This Week: Did settling the Pittsburgh Symphony strike just kick the can down the road?... The idea of progress is a fragile (and recent) notion... Why should this arts funding depend on encouraging bad behavior?... The art establishment is caught in an increasingly high-stakes investment battle... We celebrate reading - but has the dissemination of ideas and knowledge moved on? Pittsburgh … [Read more...]
Archives for November 2016
This Week’s AJ Highlights: “Hamilton” Teaches The Art Of Protest, At Last Some Real Data On Orchestras
This Week: That Mike Pence goes to "Hamilton" story? A textbook protest... Finally - some real data on the health of orchestras... Arts criticism is either being reborn or it's in dire shape... Pop culture is getting to be only for the rich... The myth of the outsider is a standard pop culture meme... The Arts And Our Next President: Many many many stories this week about artists reacting to … [Read more...]
This Week’s AJ Highlights: Divided Culture, Audience Issues, Hope From Lin Manuel Miranda
This Week: Hard to imagine there are arts headlines to compete with election news, but here goes: Science tries to explain why we're ideologically segregated... It's not just politics - arts and entertainment don't really know what their audiences want... Even the most-respected arts coverage is being cut back... Infighting on the jury of the National Book Awards point to how deeply we're … [Read more...]
This Week’s AJ Highlights: Ominous Orchestra Results? New Arts Journalism? Accountable Algorithms?
This Week: Record ticket sales at the Chicago Symphony but still a budget problem...Wall Street Journal cuts arts coverage and Boston Globe gets a subsidized critic...Why did Shakespeare's Globe fire its director?...Two cities on opposite sides of a border, share common arts culture... Who will hold intelligent machines accountable? An Ominous Report For Orchestras? The Chicago Symphony … [Read more...]