This week's best reads hover around existential questions. What arts organizations should exist? Does truth exist? Can theatre really change anything, and should it even try? Canada's new government makes an existential bet on culture. And do our tools define art? Arts Organizations At The Existential Crossroads: Some have argued that when arts organizations have outlived their missions, they … [Read more...]
Archives for March 2016
The Five Most-Interesting Stories We Collected On ArtsJournal This Week 03.20.16
My picks for the five most interesting stories we gathered this week. The Arts' Existential Challenge Arts organizations, along with every business sector trying to cope with sweeping changes wrought by the internet, are struggling with how to reinvent for the future while not alienating its past or present. "What's the answer? Some would say that reinvention invariably is brutal — in the … [Read more...]
Five Highlights From Last Week’s ArtsJournal
Researchers find links between what you watch and how you behave, how women are changing classical music, fascinating fights over who owns Picasso, a Golden Age for New York theatre, and concerns about the integrity of museums. You are what you eat, right? So are you also what you watch? Listen? Read? Makes sense. In that case, studies are quite suspicious of watching television. Researchers … [Read more...]
Five Highlights From This Week’s ArtsJournal
New York gets its first new major museum in decades. English National Opera continues its slow-motion implosion. The relationship between art and critics frays. Some counter-intuitive findings about creativity from scientists. And some cultural industries that are booming. The Met's new Breuer Building (the former Whitney Museum) opens to massive expectations. This new building will … [Read more...]