ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

Yearly Archives: 2021

What Happened To Tony Soprano In The End? “Sopranos” Showrunner David Chase Finally ‘Fesses...

Okay, it's not really a surprise, but we finally get confirmation from the guy who made the decision, along with his feelings about the...

Tomb Of Chief Official To Pharaoh Ramses II Uncovered

The 3,200-year-old monument was the burial place of Ptah-M-Wia, who was treasurer and chief scribe to Ramses the Great. It's one of many impressive...

Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theater Opens Its Brand-New Building

Chris Jones: "Contrary to the way it has sometimes been reported, Steppenwolf has not added a theater to its portfolio so much as replaced...

One Of The World’s Largest Ancient Mosaics Restored and Unveiled In Jericho

The tiled floor in Hisham's Palace in the West Bank city dates back to the 8th century and covers nearly 900 square feet. -...

By 2100, Venice Could Crumble Into The Sea, Warn Scientists

The European Geosciences Union reports that sea levels could rise three feet by the end of the century — and that's before the seasonal...

Middle East’s Leading English-Language Newspaper Shuts Down

The Daily Star was founded in Beirut in 1952 and relaunched in 1996, after Lebanon's 1975-90 civil war. Having struggled financially for years, it...

How To Memorize Something Complex? There’s A System For That

To earn the title of Grand Master of Memory, one must be able to memorize a 1000-digit number in one hour. The next hour...

High School Teacher Abruptly Cancels Play After Students Complain About Script

Students complained of a script they felt made light of sexual assault victims and contained inappropriate language and stereotypes that made cast members uncomfortable....

Justice Department Seeks To Block Giant Publishing Merger

Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement, “If the world’s largest book publisher is permitted to acquire one of its biggest rivals, it will...

Hermitage Employee Breaks Visitor’s Nose (Captured On Social Media, Of Course)

“I am at the General Staff building of the Hermitage right now and an employee broke the nose of the person I was with....

Amid Chicago’s Grand Architecture, Its Ugliest Buildings

Chicago loves its architecture and loves showcasing it to the world and tourists. But if everything you’re seeing is great and beautiful, you need...

Esperanza Spalding And Wayne Shorter Were Making An Opera. So They Made An Opera...

The famed architect Frank Gehry came on to draft the set designs, and the director Lileana Blain-Cruz came aboard to bring the story onstage....

The Old Soviet Novel That Was The Prototype For Orwell’s “1984”

Yevgeny Zamyatin's We, published 100 years ago, set 1,000 years in the future in a technologically controlled superstate, was the first novel ever banned...

Toronto Declares A Year Of Public Art To Revitalize The City

The initiative will feature more than 350 new works and provide funding to just under 100 organizations. Moreover, ArtworxTO kicks off a 10-year public art...

AI Is Figuring Out Ancient Board Games — And Letting Us Play Them Online

Those games go back as far as cilivization does. Yet when archaeologists discover game boards and pieces, of course, they never find rule books....

How Do Hot Creative Streaks Happen?

Research found that artists and scientists tend to experiment with diverse styles or topics before their hot streak begins. This period of exploration is...

Why Amsterdam Just Decreed That All New Buildings Be Made Of At Least 20...

Increasing the use of timber in the city's construction projects is hoped to reduce reliance on steel and concrete – materials that create large...

Williamstown Theatre Festival Artistic Director Mandy Greenfield Resigns

The move comes after a Times investigation, published in September, in which 25 current and former festival workers alleged that WTF exposed them to...

Why #MeToo Isn’t Making Much Headway In Stand-Up Comedy

The female comics in the trenches of the club circuit say it remains a realm of "blatant misogyny" — and that #MeToo has only...

Writing About Dance Isn’t A Profession Anymore

The truth is that culture writing that doesn't involve celebrities or popular culture or scandal fills an increasingly small niche in the mainstream press....

That Godawful Dorm Design For UCal-Santa Barbara? It May Be The Best We Can...

Henry Grabar lays out the web of dysfunction, failure, and perverse incentives that leads to a respected state university accepting, with no changes, a...

True Crime Books, Video, And Podcasts Are Massively Popular. Are They Brain-Rotting Junk Or...

There are arguments to be made on both sides. The Times gathers people to make them. - The New York Times

The Problem With New York City Ballet’s Balanchine

Jennifer Homans: "Balanchine, it seems, has become orthodox: classical, beautiful, the radical edges zipped up and smoothed. This is not the dancers' fault, nor...

Netflix Is A Drug, Its Algorithms Are Dealers, And David Foster Wallace Predicted It...

Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos "recognized that viewers were addicts, and that his role was to supply what they wanted" whenever they wanted it. The...

Pianist Nelson Freire Dead At 77

"One of the most celebrated pianists of the second half of the 20th century, … The Guardian once wrote of him, 'few pianists alive...
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