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Why The Gustav Klimt Fetched a Record Price

The painting is valued so highly because it carries a deep personal and political history – and because the artist’s incredible skill once helped it serve as a life-saving disguise. - The Convseration

San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theatre Chief To Step Down

Pam MacKinnon will step down as artistic director of San Francisco's American Conservatory Theater (A.C.T.) at the close of the 2025-2026 season, ending an eight-year tenure with the company. MacKinnon was the theatre's fourth leader, joining in 2018. - Playbill

Education Before AI Was Still Highly Problematic

We "blame everything wrong with education on generative AI rather than acknowledge deep and justifiable concerns we have had for a while. Course Hero, Chegg and other providers had industrialized academic dishonesty before ChatGPT was launched." - InsideHigherEd

Why Artists Shouldn’t Be Running Arts Organizations

Arts schools, almost by definition, assume the centrality of the art itself. They reinforce the idea that the work is intrinsically valuable and that the public simply needs help recognizing that value. This is one of the most persistent and damaging assumptions in our field. - ArtsAnalytics

A Terrific Explainer (With Examples) Of How Movie Special Effects Are Made

When was the last time you saw incredible CGI or other visual effects? Probably a tougher question to answer. That’s because VFX, like any other filmmaking tool, is invisible when done well. - Washington Post

Philadelphia Art Museum Charges Former Director With Financial Misconduct

That investigation, the motion states, concluded that Suda had “misappropriated funds from the Museum and lied to cover up her theft.” - ARTnews

A Social Media Challenge Shows The Precise Reason You Might Need A Real Percussionist

“‘I’ve always tried to put a big moment in a song, but nothing, of course, worked as good as that one,' David Foster, who produced and arranged the song for Ms. Houston, said.” - The New York Times

How To Figure Out If Your New ‘Favorite Artist’ Is Just Software, Or An Actual Artist

Some hints, but nothing is certain: “AI ‘singers' often sound a little slurred. Consonants and plosives (hard sounds like ‘p' and ’t') aren't quite right. You might hear ‘ghost’ harmonies, where backing vocals appear and disappear at random.” - BBC

Stars Of Fox’s Splashy New Bible Podcast Say They Never Granted Permission For Their Voices To be Used

“As unbelievable as this situation might sound, it seems to be possible because the podcast isn't made of entirely new, original material. The performances by the ... actors appear to be from a 2010 audiobook recording of the New Testament.” - CBC

Dorothy Vogel, A New York Librarian With A Vast Art Collection In Her One-Room Apartment, Has Died At 90

Vogel and her husband, a postal clerk, "bought thousands of works from future art stars like Sol LeWitt and Donald Judd, stashing them in their cramped one-bedroom New York apartment and eventually handing over the entire collection to the National Gallery of Art.” - The New York Times

How Chloe Zhao Made Hamnet So Powerful

“By her own admission, Zhao isn’t much of a Shakespeare connoisseur,” but she has thoughts on Hamlet, and Hamnet. “Grief keeps you in the past, but time is pulling you forward.” - Washington Post (MSN)

New York’s Newest ‘Experiential Cinema’ Is Pricey, And Private

“Pick a film from either current releases or a curated archive, select a drink package for an extra $50 each, choose a 12-13 course gourmet meal off a seasonal menu for another $100 a head, and you have a ritzy night at the movies.” - The Guardian (UK)

We’re Spending 22 Dollars A Month More On Streaming Services This Year Than Last

That’s a big jump. “Some customers are starting to get fed up with having to subscribe to multiple streaming platforms just to get all of their favorite shows and sports. That has driven some people back into the arms of pay-TV.” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo)

The Venerated, Exploited Legacy Of Anne Frank

“It is not uncommon for a visitor to refuse to leave the Annex, convinced she is Anne Frank reincarnate. This degree of identification perplexes the director. Calling her by her first name, as some of his colleagues do, troubles him as well.” - LitHub

What Art Market Reporters Are Getting Wrong

Smaller galleries may be in massive amounts of trouble. "Gallery sales are almost always private, and only a small percentage truthfully reveal their sales and profits. ... Average gallery sales are reported to be down 8 or 10%. That would hardly have caused closures. It is far, far worse.” - Hyperallergic

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