ArtsJournal Classic

AJ Four Ways: Text Only (by date) | headlines only

DANCE

    IDEAS

    • The Art that Lasts

      This Week’s Highlights:

      Many stories this week about what creativity actually is and what it’s worth. Fast Company declared that we’ve entered “the imagination era,” where creativity is the currency (Fast Company); employers say they can’t find enough people with creative skills (The Conversation); the New Yorker asked whether it matters that a chatbot wrote a prize-winning story (The New Yorker). The Yale Review pushed from the other side, wondering whether the century so far has been a creative blank space (Yale Review).

      David Hockney’s death at 88 was a kind of answer (Artnet). His whole life was an argument for looking harder, for the eye over the easy image. A century on, Martha Graham’s vision still matters intensely (The New York Times).

      We’ve been watching craft and science circle each other: a new method for spotting counterfeit Van Goghs (Artnet), a carbon-fiber violin sharing a stage with a Stradivari (The Strad), and Gaudí’s Sagrada Família standing tall with no flying buttresses (BBC).

      All this week’s stories below, organized by topic.

    • Sterling Elliott talks about the role arts organizations play in a journey toward leadership

      Sterling Elliott, Sphinx Artist & Cellist, shares the role arts organizations and family played in his journey to leadership.

    • Hockney’s Whole Life Was An Argument

      Good Morning,

      David Hockney died at 88 (AP), and the argument that ran through his seventy-year career is one we’re still having: a new tool — the Polaroid, the fax machine, the iPad — is an invitation, not a threat. He drew with whatever was at hand.

      That argument runs through the rest of today’s stories. A landmark German court ruled Google liable for what its AI Overviews assert (The Decoder) — the first real test of whether a machine can be held to account for answers it invents (and gets wrong). The Walrus, meanwhile, pleads to bring back the gatekeepers (The Walrus) as a means of sorting out culture with values, even as BookTok keeps minting the authors the old gatekeepers passed over (Yahoo).

      So what does an algorithm with no gatekeeper actually feed us? Spotify’s biggest hits are now from the 1970s and ’80s (WSJ) — infinite access curdled into nostalgia, the past outdrawing the present for our attention. Spotify did fix one thing: it killed the disco-ball app icon everyone loathed (Variety).

      And lastly — not because it’s less important, but the Kennedy Center saga drags on. Washington National Opera sues the Kennedy Center over a $17M endowment the Center has kept and which belongs to the opera company (The Hill) . And the Atlantic argues that the Kennedy Center is a metaphor or at least a cautionary tale about the difficulties of de-Trumpifying after he’s moved on. It’s a long way back (The Atlantic).

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • Why Gustav Mahler’s New York Career Was a “Failure”

      The critic Henry Krehbiel notoriously called Gustav Mahler’s New York career a failure, undone by “foolishness and naivete.” Most accounts

    • What Virgil Thought About Bees

      “(The Latin poet) recognized that bees had what we might call social being — co-dependent, organized, enterprising — and he praised them for having all the virtues of a Roman citizen: industrious, hardworking, loyal, and (willing) to die to defend the colony.” – Literary Hub

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    PEOPLE

    • The Art that Lasts

      This Week’s Highlights:

      Many stories this week about what creativity actually is and what it’s worth. Fast Company declared that we’ve entered “the imagination era,” where creativity is the currency (Fast Company); employers say they can’t find enough people with creative skills (The Conversation); the New Yorker asked whether it matters that a chatbot wrote a prize-winning story (The New Yorker). The Yale Review pushed from the other side, wondering whether the century so far has been a creative blank space (Yale Review).

      David Hockney’s death at 88 was a kind of answer (Artnet). His whole life was an argument for looking harder, for the eye over the easy image. A century on, Martha Graham’s vision still matters intensely (The New York Times).

      We’ve been watching craft and science circle each other: a new method for spotting counterfeit Van Goghs (Artnet), a carbon-fiber violin sharing a stage with a Stradivari (The Strad), and Gaudí’s Sagrada Família standing tall with no flying buttresses (BBC).

      All this week’s stories below, organized by topic.

    • Sterling Elliott talks about the role arts organizations play in a journey toward leadership

      Sterling Elliott, Sphinx Artist & Cellist, shares the role arts organizations and family played in his journey to leadership.

    • Hockney’s Whole Life Was An Argument

      Good Morning,

      David Hockney died at 88 (AP), and the argument that ran through his seventy-year career is one we’re still having: a new tool — the Polaroid, the fax machine, the iPad — is an invitation, not a threat. He drew with whatever was at hand.

      That argument runs through the rest of today’s stories. A landmark German court ruled Google liable for what its AI Overviews assert (The Decoder) — the first real test of whether a machine can be held to account for answers it invents (and gets wrong). The Walrus, meanwhile, pleads to bring back the gatekeepers (The Walrus) as a means of sorting out culture with values, even as BookTok keeps minting the authors the old gatekeepers passed over (Yahoo).

      So what does an algorithm with no gatekeeper actually feed us? Spotify’s biggest hits are now from the 1970s and ’80s (WSJ) — infinite access curdled into nostalgia, the past outdrawing the present for our attention. Spotify did fix one thing: it killed the disco-ball app icon everyone loathed (Variety).

      And lastly — not because it’s less important, but the Kennedy Center saga drags on. Washington National Opera sues the Kennedy Center over a $17M endowment the Center has kept and which belongs to the opera company (The Hill) . And the Atlantic argues that the Kennedy Center is a metaphor or at least a cautionary tale about the difficulties of de-Trumpifying after he’s moved on. It’s a long way back (The Atlantic).

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • Why Gustav Mahler’s New York Career Was a “Failure”

      The critic Henry Krehbiel notoriously called Gustav Mahler’s New York career a failure, undone by “foolishness and naivete.” Most accounts

    • What Virgil Thought About Bees

      “(The Latin poet) recognized that bees had what we might call social being — co-dependent, organized, enterprising — and he praised them for having all the virtues of a Roman citizen: industrious, hardworking, loyal, and (willing) to die to defend the colony.” – Literary Hub

    PEOPLE

    • The Art that Lasts

      This Week’s Highlights:

      Many stories this week about what creativity actually is and what it’s worth. Fast Company declared that we’ve entered “the imagination era,” where creativity is the currency (Fast Company); employers say they can’t find enough people with creative skills (The Conversation); the New Yorker asked whether it matters that a chatbot wrote a prize-winning story (The New Yorker). The Yale Review pushed from the other side, wondering whether the century so far has been a creative blank space (Yale Review).

      David Hockney’s death at 88 was a kind of answer (Artnet). His whole life was an argument for looking harder, for the eye over the easy image. A century on, Martha Graham’s vision still matters intensely (The New York Times).

      We’ve been watching craft and science circle each other: a new method for spotting counterfeit Van Goghs (Artnet), a carbon-fiber violin sharing a stage with a Stradivari (The Strad), and Gaudí’s Sagrada Família standing tall with no flying buttresses (BBC).

      All this week’s stories below, organized by topic.

    • Sterling Elliott talks about the role arts organizations play in a journey toward leadership

      Sterling Elliott, Sphinx Artist & Cellist, shares the role arts organizations and family played in his journey to leadership.

    • Hockney’s Whole Life Was An Argument

      Good Morning,

      David Hockney died at 88 (AP), and the argument that ran through his seventy-year career is one we’re still having: a new tool — the Polaroid, the fax machine, the iPad — is an invitation, not a threat. He drew with whatever was at hand.

      That argument runs through the rest of today’s stories. A landmark German court ruled Google liable for what its AI Overviews assert (The Decoder) — the first real test of whether a machine can be held to account for answers it invents (and gets wrong). The Walrus, meanwhile, pleads to bring back the gatekeepers (The Walrus) as a means of sorting out culture with values, even as BookTok keeps minting the authors the old gatekeepers passed over (Yahoo).

      So what does an algorithm with no gatekeeper actually feed us? Spotify’s biggest hits are now from the 1970s and ’80s (WSJ) — infinite access curdled into nostalgia, the past outdrawing the present for our attention. Spotify did fix one thing: it killed the disco-ball app icon everyone loathed (Variety).

      And lastly — not because it’s less important, but the Kennedy Center saga drags on. Washington National Opera sues the Kennedy Center over a $17M endowment the Center has kept and which belongs to the opera company (The Hill) . And the Atlantic argues that the Kennedy Center is a metaphor or at least a cautionary tale about the difficulties of de-Trumpifying after he’s moved on. It’s a long way back (The Atlantic).

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • Why Gustav Mahler’s New York Career Was a “Failure”

      The critic Henry Krehbiel notoriously called Gustav Mahler’s New York career a failure, undone by “foolishness and naivete.” Most accounts

    • What Virgil Thought About Bees

      “(The Latin poet) recognized that bees had what we might call social being — co-dependent, organized, enterprising — and he praised them for having all the virtues of a Roman citizen: industrious, hardworking, loyal, and (willing) to die to defend the colony.” – Literary Hub

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      • Please! Bring Back The Gatekeepers

        Gatekeeper, here, doesn’t mean the patriarchal bogeyman of progressive fever dreams. It means the picky curator who maintains a necessary membrane between your half-formed, typo-addled thoughts and the wider world. It means the tastemaker who triages opinions and batters the better ones into readable form. – The Walrus

      • The Great Divide: Creativity Before And After AI

         On one side are texts produced before the arrival of generative LLMs. On the other, everything that has followed—texts that might still be useful, even compelling, but that will always face a lingering suspicion of not being entirely human, of having been smoothed by systems trained to predict the word that comes next. – LA Review of Books

      • Has The 21st Century Been A Creative Blank Space?

        The years from 2000 to 2025 as a period of creative emptiness and stagnation so intractable that it will be remembered (or, rather, is being remembered, through the anticipation of remembrance) as voided time, a dark age. – Yale Review

      • If It’s Art And People Like It, Then…

        Our reigning cultural ideology has been poptimism—the idea that if a lot of people like a work of art, then it has to be good. Now sloptimism, which holds that if there’s a lot of art out there and people are engaging with it then how bad can it be? – The New Yorker

      • How Good Is AI At Spotting Talent? Soccer Teams Are Working On It

        For decades, the beautiful game depended on the human eye: a scout on the sideline, attentively watching, waiting for that something special. That process, however, is becoming increasingly data-driven. – The Conversation

      WORDS