ArtsJournal Classic

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

DANCE

    IDEAS

    • The education is only worth what you earn?

      Good morning. Here are this week’s highlights:

      In Washington, the Education Department moved to cancel student loans for nearly every college arts program and to judge schools by their graduates’ earnings (The New York Times) — a logic that values an arts education purely by what its graduates later earn. Meanwhile, a loose symposium of writers spent the week worrying the opposite question: what is the human part of creative work actually worth, given that it’s the one part a machine can’t reproduce?

      Neuroscience suggests “semantic knowledge” — the internal map of how concepts connect — is the precondition for genuine invention, and it’s what no AI model possesses (Neuroscience News). But how can you tell whether something has been written by AI? The Atlantic proposes that it’s the absence of human friction: prose that’s too clean, too even, “simultaneously breezy and grandiose” (The Atlantic). And as computers increasingly talk to computers, another writer asks whether we’re quietly surrendering our autonomy — typing into the box and waiting (The Atlantic).

      So we’re working out how to define and defend the irreducibly human contribution to art and creativity at the precise moment our government is reclassifying it as a bad financial bet. One side measures art by its earnings; the other suspects the value was never in the output at all.

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

      Doug

    • Andrew Joslyn talks about the unique impact of relevant programming for orchestras

      Andrew Joslyn, Associate Director of Popular Programming at the Seattle Symphony, shares the unique impact of relevant programming in building community.

    • Meet One Of The American Revolution’s Leading Composers, William Billings

      The self-taught composer, who lived in Boston during the revolution years, published six books of music, with over 340 choral works. In addition to the Psalm settings and fuguing tunes he’s remembered for today, he wrote what may be America’s first protest song — in response to the Boston Massacre of 1770. – The Conversation

    • YouTubers Invade This Summer’s Movie Theatre Screens

      Kane Parsons, 20, and Curry Barker, 26, the directors behind Backrooms and Obsession who both built their audiences on YouTube, have become two of the youngest filmmakers to have movies top the box office. – CBC

    • Lucinda Childs On How She Keeps Her Working Pace After More Than 50 Years

      “I just feel fortunate. I’m still running around and everybody keeps reminding me that I’m 85. I don’t think about that so much. I do work every day. I work out every day. … It’s the first thing I do and that sort of keeps me together physically.” – The Brooklyn Rail

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    • Literary Arts Fund Awards Its First-Ever Grants — $7.7 Million Worth

      “Among 40 organizations in 19 states, (the) recipients of grants ranging from $40,000 to $500,000 include the National Book Foundation, which oversees the National Book Awards; the North Carolina Writers’ Network; Graywolf Press, Copper Canyon Press and other publishers; and the Minnesota Prison Writing Workshop.” – AP

    • A Frequent Book-Prize Juror Explains How These Awards Actually Work

      Rebecca Makkai has judged six major awards in the past eight years (a pace she does not recommend), and she shares some things she’s learned that she thinks most people don’t realize. For instance, she explains, the process is both purer and more random than you’d guess. – SubMakk

    • A Story Of Gay Life In Early America

      The two women lived openly as a same-sex couple from 1807 to 1851 in Weybridge, VT, where they ran a successful tailoring business. Despite some local misgivings, they were largely accepted. Neighborhood children apprenticed with them, and Sylvia served as a deacon in the local Congregational Church. – ArtsFuse

    • A New Wave Of Women’s Ragebait Lit

      “These books may have inspired more than their share of hot takes … but the conversations around them allow us to question where we are and what our feminist ideals have become … (now that) so many of the problems that felt like they were somehow close to being solved … have become drastically worse.” – Harper’s Bazaar

    • Minnesota Star Tribune To Cut 65 Jobs, Explore Going Fully Nonprofit

      “The Star Tribune employs 495 people and cuts will be made across every department. The newsroom has just under 200 journalists and will decline to 175 while remaining one of the largest between the coasts. Just last year, 125 employees were laid off when the company … closed its … printing plant.” – The Minnesota Star Tribune

    PEOPLE

    • The education is only worth what you earn?

      Good morning. Here are this week’s highlights:

      In Washington, the Education Department moved to cancel student loans for nearly every college arts program and to judge schools by their graduates’ earnings (The New York Times) — a logic that values an arts education purely by what its graduates later earn. Meanwhile, a loose symposium of writers spent the week worrying the opposite question: what is the human part of creative work actually worth, given that it’s the one part a machine can’t reproduce?

      Neuroscience suggests “semantic knowledge” — the internal map of how concepts connect — is the precondition for genuine invention, and it’s what no AI model possesses (Neuroscience News). But how can you tell whether something has been written by AI? The Atlantic proposes that it’s the absence of human friction: prose that’s too clean, too even, “simultaneously breezy and grandiose” (The Atlantic). And as computers increasingly talk to computers, another writer asks whether we’re quietly surrendering our autonomy — typing into the box and waiting (The Atlantic).

      So we’re working out how to define and defend the irreducibly human contribution to art and creativity at the precise moment our government is reclassifying it as a bad financial bet. One side measures art by its earnings; the other suspects the value was never in the output at all.

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

      Doug

    • Andrew Joslyn talks about the unique impact of relevant programming for orchestras

      Andrew Joslyn, Associate Director of Popular Programming at the Seattle Symphony, shares the unique impact of relevant programming in building community.

    • Meet One Of The American Revolution’s Leading Composers, William Billings

      The self-taught composer, who lived in Boston during the revolution years, published six books of music, with over 340 choral works. In addition to the Psalm settings and fuguing tunes he’s remembered for today, he wrote what may be America’s first protest song — in response to the Boston Massacre of 1770. – The Conversation

    • YouTubers Invade This Summer’s Movie Theatre Screens

      Kane Parsons, 20, and Curry Barker, 26, the directors behind Backrooms and Obsession who both built their audiences on YouTube, have become two of the youngest filmmakers to have movies top the box office. – CBC

    • Lucinda Childs On How She Keeps Her Working Pace After More Than 50 Years

      “I just feel fortunate. I’m still running around and everybody keeps reminding me that I’m 85. I don’t think about that so much. I do work every day. I work out every day. … It’s the first thing I do and that sort of keeps me together physically.” – The Brooklyn Rail

    PEOPLE

    • The education is only worth what you earn?

      Good morning. Here are this week’s highlights:

      In Washington, the Education Department moved to cancel student loans for nearly every college arts program and to judge schools by their graduates’ earnings (The New York Times) — a logic that values an arts education purely by what its graduates later earn. Meanwhile, a loose symposium of writers spent the week worrying the opposite question: what is the human part of creative work actually worth, given that it’s the one part a machine can’t reproduce?

      Neuroscience suggests “semantic knowledge” — the internal map of how concepts connect — is the precondition for genuine invention, and it’s what no AI model possesses (Neuroscience News). But how can you tell whether something has been written by AI? The Atlantic proposes that it’s the absence of human friction: prose that’s too clean, too even, “simultaneously breezy and grandiose” (The Atlantic). And as computers increasingly talk to computers, another writer asks whether we’re quietly surrendering our autonomy — typing into the box and waiting (The Atlantic).

      So we’re working out how to define and defend the irreducibly human contribution to art and creativity at the precise moment our government is reclassifying it as a bad financial bet. One side measures art by its earnings; the other suspects the value was never in the output at all.

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

      Doug

    • Andrew Joslyn talks about the unique impact of relevant programming for orchestras

      Andrew Joslyn, Associate Director of Popular Programming at the Seattle Symphony, shares the unique impact of relevant programming in building community.

    • Meet One Of The American Revolution’s Leading Composers, William Billings

      The self-taught composer, who lived in Boston during the revolution years, published six books of music, with over 340 choral works. In addition to the Psalm settings and fuguing tunes he’s remembered for today, he wrote what may be America’s first protest song — in response to the Boston Massacre of 1770. – The Conversation

    • YouTubers Invade This Summer’s Movie Theatre Screens

      Kane Parsons, 20, and Curry Barker, 26, the directors behind Backrooms and Obsession who both built their audiences on YouTube, have become two of the youngest filmmakers to have movies top the box office. – CBC

    • Lucinda Childs On How She Keeps Her Working Pace After More Than 50 Years

      “I just feel fortunate. I’m still running around and everybody keeps reminding me that I’m 85. I don’t think about that so much. I do work every day. I work out every day. … It’s the first thing I do and that sort of keeps me together physically.” – The Brooklyn Rail

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      WORDS