication and artistry that is without precedent for pre-Inca cultures in the region, … was discovered at Huaca Yolanda, a site 500 miles north of the capital, Lima.” - Artnet

How Spirituality Went From Uncool To Trendy In The Art World

The turn we are witnessing is wide-ranging, encompassing everything from an interest in esoteric rituals and the occult to the amplification of Indigenous, non-Western, and precolonial spiritual practices. - ARTnews

Manhattan DA’s Office Repatriates More Looted Antiquities

The objects came from investigations into several convicted traffickers and were returned to Italy, Hungary, and Spain. - ARTnews

State Museum Of Pennsylvania Closes Native American Exhibit And Will Return All Items To Tribes

“(The action is) part of the museum’s compliance with a federal law mandating the repatriation of Native American human remains and cultural items held by federal agencies and institutions that receive federal funding.” - PennLive

Herzog And De Meuron To Design New Museum In Honor Of Charles And Ray Eames

“The Eames Institute of Infinite Curiosity, the organization dedicated to stewarding the Eameses’ legacy, will be transforming the former Birkenstock campus in Marin County into a museum. … The 88-acre site (will become) a public space set to host exhibitions, workshops, educational programming, and retail offerings.” - Artnet

How Did Dinosaur Bones Get To Be As Expensive As Old Master Paintings?

Skulls and other recognizable fragments can sell for well into six figures, while complete or near-complete skeletons now bring tens of millions of dollars at auction. Dinosaur fossils are even turning up at art fairs. - Artnet

How Anglo Literature Lost Its Global Influence

The imperialistic premise in this idea of literature as an egalitarian conversation between national traditions is blatant: as Milan Kundera remarked, what it took for a country to be awarded its own national literature – instead of being grouped into an ill-assorted umbrella term such as “Mitteleuropa” – was a colonial past. - The Guardian

India’s Government Is Now Banning Books In Kashmir

The ban threatens people with prison time for selling or owning 25 works by authors such as Arundhati Roy, constitutional expert A.G. Noorani, and noted academicians Sumantra Bose, Christopher Snedden and Victoria Schofield. The central government claims the books propagate “false narratives” and “secessionism.” - AP

The Impact Of NEA Funding On Small Presses

For most publishers, the grants are not generous enough to sustain an entire catalog, especially when compared to how tedious and time-consuming the application process is. The money matters because it puts more gas in a small team’s tank, but also it waves a green flag. - LitHub

There’s A New National Association Of Black Bookstores

“The National Association of Black Bookstores, a member-based nonprofit organization which aims to support and promote Black booksellers, announced its launch on Friday. Its mission, NAB2 said in the announcement, includes ‘promoting literacy, amplifying Black voices, and preserving Black culture.’”  - Publishers Weekly

Robert Reich: I Hate Book Tours

That’s what you are when you go on a book tour: merchandise. A traveling salesperson selling a book. But not just any book — it’s your book. - Robert Reich

Study: As Language Changes, People Of All Ages Adapt (Not Just The Young)

A study led by McGill University researchers challenges the theory that language change over time requires new generations to replace older generations of speakers. - Phys

If Cinema Is Dying, There’s Still Plenty To Say

Its infirmity has a number of culprits: superhero box office dominance, short-form videos eroding attention spans, streaming services hollowing out theatrical exhibition. - The Walrus

Public Media’s Slow Motion Crisis

For dozens of stations that depend heavily on federal dollars, a slow-motion crisis is now unfolding; many are already downsizing and cutting programming, and some report that if new sources of funding do not materialize they could go dark for good. - The New Yorker

How Hollywood Is Pivoting To Conservative Audiences

The red-state audience that Hollywood is chasing isn’t a monolith, and there’s an experimental energy in the crop of shows catering to this newly prized demographic. - The New Yorker

If AI Really Can Make Movies, Then What Does Hollywood Become?

Luma’s generative AI platform, Dream Machine, debuted last year and points toward a new kind of moviemaking, one where anyone can make release-grade footage with a few words. - Los Angeles Times

AI Really Is Replacing Voice Actors In This Country, And There’s No Law Or Contract To Stop It

“If earlier a voice actor was doing 15-20 projects a month, now it's down to maybe six or seven,” says the leader of the Association of Voice Artists of India. Worse, if you work in dubbing, you may discover your voice being used in a film you knew nothing about. - The Hollywood Reporter

Skydance’s $8 Billion Acquisition Of Paramount Global Is Now Complete

“Skydance Media has closed its takeover, unveiled in July 2024, of Paramount Global to form what the merger partners have called a ‘next-generation media and technology leader, positioned to win in today’s rapidly transforming media landscape.’” - The Hollywood Reporter

Social Media Video Has Made Learning Dance More Available Than Ever — And There’s A Danger In That

“Platforms such as TikTok, YouTube and Instagram … (have) given access to many different forms of dance styles, and it’s had an impact on the years-long process of training. While students find inspiration, instructors worry they might hurt themselves by moving too fast.” - The Minnesota Star Tribune (MSN)

Minnesota Dance Theatre Will Move To New Location And, Eventually, Revive Its Performing Company

“It has been over a year since Minnesota Dance Theatre paused its performances and shifted its focus onto its school. On Wednesday, MDT announced that not only is it moving to a new home …, but it also plans to … (launch) a new professional company in about 10 years.” - The Minnesota Star Tribune (MSN)

Jacob’s Pillow Cancels Remainder Of Season Following Production Manager’s Death

The western Massachusetts dance festival had originally called off performances only for this past weekend following the death of production manager Kat Sirico in a workplace accident. But an announcement on Wednesday said that "the Jacob’s Pillow Board of Trustees and institutional leadership has decided that Festival 2025 will not continue." - CBS News

London’s Royal Ballet School Will End Boarding School And Full-Time Instruction For Preteens

In a statement, the school said: “(Research) has led us to conclude that, in our specific context, young dancers may benefit from more time to develop before entering full-time vocational training. Students who begin full-time training slightly later, when they are more physically and emotionally prepared, are more likely to thrive long-term.” - Bachtrack

We’re Seeing More Male-Male Love Depicted In Ballet. Why Not More Female-Female Couples?

Lily Hyde: “They have appeared in contemporary ballets, such as Christopher Wheeldon’s Corybantic Games and Wayne McGregor’s Woolf Works, but are by no means at the heart of the narrative. … I have concluded that there is not one problem responsible for this imbalance – there are several.” - Gramilano (Milan)

Staff Member Dies In A ‘Tragic Accident’ At Jacob’s Pillow

Production manager Kat Sirico and an intern lost control of a dolly carrying heavy platforms. Sirico tripped and fell, and the dolly and platforms fell on Sirico. All performances were canceled over the weekend. - The New York Times

Standup Comedy In English Is Developing An Entire Circuit In Mainland Europe

“(This is) in part because European cities are teeming with foreigners who use English as a lingua franca and want to connect through laughter. After the COVID-19 pandemic, many people who had been stuck at home watching Netflix comedy specials and YouTube clips suddenly craved a live experience.” - The New York Times

Meet The One Actor Who’s Been In “Hamilton” For Its Entire 10-Year Broadway Run

“Thayne Jasperson … IS still thrilled to be in the room where it happens, finding new ways to make sure starring in a pop culture phenomenon doesn’t become just another job. It’s a running joke that he’s moved into the building. Fans predict he’ll haunt the place one day.”- The Washington Post (MSN)

How Artists Are Using AI At This Year’s Edinburgh Fringe

It is an uncertainty that haunts the AI-themed plays on this year’s Edinburgh fringe. It also accounts for their apocalyptic mood. Do we even have a future, they all seem to ask, or are we bequeathing it to the machines? - The Guardian

Renovation Of Central Park’s Delacorte Theater: What Exactly Got Fixed?

There’s not a lot (other than a slightly more welcoming exterior) that will look different to an average theatergoer.  However, the facilities backstage had become dilapidated enough that some performers refused to work there; that’s been remedied, and the technical equipment has been upgraded as well. - The New York Times

Ten Years Of “Hamilton” — And The “Hamilton Effect”

“Little on Broadway looks the way it did on Aug. 6, 2015, when Hamilton opened; that’s what happens when a show runs 10 years, sells more than four million tickets and earns more than $1 billion — not counting tours, international productions and the 2020 movie.” - The New York Times

Britain’s National Theatre To Slash Staff At Its Commercial Arm By 70%

“National Theatre Productions is the commercial arm of the National Theatre, created to oversee touring productions and West End transfers of NT shows. ... The NT plans to reduce (NTP's core team of 24) by 70% to just seven by the end of the restructuring period.” - The Stage (UK)

Linda Hodes, 94, Dancer At Heart of Martha Graham And Batsheva Companies

She went from taking classes from Graham at age 9 to dancing leading parts in Graham's works — then teaching those works to Batsheva (the only other company permitted to perform them), where she stayed for 13 years. Hodes held key teaching positions at both Graham's and Paul Taylor's companies. - The New York...

Pioneering Rock Journalist Michael Lydon, 82

“(He) recovered from a galling pan of the Beatles for his college newspaper to become a founding editor of Rolling Stone and a pioneering rock journalist, capturing the pinwheel vibrancy of Swinging London and flower-power San Francisco.” - The New York Times

What Robert Wilson Meant For The Avant Garde

What made Wilson’s divergence from theatrical and classical conventions so powerful was his clear reverence for them — the careful, conscientious approach he took to turning things upside down. - Washington Post (MSN)

LA Arts Philanthropist Glorya Kaufman, 95

Glorya Kaufman, the philanthropist who transformed dance in Los Angeles through the establishment of an eponymous dance school at USC as well as a prominent dance series at the Music Center, among many other initiatives, has died. She was 95. - Los Angeles Times

Leonard Lopate, New York Public Radio’s Master Interviewer, Has Died At 84

"Across more than 40 years as a popular New York talk-show host, graced with a discerning ear and a sympathetic voice, he interviewed thousands of writers, artists, actors, directors, politicians, scientists, journalists, musicians, athletes, designers, explorers — you name it." - The New York Times

Latin Jazz Star Eddie Palmieri, 88

“The pianist, composer and bandleader was the first Latino to win a Grammy Award and would win seven more over a career that spanned nearly 40 albums.” - AP

AJ Premium Classifieds

Senior Finance Consultant – Arts FMS

As a financial management firm that integrates with nonprofit arts organizations, Arts FMS empowers organizations to focus on their mission while they focus on the long-term fiscal health and sustainability of the organization.

MAJOR GIFTS OFFICER, Paper Mill Playhouse

The Major Gifts Officer (MGO) is a critical member of the Development team and plays a central role in helping to advance PMP's philanthropic goals.

RADAR Nonprofit Solutions seeks Remote Accounting Manager

RADAR Nonprofit Solutions is seeking an experienced Accounting Manager to perform the accounting activities for various clients in the arts and other nonprofit sectors.

Artistic Director – Dallas Theater Center

Dallas Theater Center (DTC) encourages qualified candidates to apply for the Enloe/Rose Artistic Director

Finance Consultant – Arts FMS

As a financial management firm that integrates with nonprofit arts organizations, Arts FMS empowers organizations to focus on their mission while they focus on the long-term fiscal health and sustainability of the organization.

General Manager – Alley Theatre working with Management Consultants for the...

Alley Theatre is looking for a talented individual to join the team to work directly with the Managing Director, Artistic Director and leadership team

AJClassifieds

Arizona Theatre Company seeks Executive Director

The Executive Director of the Arizona Theatre Company will provide the leadership, direction, and management necessary to support the organization’s ongoing growth and operational success.

PRESIDENT & CEO, South Arts

South Arts is searching for a bold, visionary leader with a proven ability to shape strategy, inspire collaboration, and drive impact across complex, evolving landscapes.

Dallas Theater Center seeks Director of Development

The DoD will work closely with individuals, corporations, foundations, and government entities in fulfilling DTC’s revenue goals, while also engaging, cultivating, and stewarding a passionate community of supporters invested in the organization’s mission and programs.

Director of Marketing and Communications, Mark Morris Dance Group

As we approach our 45th anniversary this position will play an integral role in ensuring the organization’s brand is effectively communicated to diverse audiences, including ticket buyers, donors, students, community members, press, presenters and other industry professionals.

Adult Programs Manager, Mark Morris Dance Group

This position is focused on delivering programming excellence and increasing programming visibility, diversity and engagement with both professional and recreational dancer communities.

Radio Producer/Announcer Opening at GBH – CRB Classical

We are seeking a full-time Radio Producer/Announcer to host CRB’s Morning Drive, airing weekdays from 5:00 AM to 10:00 AM, Monday through Friday. ​

Executive Director, IN Series

IN SERIES, one of the nation’s leading companies for innovative “small” Opera and music-theater work, invites applications for the newly created full-time position, Executive Director

Museo de Arte de Ponce seeks Director

The Director will inspire, guide, and implement Museo’s strategy as a dynamic leader with a deep passion for stewarding and expanding the collection.

Global Arts Live seeks Director of Artistic Programs

The Director of Artistic Programs (Director) will lead the...

Finance Associate & Payroll Processor for Nonprofit Arts [Wallis Annenberg CPA]

Finance Associate is responsible for general accounting functions and must demonstrate knowledge in accounting practices, pay attention to detail and learn the payroll processing system.

Jacob’s Pillow Cancels Remainder Of Season Following Production Manager’s Death

The western Massachusetts dance festival had originally called off performances only for this past weekend following the death of production manager Kat Sirico in a workplace accident. But an announcement on Wednesday said that "the Jacob’s Pillow Board of Trustees and institutional leadership has decided that Festival 2025 will not continue." - CBS News

This Theatre In Upstate Wisconsin Survives, And Thrives, On Local Lore, And Cheese

At Northern Sky, “There’s kind of an ownership because you saw shows about people that you know, Midwesterners.” Some of them, like Lumberjacks in Love and Guys on Ice, even translate outside of the state. - The New York Times

The Smithsonian Now Says It Will Restore Trump To Impeachment Display

Eventually. And by the way, they removed the info, they say, because it "was meant to be a temporary addition to a twenty-five year-old exhibition did not meet the museum’s standards in appearance, location, timeline, and overall presentation.” - Washington Post (Yahoo)

This Man Was One Of New York’s Biggest Young Arts Philanthropists. The Money He Donated May Have Been Stolen.

Remember Alberto Vilar? What Matthew Christopher Pietras did might have been worse.  Or it might not, since the victims of the theft may not have noticed that they were being robbed. - New York Magazine

Is What Most Historians Have Believed About Sacagawea For A Century Actually Wrong?

Her tribe, birthplace, date of death — all those and much else from the journals and later testimony of Lewis and Clark had been considered definitive. But Native American oral history about Sacagawea is quite different, and there are good reasons to believe that Lewis and Clark were misinformed. - The New York Times...

Congress Approves Trump’s Clawback Of All Public Radio And TV Funding

The bill reclaims the entire $1.1 billion previously appropriated for the next two years for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The CPB distributes two-thirds of its funding to over 1,500 local public radio and TV stations, with most of the rest going to NPR and PBS to support national programming. - AP

Can The Eugene O’Neill Theater Center Survive?

The venerated, invaluable theatre incubator is facing, like so many performance-related sites, money trouble. - The New York Times

The Salt Path’s Author Had A New Book Coming Out, Then Came Last Week’s Revelations

“Penguin, publisher of The Salt Path, is delaying author Raynor Winn’s next book after reporting cast doubt over the truth of the 2018 memoir. The decision was taken to 'support the author.’” - The Guardian (UK)

As The Kennedy Center Loses Subscribers, What Will This Mean For The National Symphony Orchestra?

It’s not great: Subscriptions are down 36 percent. But “complicating things for a number of NSO supporters … is the energy surrounding the orchestra itself, which remains infectiously high, ascendant and alive with promise, especially following last season’s extension of music director Gianandrea Noseda’s contract.” - Washington Post (MSN)

The Multitude Of Ways Trump Is Preventing Musicians From Other Countries Getting To The US

It’s not pretty. Yet organizers persist. Why? "When you’re in the same room as the artist, when you feel the music move through your body, when you see the emotion on their face and hear their story — that creates a bond. … It counters propaganda. It softens xenophobia.” - Seattle Times

In A Tough Hollywood Job Market, YouTube And Other Social Media Provide Aa Rare Bright Spot

Yes, it’s true: "That part of the industry, once dominated by amateurs making funny viral videos with smartphones has blossomed into a formidable entertainment force, where video creators are setting up real businesses with large studios in Southern California funded through advertising by major brands. - Los Angeles Times

Remember The Collective That Sold Pieces Of A Damien Hirst Painting Dot By Dot? Look At What They’re Up To Now.

“Billed as a ‘financial trust fall,’ the project” — a sculpture of an infant, built to be taken apart and divided, which the collective MSCHF has titled King Solomon’s Baby — “invites collectors to take the plunge (and buy a piece), hoping others will follow suit in a reverse pyramid scheme that’s artfully self-aware.”...

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