The planned new building will house two expanded spaces: a flagship 700-seat theatre and a 250-seat space. A new cafe and restaurant are planned, along with extra rehearsal spaces, a creative arts hub and expanded office space for staff. A spokeswoman for the theatre said the group believes the “current building is inadequate for artists, audiences and staff. We have been seeking to find a solution to improve this situation for more than 10 years.”
What It’s Really Like To Work With The Wachowskis On ‘Sense8’
The Verge: “When Lana talks about her work, she tends to put it in heady, intellectual terms, looking at deconstructionism and semiotics and Jacques Derrida and Kant. Does she bring up that kind of philosophy when she’s talking to the cast?”
Freema Agyeman: “Oh yeah, she does, but we can only contribute so far, because we just kind of go, ‘Huh?’ [Laughs] They’re incredibly erudite, and that’s fascinating. You can sit and learn so much from them.”
We’d Have No Concept Of ‘News’ Without Our Particular Ideas About Time
“While we frequently wring our hands about the fact that news is in ‘crisis’, we rarely discuss what news actually is. Much like history, news is fundamentally a way of imposing order on the messy totality of what’s going on around us. The Oxford English Dictionary defines ‘news’ as ‘newly received or noteworthy information, especially about recent or important events’. Or, in [historian Robert] Darnton’s words, news is ‘stories about what happened’. What we consider to be news is therefore intimately connected to our perception of time.”
When Poetry Could Get You Killed: Osip Mandelstam Under Stalin
“Nadezhda Mandelstam … [wrote] about the many instances when, confronted with the desperation of their situation, they had asked each other if this was the moment when they, too, could no longer bear to go forward.”
A New Riff On ‘Pictures At An Exhibition’ (The Orchestra Version) From Dirk Brossé
The Belgian composer-conductor, music director of the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, decided to write his own, all-new take on the concept of the Mussorgsky-Ravel favorite. (Unlike George Crumb, Brossé didn’t come up with a new title.) So he took a special tour of the Philadelphia Museum of Art and ultimately chose seven paintings from the collection – from Thomas Eakins’s The Gross Clinic to Man Ray’s Fair Weather – as his inspirations. Peter Dobrin met with Brossé to talk about the artworks and how Brossé found the music in them.
Some Of The Coolest, Most Interesting Stuff In Medieval Manuscripts Is Off In The Margins
Humans, animals, human-animal hybrids, disembodied limbs and other parts, monkeys playing bagpipes, rabbits in a funeral procession, naked bishops – the surprises are nearly endless. What’s more, says a scholar from the University of Glasgow, these drawings, doodles, and offhand notes can tell us a surprising amount about the people who wrote and read these volumes.
St. Louis Wants To Turn Chuck Berry’s Old Home Into A Museum
The museum would anchor a “Chuck Berry Cultural District,” to honor Berry, who died in March at age 90, and the area’s African-American heritage.
The Story Of Flora Mayo, Giacometti’s First Mistress
An attractive young department-store heiress from Denver, Flora divorced the painfully conventional husband she had been pressured to marry at 19 and took off to study art in Paris, where she met and fell in love with the sculptor. If only the story had ended there.
A Contemporary Art Show For Dogs, And It’s Called –
Yes, we’re afraid so: Dogumenta. The idea comes from former Washington Post art critic Jessica Dawson, whose Yorkie/Maltese mix Rocky (pictured) accompanies her on all her gallery visits in Chelsea.
Why Are Star Artists So Rarely Used In Ads?
“Making money outside of the typical fare artists offer–paintings, drawings, sculptures, objects, books, prints, lectures, teaching gigs–is weirdly frowned upon. Or it might be the case that most artists, either by face or name, aren’t well known enough, pretty enough, or cunning enough.”
The Ten Biggest Art Controversies In Venice Biennale History
The exhibition has suffered several dust-ups in its 114-year history, from vexing grand prize winners to derogatory showcases of “primitive” African art.
Blasphemy Charges Against Actor Stephen Fry Dropped By Irish Police
“Irish police have halted a prosecution against Stephen Fry for blasphemy because the [authorities] could not find enough people to be outraged over the actor’s anti-God remarks on Irish TV.”
Is Athens Becoming The Next Berlin?
Thanks to the still-struggling Greek economy, rents are low and there’s plenty of vacant space. Artists love those things, and they’ve started arriving in Athens from elsewhere in Europe. What’s more, Documenta is holding part of this year’s events there, the first time the festival has left Kassel in Germany. On the other hand, there’s not much of a contemporary art culture there yet, and few collectors. Alastair Sooke pays the city a visit.
One Of The Toughest Jobs At The Met Opera Is Completely Silent
Reporter Michael Cooper talks to Tim Guscott, chief follow-spot operator, who says “It’s really hard to follow something no bigger than a basketball that’s 135 feet away.” (He’s referring to Anna Netrebko’s head.)
The Other Half Of Eiko And Koma Launches *His* Solo Career
Together, the Japanese-American duo Eiko and Koma had a successful decades-long career performing what one might describe as New York neo-Butoh. But Koma had to give up dancing after a foot injury several years ago, and Eiko eventually began performing alone. Now, thanks to what he calls a “miracle,” Koma is onstage again, with scenery he designed and painted himself.
Study: A Connection Between The Type Of Fiction You Read And Your Ethics/Morals
The research finds fans of science fiction and fantasy, as well as literary fiction, lean toward a more permissive moral style. Romance and mystery readers, in contrast, tend to abide by a more rigid sense of right and wrong.
Misty Copeland On The Art Of Acting
“You feel the age and the injuries, and you realize the importance of character,” she said in a recent interview. “I used to muscle through these things. I can’t do that anymore. There needs to be something more, something else.”
Cartoonist Kills Off Pepe The Frog After Pepe Becomes A Hate Symbol
“It’s completely insane that Pepe has been labeled a symbol of hate, and that racists and anti-Semites are using a once peaceful frog-dude from my comic book as an icon of hate. It’s a nightmare, and the only thing I can do is see this as an opportunity to speak out against hate.”