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Paul Taylor’s “Esplanade” At 50

How the landmark modern dance was created, whom it influenced, and why it’s still magical today. - The New York Times

Why Are We Curious About Some Things And Not Others?

All this infophilia raises an important question: if we like information so much, why don’t we seek out more of it? - Psyche

Dallas Black Dance Theatre Makes Its Interim Artistic Director Permanent

Richard A. Freeman Jr. served on an interim basis for two seasons, including holding the company together through the turmoil following the firing of 10 dancers for attempting to unionize. - KERA (Dallas)

Pew Arts And Culture Names A New Leader

Christina Vassallo, 45, follows Paula Marincola, who retired in October after serving as the center’s first director, since 2008. After leaving the Fabric Workshop in 2023, Vassallo became director of the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati. - Philadelphia Inquirer (MSN)

How Streaming Made Documentaries Popular (And Wrecked The Form)

Presently, non-fiction filmmaking (in the form of docuseries) stands as a cornerstone of streaming economics, a format bolstered and degraded by an ever-growing demand for cheap, time-consuming content. - Stat Significant

How Netflix Upended The Movie Business

Netflix’s movies don’t have to abide by any of the norms established over the history of cinema: they don’t have to be profitable, pretty, sexy, intelligent, funny, well-made, or anything else that pulls audiences into theater seats. - n+one

How A Crazy Musician Spent Six Months Teaching An Octopus To Play Piano

Did Mattias Krantz pull it off?  Sort of.  Here’s what he did, how well it worked, and why it didn’t work better. - ZME Science

Princeton’s New Museum Is An Important Building

This extraordinarily rich design is certainly assertive throughout, but it is completely in synch with the nature of an institution that has been collecting for 255 years, one that inevitably reflects the sprawling curiosity and a worldliness—or lack thereof—among generations of Princetonians. - James Russell

Playwrights Are Breaking Theatre’s Fourth Wall

These writers create an environment in which characters can enter or exit the main storyline as if from a magic door. Audiences are cognizant of this portal, but they are encouraged to forget its existence when the drama ramps up, thereby allowing them to have their cake and eat it too. - Los Angeles Times

The Golden Globes Are Back (And Still Problematic)

So, yes, for all intents and purposes, the Golden Globes are back. But regarding ethical practices, today’s for-profit Globes may well be worse than ever, crossing the line in ways that are more egregious than the shady maneuverings that put the awards on life support not so long ago. - Los Angeles Times

Gertrude Stein Knew She Was A Genius — And That The World Would Only Realize It After She Died

“‘Those who are creating the modern composition authentically are naturally only of importance when they are dead,’ Stein once wrote. Accordingly, she spent a good portion of her life making arrangements for her afterlife.” - The New Republic

Producer: AI Is Inevitable In Music. Time To Have A Strategy

“Everybody should be selling or licensing their voice and their skills to these companies,” Stewart said. “Otherwise they’re just going to take it anyway.” - The Guardian

Louvre Leak Causes Water Damage To Art Work

“Between 300 and 400 works” were affected by the leak discovered on 26 November, the museum’s deputy administrator, Francis Steinbock, said, describing them as “Egyptology journals” and “scientific documentation” used by researchers. - The Guardian

Solving An 800-Picture Art Heist In Slow Motion

Some 800 paintings have been taken from the collection since 1945, in one of the most devastating spates of art theft in Germany’s postwar history. Canvas by canvas, however, they are being filled in as the artworks are returned from around the world through a marathon exercise in detective work and cultural diplomacy. - The Times (UK)

Professors Are Giving Lectures In Bars — To Capacity Crowds

At Lectures on Tap, “attendees hear thought-provoking talks from experts on wide-ranging topics such as Taylor Swift's use of storytelling in her music, how AI technology is being used to detect cardiovascular diseases, the psychology of deception and the quest for alien megastructures — all in a fun, low-stakes environment.” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

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