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Today's Stories

Is Removing Cultural Appropriation From “La Bayadère” Even Possible? This Company’s Giving It A Try

Dutch National Baller director Ted Brandsen: “Just as you don’t (simply) replace a Rembrandt with a new painting, you don’t let such wonderful ballet heritage go to waste. The only way to preserve it is to keep performing it ... in a different context, away from the orientalist gaze of the nineteenth century.” - Gramilano (Milan)

Behavioral: Why We’re Addicted To Work

Work requires and supports a certain ecology of tasks, an economy of attention. You train your mind to it. When the job’s gone, that attention economy is rendered useless. But you’ve devoted so much time to it that you don’t know how else to deploy your behavioral resources. - 3 Quarks Daily

Athens’ Ancient Outdoor Theatre Gives Its Final Season Before Three-Year Renovation

“The Odeon of Herod Atticus recently opened the 70th season of the annual Athens Epidaurus Festival, a cherished tradition for many Greeks. But this edition marks the last before the theater that’s more than 18 centuries old shuts down for maintenance and restoration work that is expected to last at least three years.” - AP

The Man Who Became History-Keeper Of A Legendary Dance Mecca

Norton Owen has worked in the press office, run the summer school for students, and done development work. But along the way, he began to stage exhibitions and work his way through the programs, films, photographs, posters and other documentation that filled boxes and shelves in the festival offices. - The New York Times

Seattle Festival Canceled Over Concerns About ICE

“My biggest concern was exposing our community members that could be affected by ICE to any danger or safety issues,” said Angel-Cano, a community engagement and communications specialist at the coalition who was raised in South Park by immigrant parents from Mexico. - Seattle Times

Hollywood Is Struggling. But Its CEO’s Are Making Out Like Bandits

The median compensation for media and entertainment executives for 2024 was $33.9 million, up 7% from 2023, according to figures from data company Equilar. - Los Angeles Times

NYC Police Cancel Theatre Program Meant To Connect Community

For 10 years, “To Protect, Serve and Understand,” was an acting troupe born out of the killing of Eric Garner in 2014. It paired seven officers with seven civilians, and the group went through acting exercises meant to help both sides see each other’s humanity and to create “a theater of empathy.” - The New York...

New Hampshire Lawmakers Are Still Trying To Cut State Arts Budget To $1

“(Giv.) Ayotte had proposed a $16 billion two-year budget that included nearly $1 million annually for the arts council. ... But some legislators consider that frivolous spending when New Hampshire — which has no income tax or sales tax — is facing a revenue shortfall because of tax repeals.” - The New York Times

Does Choice Make You Free? (The Costs Of Choosing)

If choice has indeed become an end unto itself, absent a set of principles for actually making choices, then something has gone awry. - The Atlantic

Norman Foster To Design Translucent Bridge For Queen Elizabeth Memorial

His translucent glass “unity bridge”, inspired by Elizabeth’s wedding tiara, is said to symbolise her as a “unifying force”. - The Guardian

FanFic Writers Battle Against A Deluge Of AI Slop

“This is something that takes time and effort and your heart and your soul, and you do this in a community. And then you’re telling me you’re just going to poop it out two seconds on a screen. And I was just like, who asked for this? This is gross.” - The Verge

Sculptor Arnaldo Pomodoro, Master of The Bronze Sphere, Is Dead At 98

“Pomodoro’s massive spheres are instantly recognizable: shiny, smooth bronze globes with clawed out interiors that Pomodoro has said referred to the superficial perfection of exteriors and the troubled complexity of interiors. … (They) decorate iconic public spaces from the Vatican to the United Nations.” - AP

Send In The Saints: Notre Dame Statues To Be Returned

The copper-coated figures, each weighing almost 150kg, escaped the blaze because they were removed from the Parisian landmark for renovation just four days before flames consumed the roof and destroyed the spire. - The Guardian

Man Trips, Tears Hole In 17th Century Painting In An Uffizi Gallery

 While trying to emulate de’ Medici’s arm placement, the man lost his balance and rolled backwards on the balls of his feet, falling back on the painting and making a tear in the lower section of the artwork. - Hyperallergic

One Man Has Been Tuning Pianos In The Sydney Opera House For Fifty Years

Terry Harper “started on rehearsal pianos in the backroom, while building up his skills and confidence, before finally taking over when his dad retired a decade later. These days, he can walk into a room and immediately know if the piano is out of tune.” - BBC

High-Tech Storytelling Is All Over Broadway These Days

“Stages have been brimming with large-scale and high-resolution videos, deployed not simply for scenery but also as an integrated narrative tool. It is all made possible by the growing availability, affordability and stability of the cameras, computers, projectors and surfaces that are utilized as part of today’s stage sets.” - The New York Times

There’s A Boom In Translated Fiction. A New Prize Aims To Give A Boost To Translated Poetry

“(Three publishers) have launched the biennial Poetry in Translation prize, which will award an advance of $5,000 to be shared equally between poet and translator. The winning collection will be published in the UK and Ireland by Fitzcarraldo Editions, in Australia and New Zealand by Giramondo and in North America by New Directions.” - The Guardian

Alison Bechdel Explains Why Her New Graphic Novel Isn’t The Memoir She Had Planned

“It started out to be ... (a) serious memoir project about money and what it’s like to live in a capitalist system. … But then I sat down to write a memoir and realized, ‘Oh my god, I’m going to have to read about economics.’ … I didn’t want to do all that research.” - Slate

David Finckel And Wu Han Will Step Down From Their Chamber Music Festival, Music@Menlo

The cellist-pianist couple, also co-artistic directors of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, founded the Silicon Valley-based summer festival in 2002 and have been its leaders ever since. They will depart after next summer’s event. - The Strad

Layoffs And Programming Cuts At Wisconsin Public Radio

“Faced with ongoing budget shortages and the possibility of federal funding cuts, Wisconsin Public Radio is laying off at least 15 staff members and has decided not to fill several vacant positions, while canceling four of its programs.” - Inside Radio

By Topic

Behavioral: Why We’re Addicted To Work

Work requires and supports a certain ecology of tasks, an economy of attention. You train your mind to it. When the job’s gone, that attention economy is rendered useless. But you’ve devoted so much time to it that you don’t know how else to deploy your behavioral resources. - 3 Quarks Daily

Does Choice Make You Free? (The Costs Of Choosing)

If choice has indeed become an end unto itself, absent a set of principles for actually making choices, then something has gone awry. - The Atlantic

Our Technologies Keep Trying To Give Us “Experiences.” They’re Fake.

More and more, our “mediating technologies” are in the business not of enhancing our own senses to encounter the world better, but in replacing authentic experience with “experiences.” - The Point

What Jaws Did To, And Also For, Sharks

“Before Jaws premiered in 1975, most shark research was conducted by the U.S. Navy. Much of it involved experimenting and testing repellents to prevent shark attacks on sailors.” - The New York Times

Lessons From The Apocalypse

How humanity, or at least some humans, can survive. (Hint: Study archaeology.) - Fast Company

Instead Of Replacing Journalists, Can Targeted AI Use Help Indie News Sites Get Better?

Minnesota’s nonprofit Sahan Journal "has been working on ways to support internal workflows with AI. Now, it’s even testing a custom ChatGPT bot to help pitch Sahan Journal to prospective advertisers and sponsors.” - Nieman Lab

Seattle Festival Canceled Over Concerns About ICE

“My biggest concern was exposing our community members that could be affected by ICE to any danger or safety issues,” said Angel-Cano, a community engagement and communications specialist at the coalition who was raised in South Park by immigrant parents from Mexico. - Seattle Times

New Hampshire Lawmakers Are Still Trying To Cut State Arts Budget To $1

“(Giv.) Ayotte had proposed a $16 billion two-year budget that included nearly $1 million annually for the arts council. ... But some legislators consider that frivolous spending when New Hampshire — which has no income tax or sales tax — is facing a revenue shortfall because of tax repeals.” - The New York Times

How Korean Culture Became A Worldwide Phenom

Experts say the nation’s cultural wave, known as “Hallyu” in Korean, began in the late 1990s, when South Korean soaps started gaining popularity in China and Japan. The rise of the internet spread these exports further. - The New York Times

New AI Arts Residencies Intend To Promote Artists Working In AI

These residencies, usually hosted by tech labs, museums, or academic centers, offer artists access to tools, compute, and collaborators to support creative experimentation with AI. - The Verge

An Ambitious Seattle Artist Housing Initiative Falters

Artspace secured millions in public funding for affordable housing to support the arts. But instead of stemming Seattle’s creative brain drain, problems at the nonprofit’s three local buildings — unresponsiveness, chronic maintenance issues and threats of eviction — have driven some artists away. - Seattle Times

Author Kaveh Akbar Reflects On Making Art During War

“Every Iranian that you know has people in Tehran, people around Iran who are doing poorly,” the author of Martyr! says. For instance, his aunt with Stage Four cancer can’t get her desperately necessary daily chemo. - NPR

One Man Has Been Tuning Pianos In The Sydney Opera House For Fifty Years

Terry Harper “started on rehearsal pianos in the backroom, while building up his skills and confidence, before finally taking over when his dad retired a decade later. These days, he can walk into a room and immediately know if the piano is out of tune.” - BBC

David Finckel And Wu Han Will Step Down From Their Chamber Music Festival, Music@Menlo

The cellist-pianist couple, also co-artistic directors of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, founded the Silicon Valley-based summer festival in 2002 and have been its leaders ever since. They will depart after next summer’s event. - The Strad

English National Opera’s Next Music Director Will Also Take Helm At New Zealand Symphony

André de Ridder, currently music director of the opera house and orchestra in Freiburg, Germany, will start work at both ENO and NZSO in 2027. Current principal conductor Gemma New will become the NZSO’s Artistic Partner, a new position. - Limelight (Australia)

The Music Industry Can’t Stop The AI Onslaught

But the industry has new tools to help companies track down what songs are ‘made’ by software, and what are human-created. The focus could "enable more precise licensing, with royalties based on creative influence instead of post-release dispute.” - The Verge

Miss Manners Weighs In On Female Orchestra Musicians’ Concert Attire

A Gentle Reader complains about the seeming informality of some all-black women’s attire on orchestral stages. Miss Manners replies, “Surely women musicians can find long black dresses or trouser suits they can wear at every concert. … Miss Manners recalls reading about a cellist who …” - UExpress

Explaining The ABBA Phenomenon (In Retrospect)

In the wake of the nineties revival, ABBA’s music has come to seem so universal—pure, uncut, lab-grade pop, purified of any particularizing influences—that it can be hard to remember that it originated in a particular milieu, and a marginal one at that. - The New Yorker

Norman Foster To Design Translucent Bridge For Queen Elizabeth Memorial

His translucent glass “unity bridge”, inspired by Elizabeth’s wedding tiara, is said to symbolise her as a “unifying force”. - The Guardian

Send In The Saints: Notre Dame Statues To Be Returned

The copper-coated figures, each weighing almost 150kg, escaped the blaze because they were removed from the Parisian landmark for renovation just four days before flames consumed the roof and destroyed the spire. - The Guardian

Man Trips, Tears Hole In 17th Century Painting In An Uffizi Gallery

 While trying to emulate de’ Medici’s arm placement, the man lost his balance and rolled backwards on the balls of his feet, falling back on the painting and making a tear in the lower section of the artwork. - Hyperallergic

Iran Moves Cultural Treasures To Safety

Iran’s Cultural Heritage Organization has transferred museum artifacts across the country to secure storage locations and closed museums and heritage sites until further notice, according to local reports. - ARTnews

MIT Student Creates New Way To Restore Art Work

Unlike traditional restoration, which permanently alters the painting, these masks can reportedly be removed whenever needed. So it's a reversible process that does not permanently change a painting. - Ars Technica

Lessons About The Market At This Year’s ArtBasel

For now, Art Basel’s reputation for quality and importance in the art market continues to draw in more seasoned collectors, but that may change in years to come. There are questions about whether galleries need to pivot. - The Art Newspaper

FanFic Writers Battle Against A Deluge Of AI Slop

“This is something that takes time and effort and your heart and your soul, and you do this in a community. And then you’re telling me you’re just going to poop it out two seconds on a screen. And I was just like, who asked for this? This is gross.” - The Verge

There’s A Boom In Translated Fiction. A New Prize Aims To Give A Boost To Translated Poetry

“(Three publishers) have launched the biennial Poetry in Translation prize, which will award an advance of $5,000 to be shared equally between poet and translator. The winning collection will be published in the UK and Ireland by Fitzcarraldo Editions, in Australia and New Zealand by Giramondo and in North America by New Directions.” - The Guardian

Alison Bechdel Explains Why Her New Graphic Novel Isn’t The Memoir She Had Planned

“It started out to be ... (a) serious memoir project about money and what it’s like to live in a capitalist system. … But then I sat down to write a memoir and realized, ‘Oh my god, I’m going to have to read about economics.’ … I didn’t want to do all that research.”...

Teachers: How AI Deepens Our Students’ Ability To Write

In our classrooms, we challenge the misconception that AI tools serve merely as shortcuts, bypassing critical thinking and creativity. We don’t seek to pit human authorship against AI; rather we aim to show how the two can work together. - Education Week

Finland’s Public Libraries Are Flourishing (There’s A Reason)

In the age of TikTok, Netflix and Candy Crush, it is not just Finland’s public libraries that are booming, but also demand for their physical paperbacks and hardbacks. Last year the average Finn visited them nine times and borrowed 15 books, resulting in the highest lending figures for 20 years.

The Days When Charles Dickens Was Known As Boz

The writer was so popular that “a ‘Boz Ball,’ attended by 3,000 people, was held in New York in 1842 to welcome Dickens to America.” - LitHub

Hollywood Is Struggling. But Its CEO’s Are Making Out Like Bandits

The median compensation for media and entertainment executives for 2024 was $33.9 million, up 7% from 2023, according to figures from data company Equilar. - Los Angeles Times

Layoffs And Programming Cuts At Wisconsin Public Radio

“Faced with ongoing budget shortages and the possibility of federal funding cuts, Wisconsin Public Radio is laying off at least 15 staff members and has decided not to fill several vacant positions, while canceling four of its programs.” - Inside Radio

London’s Fabled Ealing Studios Get A Revamp And, Owners Hope, A New Life

“What we dreamed of doing was to make a studio that had all this history, the old stages built in the 1930s and the heritage since 1902, but also have the most modern facilities. … It needed to be absolutely fit for the 21st century.” - The Guardian (UK)

Pixar, Once The Golden Child, Is Having A Very Rough Time With Its Original Movies

What in the heck is going on? Since the pandemic, “while audiences often say they want to see new stories, box office ticket sales show they gravitate toward sequels, reboots and other familiar fare.” - Los Angeles Times

Money And Status Aren’t Everything, Right?

Right? Uh … TV creators? - Chicago Tribune

The US Administration Has Effectively Killed The Voice Of America

“Once a Cold War-era powerhouse for U.S. diplomacy, the U.S. Agency for Global Media has been gutted under a Trump executive order — slashing ... 85% of its workforce — in a move Kari Lake calls a win for taxpayers and critics warn is a death knell for press freedom.” - Salon

Is Removing Cultural Appropriation From “La Bayadère” Even Possible? This Company’s Giving It A Try

Dutch National Baller director Ted Brandsen: “Just as you don’t (simply) replace a Rembrandt with a new painting, you don’t let such wonderful ballet heritage go to waste. The only way to preserve it is to keep performing it ... in a different context, away from the orientalist gaze of the nineteenth century.” -...

An Underground Ballet Revival In Ukraine Gives Relief From Relentless War

“In the dark, brick-walled basement of the Kharkiv National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre, a dance company has created a space protected from drones and bombs where audiences can lose themselves in performances of classic ballets.” - Globe and Mail

Ballet Shoe Company Faces One-Two Punch: Catastrophic Fire And High Tariffs

The pointe shoe manufacturer Virtisse, based near Philadelphia, saw its entire inventory — 25,000 pairs, worth over $3 million — literally go up in smoke. Now, as it tries to get back on its feet, it faces costs 50% higher than before because of the Trump administration’s tariff policy. - Marketplace

This Family Has Kept The Whirling Dance of Sufism Alive In Syria

“The al-Kharrats say they are the only family in Syria who have continuously performed the Sema, as the dance is known, ... through years of war, repression and threats from extremist groups like ISIS. … Now, they say they are hopeful about new opportunities under the new Syrian government.” - The World

Indoor Skydiving — Not Only Is It Really A Thing, It’s Turning into A Form of Dance

In glass-sided vertical wind tunnels, powerful fans shoot air upward at approximately the speed a human body would fall from an airplane. …But over the last 20 years, … because the tunnels can be viewed from the ground, indoor skydiving has become a spectator sport. - The New York Times

How The Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders Got Their Pay Quintupled

“They will also be paid more for their appearances outside of cheering for the Dallas Cowboys. It’s a happy ending to a grueling season and a key milestone in the dancers' long fight for fair pay.” - Time

Athens’ Ancient Outdoor Theatre Gives Its Final Season Before Three-Year Renovation

“The Odeon of Herod Atticus recently opened the 70th season of the annual Athens Epidaurus Festival, a cherished tradition for many Greeks. But this edition marks the last before the theater that’s more than 18 centuries old shuts down for maintenance and restoration work that is expected to last at least three years.” - AP

NYC Police Cancel Theatre Program Meant To Connect Community

For 10 years, “To Protect, Serve and Understand,” was an acting troupe born out of the killing of Eric Garner in 2014. It paired seven officers with seven civilians, and the group went through acting exercises meant to help both sides see each other’s humanity and to create “a theater of empathy.” - The...

High-Tech Storytelling Is All Over Broadway These Days

“Stages have been brimming with large-scale and high-resolution videos, deployed not simply for scenery but also as an integrated narrative tool. It is all made possible by the growing availability, affordability and stability of the cameras, computers, projectors and surfaces that are utilized as part of today’s stage sets.” - The New York Times

If They Can Make It Here, These Top High School Actors Know, They Might Be Able To Make It Here

That is to say, more than 100 high school theatre stars have been working for a week to put on a Broadway show tonight. Then? Only two can win the top prizes. - NPR

More Fallout From The Broadway Shows That Didn’t Win At The Tonys

Dead Outlaw “was nominated for seven prizes, including best musical, but won none. It is the third new musical to post a closing notice since the awards ceremony.” Ouf. - The New York Times

There Are Just So Many Bros On Broadway Right Now

One (male) audience member: “We want to see a good, solid male psyche. We want to see the full extent of the male experience. … You don’t always get that in theater.” - Washington Post (MSN)

The Man Who Became History-Keeper Of A Legendary Dance Mecca

Norton Owen has worked in the press office, run the summer school for students, and done development work. But along the way, he began to stage exhibitions and work his way through the programs, films, photographs, posters and other documentation that filled boxes and shelves in the festival offices. - The New York Times

Sculptor Arnaldo Pomodoro, Master of The Bronze Sphere, Is Dead At 98

“Pomodoro’s massive spheres are instantly recognizable: shiny, smooth bronze globes with clawed out interiors that Pomodoro has said referred to the superficial perfection of exteriors and the troubled complexity of interiors. … (They) decorate iconic public spaces from the Vatican to the United Nations.” - AP

Actor Jay Ellis Found Inspiration In Colson Whitehead’s Books

The star of movies, and now Off-Broadway, says, "I feel like I did not understand or see myself in fiction until I read him. Sag Harbor was the first thing I read. I’ve been a huge fan since.” - The New York Times

Marlee Matlin Won An Oscar, But Had To Wait Years For More Good Work In Hollywood

And - despite CODA co-star Troy Kotsur’s Oscar win in 2022 - that hasn’t changed. “'It’s hard to find work,’ she said, but still insists: ‘This is something I love to do. This is a business that I love being in. I love acting. I love it all.’” - The Guardian (UK)

Two Years After The British Museum Thefts Were Revealed, Big Questions About The Curator At The Center Of It

What might have motivated a respected professional to allegedly take such high risks for such low rewards? Why is the police investigation taking so long? How did the museum not notice the missing artefacts for so many years? And why did the thief, whoever it may be, make so little effort to cover his...

Journalist William Langewiesche, “Master Of The White-Knuckle Narrative,” Has Died At 70

“A globe-trotting correspondent for The Atlantic, Vanity Fair and The New York Times Magazine, … (he) worked as a commercial pilot before becoming one of the most acclaimed magazine writers of his generation, traveling around the world to report on plane crashes, shipwrecks, nuclear proliferation and war.” - The Washington Post (MSN)

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Chief Development Officer – Arena Stage

Arena Stage is seeking a talented fundraising leader driven by ambition and creativity to serve as its Chief Development Officer

Vice President of Business Development, Dance & Performing Arts – Robbins...

Robbins Dance Floors seeks a driven sales-oriented leader to fill the role of Vice President of Business Development, Dance & Performing Arts.

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.

Executive Director – Southeastern Theatre Conference

The Southeastern Theatre Conference (SETC), the largest network of theatre practitioners in the US, seeks service-oriented & inclusive leader to serve as its Executive Director

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The Bruce Museum, Inc. Seeks Chief Operating Officer

The Bruce Museum, Inc. (the Bruce) is an American Alliance of Museums accredited institution that highlights art, science, and natural history in numerous exhibitions.

Assistant to the Executive Director, Joyce Theatre Foundation

The Joyce Theater Foundation, the country’s leading dance presenting organization, seeks an Assistant to the Executive Director.

Executive Director – Goh Ballet

Goh Ballet Canada is seeking an accomplished and visionary Executive Director to lead its strategic and operational initiatives, ensuring the ongoing success and sustainability.

George Street Playhouse: Director of Advancement, New Brunswick, NJ

George Street Playhouse, Central NJ’s premier producing theater, seeks experienced Director of Advancement to lead ambitious fundraising program that supports GSP’s vision next 50 years.

Stratford Festival seeks Senior Director of Marketing

The Senior Director, Marketing (Senior Director) will lead the...

General Director – Pittsburgh Opera

As it looks forward to its 87th season, Pittsburgh Opera—one of America’s most artistically respected opera companies—invites recommendations/applications for the position of General Director

Arts Copywriter & Marketing Strategist

Add a highly creative, responsive, arts-obsessed marketer to your team. Versatile writer with 20+ years in marketing, arts administration, and strategy available for part-time engagement.

Seattle’s Low-Income Artspace Seems To Be Falling Apart

“Artspace, the Minneapolis nonprofit that owns the lofts, sold the city on a vision: affordable housing that would help retain Seattle’s creative soul as redevelopment and rising costs were driving out artists. But the dream shattered.” - Seattle Times

Inside The Courthouse Reshaping The Future Of The Internet

“While the FTC’s lawyers were calling witnesses against Meta in one courtroom, a nearby room was hosting arguments about whether Trump could fire two of the agency’s own commissioners.” - The Verge

Authors Are Creating Time-Lapse Tik-Toks To Prove They Don’t Use AI

One young adult fantasy author “doesn't say a single word in the video, but her captions on the screen speak volumes. ‘Using GenAI to write a book doesn’t make you a writer, it makes you a thief,’ reads one.” - Wired

Oops, Sorry, Authors – TikTok Doesn’t Actually Want To Publish Books

The news "came as a shock to authors who were swayed by the possibility that 8th Note could help engineer best sellers with elaborate marketing campaigns on TikTok. Instead, 8th Note has started taking down digital editions of their books, effectively unpublishing them.” - The New York Times

Why Culture Desperately Needs Better Digital Infrastructure

When AI systems learn about Canadian culture, history, and events, they should be learning from trusted, structured, Canadian sources - not filtered scraps from engagement-driven platforms. - LinkedIn

This Administration Almost Sold The Freedom Rides Museum, And Other Civil Rights Monuments

“Many of the buildings on the original list were not ‘underutilized’ at all. They were simply being used for government work that the president didn’t like or by government officials whom the president wanted to punish.” - The New York Times

National History Day Has Turned Into A Deeply Competitive Performance Extravaganza For High School Students

But federal funding cuts are threatening national history: "A scramble for stopgap funding from donors and bake sales allowed all qualifying teams to attend the national finals this year. But what happens next is unclear.” - The New York Times

The Schomburg Center, At 100, Is Ready For Its Day In The Sun

“Artists, writers and community leaders have gone the center to be inspired, root their work in a deep understanding of the vastness of the African diaspora, and spread word of the global accomplishments of Black people” - Seattle Times (AP)

Space Artists At The Museum Of Natural History Discovered A Spiral At The Edge Of Our Solar System

As the artists worked on a video, “We’re flying away from the Oort cloud and out pops this spiral, a spiral shape to the outside of our solar system. … A huge structure, millions and millions of particles.” - Fast Company (Internet Archive)

Disney And Universal’s Battle With Midjourney May Reshape Copyright

“The only thing that can stop AI companies doing what they’re doing is the law. ... If these lawsuits are successful, that is what will hopefully stop AI companies from exploiting people’s life’s work.” - Time

Pussy Riot Founder’s Performance Art ‘Police State’ In LA Got Shut Down By The Police State

"Tolokonnikova, 35, whose political art has left her as a wanted criminal in Russia, chose to continue her performance inside the empty museum.” Normal country. Nothing to see here. - The Guardian (UK)

Where The Last Decade Of Andy Goldsworthy’s Life Has Gone

He’s been doing physically demanding, “totally grim work” on nine farmhouses, restored and turned into art, across six miles in a valley in Yorkshire. And the artist says he’ll never do anything like it again. - The New York Times

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