ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

Today’s AJ Highlights

Good morning: When voters elected far right governments in Hungary and Poland, the new leaders started changing the rules for how government would work. Among the measures were laws to crack down on culture and media. This week, The US House voted to allow the Treasury Secretary to classify any non-profits as “terrorism-supporting” and strip them of their nonprofit status. Artists are alarmed. If a theatre presents a play critical of government actions, might it find itself disappeared? These are the kinds of laws without oversight that create a chilling effect across culture. Here’s a report of the bill’s passage in the House (which doesn’t mean the Senate will also pass the bill), and here’s a good roundup of potential artistic risks.

Now more highlights from stories we collected today:

  1. Berlin Announces Major Cuts To Its (Substantial) Arts Funding Budget “Overall, Berlin is slashing its cultural funding budget by around €120 million ($127 million), or about 12%. For weeks now, theatres and other organizations have warned of insolvency, operational restrictions, and job losses.”DPA (Yahoo!)
  2. African Musicians Express Concerns Over AI’s Impact on Music Ownership “Musicians from Africa are voicing worries about the use of artificial intelligence in music creation, particularly regarding ownership rights and cultural appropriation. They question how original creators will be credited when AI utilizes music from countries like Ghana or Nigeria.”BBC
  3. Shen Yun Investigated Over Alleged Labor Violations Involving Underage Performers “New York State is investigating Shen Yun for allegedly using underage student performers in extensive work schedules with minimal pay, raising concerns about labor rights and exploitation within the arts industry.”The New York Times
  4. A Recreated Pina Bausch Classic With Original Dancers Playing In Front Of Film Of The Original “The performers, ages 69 to 80, will dance the roles they created while footage from that first production, filmed by Rolf Borzik, plays alongside them onstage.”The New York Times
  5. Portland Oregon Changed How It Funds The Arts. Small Arts Organizations Aren’t Happy “The city argues its new method of funding creates a more equitable process to sustain its creative centers. But smaller arts organizations say the shift has left them with less funding than expected.”Willamette Week

Skip down to see all the stories we collected in the past day, grouped by art form. See you tomorrow.

Doug

Latest Stories

How Marla Mindelle Became The Queen of Queer Off-Broadway

Says the creator and star of hit parodies Titanique and The Big Gay Jamboree, "I liken myself to the homeless man’s Lin-Manuel Miranda. I’m still broke, but I’ve excelled at carving out a little queer millennial piece of the pie." - Variety

Remembering Painter Frank Auerbach Who Has Died At 93

In almost any Auerbach oil painting, early or late, rawness is thick on the ground. So dense, so clotted, and so busily heaped is the pigment that you’re not sure whether to gaze at it, lick it, chew it, or file a weather report. - The New Yorker

Baltimore Symphony Oboist Has Become A Clearing House For Classical Music’s #MeToo Reckoning

“We need to show our industry and music-loving public that there are consequences for inappropriate behaviour,” Katherine Needleman says. - Baltimore Banner

Premium

Finance Consultant – Arts FMS

Arts FMS is seeking a Finance Consultant who is a highly motivated and self-directed individual with extensive experience with accounting and financial management.

Managing Director-Goodspeed Musicals

Goodspeed Musicals (Goodspeed) seeks an accomplished, inspiring, and inclusive arts leader to help guide this storied organization into a vibrant next chapter.

Managing Director – Roundabout Theatre Company

Roundabout Theatre Company is seeking a strong business and operations leader to serve in partnership with with its Artistic Director to chart the future of the nation’s largest theatre producing organization.

General Director – Opera Colorado

Opera Colorado invites talented leaders possessing drive, ambition, energy, and a deep love of opera to present themselves as candidates for General Director.

Executive Director – The Washington Ballet

The Executive Director of The Washington Ballet will work in a Co-CEO relationship with the Artistic Director, with both positions reporting to and working collaboratively with the Board of Directors.

Executive Director – Kansas City Repertory Theatre

Kansas City Repertory Theatre (KCRep) is excited to welcome an innovative, collaborative, and entrepreneurial minded professional to serve as the company’s next Executive Director.

Executive Director – Maestra Music

The Executive Director will harness the energy and activities of a rapid movement that has grown exponentially since Maestra’s founding in 2019.

ARTISTIC DIRECTOR, Australian National Academy of Music 

The Australian National Academy of Music provides artistic and professional development for the most exceptional young classical musicians from Australia and New Zealand.

Classifieds

Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center seeks Digital Content Manager

Reporting to the Director of Digital Media, you will take a leading role in ensuring that our website remains dynamic, up-to-date, and filled with compelling content that resonates with classical music enthusiasts at every step of their journey.

Stratford Festival seeks their next Artistic Director

“Stratford is by every measure – budget, employment, attendance, production – the largest repertory theater in North America, and likely the largest nonprofit theater, period.”

Global Executive Arts Management Fellowship

A three-year, fully-subsidized program for arts and culture executives.
function my_excerpt_length($length){ return 200; } add_filter('excerpt_length', 'my_excerpt_length');