Northeast Indiana Public Radio purchased the license for 94.1 FM in 2002 for $1.8 million and has been operating it since then as Classical 94.1 WBNI. But NIPR never raised enough money to cover both running costs and debt service from acquiring the frequency, so the broadcaster is now selling 94.1 FM — for $350,000 — to a licensee which will operate it as “Rhythm and Praise” with an Urban Gospel format. – Greater Fort Wayne Business Weekly
Venice Cruise Ship Ban Ends — Ships Return To The Lagoon
Residents were caught by surprise on Thursday when a cruise liner sailed into the lagoon city for the first time since the pandemic began, despite prime minister Mario Draghi’s government declaring that the ships would be banned from the historic centre. The 92,000 tonne ship MSC Orchestra collected 650 passengers before leaving for Bari, in southern Italy, on Saturday. – The Guardian
As Italy Was Locked Down, Looting Of Ancient Roman Artifacts Went Up
“The looting of ancient art in Italy is … at least as old as the Roman empire, which not only contended with its own tomb raiders — or tombaroli, as they are known in Italy — but also pilfered riches from other nations. The COVID-19 pandemic, however, has offered these thieves new opportunities to raid closed archaeological sites, churches and museums for priceless artifacts while police are reassigned to enforce lockdowns.” – CNN
Howard Herring talks digital in the arts
The President and CEO of the New World Symphony discusses the impact of digital environments on our art and audiences. – Aaron Dworkin
Why Do We Take The Tyranny Of Time For Granted?
“For most people, the last class they had devoted to clocks and time was early in primary school,” Kevin Birth, a professor of anthropology at the City University of New York who has been studying clocks for more than 30 years, told me recently. “There’s this thing that is central to our entire society, that’s built into all of our electronics. And we’re wandering around with an early primary school level of knowledge about it.” Noema Magazine
Amsterdam Is Falling Apart
“Sinkholes are appearing in its small streets, and nearly half its 1,700 bridges are rickety and need repairs, frequently requiring trams to cross at a snail’s pace. As a huge project to shore up the canal walls gets underway, the city is beginning to look like one gigantic construction site.” The New York Times
The Cinque Gallery Gives Us Another Chapter Of Black Art History
Cinque, founded by Romare Bearden, Ernest Crichlow, and Norman Lewis in 1969, showed more than 450 artists of color during its 35-year existence. “The fact that Cinque sustained itself for more than three decades attests to an indisputable fact: the existence of at least two art communities, which were separated along color lines.” – Hyperallergic
Author Naomi Wolf Spreads So Many Anti-Vaccine Myths That She’s Banned From Twitter
One might even call them all lies. “The author variously claimed that vaccines were a ‘software platform that can receive uploads’ and that ‘the best way to show respect for healthcare workers if you are healthy and under 65 is to socialise sensibly and expose yourself to a low viral load.’ In her most recent post, she argued that ‘vaccinated people’s urine/feces’ (sic) needed to be separated from general sewage supplies/waterways until its impact on unvaccinated people via drinking water was established.” – The Guardian (UK)
The Moomintrolls’ Essence Came From Tove Jansson’s Island
Author and illustrator Jansson found her dream island when she was in her ’50s. “Klovharun in the Finnish archipelago is tiny – some 6,000 sq metres – and isolated, ‘a rock in the middle of nowhere,’ according to Jansson’s niece, Sophia. It has scarcely any foliage, no running water and no electricity. Yet for Jansson, it was an oasis. For 18 years she and her partner Tuulikki Pietilä spent long summers there, heading out from Helsinki as soon as the ice broke in April, leaving only in early October. The island meant ‘privacy, remoteness, intimacy, a rounded whole without bridges or fences.'” – The Guardian (UK)
Conductor And Soundmaker Yoshi Wada, Of Fluxus Art Collective, Has Died At 77
Wada wrote and performed music that “was characterized by dense, sustained sounds that could create mind-bending acoustic effects. He borrowed widely from different musical traditions — Indian ragas, Macedonian folk singing and Scottish bagpipes — all while supporting his musical life by working in construction” – which meant that sometimes, tools of the trade (like plumbing pipes) became instruments. – The New York Times
Publishing Is So Easy To Spoof
Or so says Zakiya Dalila Harris, the author of The Other Black Girl. The book is a combined thriller and social satire that was indeed inspired by Harris’ experiences. “Part of me enjoyed editing and I felt I was good at it, but it’s also an exhausting job for an entry-level person in terms of the pay. I was also one of the very few black people in the company – it wasn’t as bad as Nella in the book, but I was the only black woman in editorial in a full-time position for a while. I thought: why does it feel like we’re living in 1955 still, in terms of what we value?” – The Guardian (UK)
A Return To Movie Theatres, Or Not, Summer Watchlist
Choose your own adventure – couch or theatre? Crowded or distanced? Popcorn or not? (That’s a trick question: Always get the popcorn.) – The Atlantic
Check Your Local Little Free Art Gallery If You’re In Need Of Visual Stimulation
One artist says little free art galleries stir “feelings of ‘cute aggression,’ a term that describes the way our minds cope with the onslaught of positive feelings brought on by something adorable — you just want to squish/squeeze/eat it. Thankfully, no one has tried, but part of the popularity might come from the feeling that you could. Artists and tiny gallerists alike say bite-size art is less intimidating.” – Washington Post