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    • Who’s Minding the Gates?

      Good Morning

      The Kennedy Center laid off more staff Friday, with much of its programming department terminated or redirected toward venue rentals (Washington Post). Meanwhile the AP is offering buyouts as it formally pivots away from newspapers — which now account for just 10% of its revenue (NiemanLab).

      The gatekeeping infrastructure keeps thinning. David Bell chronicles the slow death of the book review and what it takes with it (Liberties Journal), while the New York Review of Books asks why writers still bother with political satire when the political targets don’t read (NYRB). And into the vacuum: AI influencers now good enough to fool their audiences (The Atlantic).

      A stolen Van Gogh, returned in an Ikea bag with a blood-stained pillow, has been restored to its former glory (Smithsonian). Art finds a way.

      All of our stories below.

    • Chopin Waltzes as a Cycle — A Triumph for Seong-Jin Cho

      That Chopin’s 24 Preludes are commonly performed as a set makes sense. They are individually short and concise, they vary greatly in mood and texture, they suggest a trajectory beginning with a clearing of the throat and ending with a firestorm.

      That Chopin’s waltzes are not commonly performed as a

    • Language And The Battle For Democracy

      If ‘language is one of the keys to individual autonomy’, the central challenge in a linguistic landscape being flattened and standardized by AI is to ‘continue to believe in language learning as a tool of emancipation and liberation’. – Eurozine

    • Hilde Limondjian, Longtime Met Museum Music Curator, 89

      Hilde Limondjian, who spent more than four decades bringing music to the auditorium — and the galleries — of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan, died on Jan. 24. She was 89. – The New York Times

    • Obama Library Announces Artist Commissions For The Presidential Library

      The latest set of commissions will be realized by Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Jeffrey Gibson, Rashid Johnson, Hugo McCloud, Martin Puryear, Lorna Simpson, and Norman Teague. – ARTnews

    ISSUES

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    PEOPLE

    • Who’s Minding the Gates?

      Good Morning

      The Kennedy Center laid off more staff Friday, with much of its programming department terminated or redirected toward venue rentals (Washington Post). Meanwhile the AP is offering buyouts as it formally pivots away from newspapers — which now account for just 10% of its revenue (NiemanLab).

      The gatekeeping infrastructure keeps thinning. David Bell chronicles the slow death of the book review and what it takes with it (Liberties Journal), while the New York Review of Books asks why writers still bother with political satire when the political targets don’t read (NYRB). And into the vacuum: AI influencers now good enough to fool their audiences (The Atlantic).

      A stolen Van Gogh, returned in an Ikea bag with a blood-stained pillow, has been restored to its former glory (Smithsonian). Art finds a way.

      All of our stories below.

    • Chopin Waltzes as a Cycle — A Triumph for Seong-Jin Cho

      That Chopin’s 24 Preludes are commonly performed as a set makes sense. They are individually short and concise, they vary greatly in mood and texture, they suggest a trajectory beginning with a clearing of the throat and ending with a firestorm.

      That Chopin’s waltzes are not commonly performed as a

    • Language And The Battle For Democracy

      If ‘language is one of the keys to individual autonomy’, the central challenge in a linguistic landscape being flattened and standardized by AI is to ‘continue to believe in language learning as a tool of emancipation and liberation’. – Eurozine

    • Hilde Limondjian, Longtime Met Museum Music Curator, 89

      Hilde Limondjian, who spent more than four decades bringing music to the auditorium — and the galleries — of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan, died on Jan. 24. She was 89. – The New York Times

    • Obama Library Announces Artist Commissions For The Presidential Library

      The latest set of commissions will be realized by Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Jeffrey Gibson, Rashid Johnson, Hugo McCloud, Martin Puryear, Lorna Simpson, and Norman Teague. – ARTnews

    PEOPLE

    • Who’s Minding the Gates?

      Good Morning

      The Kennedy Center laid off more staff Friday, with much of its programming department terminated or redirected toward venue rentals (Washington Post). Meanwhile the AP is offering buyouts as it formally pivots away from newspapers — which now account for just 10% of its revenue (NiemanLab).

      The gatekeeping infrastructure keeps thinning. David Bell chronicles the slow death of the book review and what it takes with it (Liberties Journal), while the New York Review of Books asks why writers still bother with political satire when the political targets don’t read (NYRB). And into the vacuum: AI influencers now good enough to fool their audiences (The Atlantic).

      A stolen Van Gogh, returned in an Ikea bag with a blood-stained pillow, has been restored to its former glory (Smithsonian). Art finds a way.

      All of our stories below.

    • Chopin Waltzes as a Cycle — A Triumph for Seong-Jin Cho

      That Chopin’s 24 Preludes are commonly performed as a set makes sense. They are individually short and concise, they vary greatly in mood and texture, they suggest a trajectory beginning with a clearing of the throat and ending with a firestorm.

      That Chopin’s waltzes are not commonly performed as a

    • Language And The Battle For Democracy

      If ‘language is one of the keys to individual autonomy’, the central challenge in a linguistic landscape being flattened and standardized by AI is to ‘continue to believe in language learning as a tool of emancipation and liberation’. – Eurozine

    • Hilde Limondjian, Longtime Met Museum Music Curator, 89

      Hilde Limondjian, who spent more than four decades bringing music to the auditorium — and the galleries — of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan, died on Jan. 24. She was 89. – The New York Times

    • Obama Library Announces Artist Commissions For The Presidential Library

      The latest set of commissions will be realized by Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Jeffrey Gibson, Rashid Johnson, Hugo McCloud, Martin Puryear, Lorna Simpson, and Norman Teague. – ARTnews

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