ArtsJournal Classic

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

DANCE

    IDEAS

    • Who gets to be in the room?

      This Week’s Highlights:

      The most revealing arts story this week was a hire that, by the old rules, wouldn’t have happened. The San Francisco Symphony passed over the marquee conductors and handed its podium to Elim Chan — the first woman to lead one of America’s “Big 7” orchestras and, by critic Joshua Kosman’s own count, the most unproven music director the institution has chosen in four decades. His verdict: the choice “could not have been wiser” (San Francisco Chronicle). Potential.

      Chicago arts groups are locking patrons’ phones in pouches to sell something a screen can’t (WBEZ). And a Philadelphia orchestra that programs Rainbow Road and the Sonic theme is growing like a weed. What’s the secret? (Philadelphia Inquirer).

      The field’s top honors kept landing in unexpected places, too. The Regional Theatre Tony went to American Players Theatre, in a Wisconsin town of 1,500 (Wisconsin Public Radio). And the International Booker, for the first time in its history, went to a novel written in Mandarin Chinese (AP).

      None of these are the same story, but they pose the same question: the map of what counts — who leads, who belongs in the room, what’s allowed on the program — is being redrawn from the edges in.

      Which is the bigger question I take up in this week’s AJ Chronicles: Hollywood has completely reinvented its core business model six times in a century. The nonprofit arts have managed it once. Is the second time finally being forced?

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

    • AJ Chronicles: Hollywood, 6; Non-Profit Arts, 1
      Hollywood has reinvented its core model at least six times in a century. The nonprofit arts model has reinvented itself exactly once. Now there may no choice. But what’s the case?
    • Christine Taylor Conda talks about the One Score, One Chicago program

      Christine Taylor Conda, Executive Director of Education and Community Engagement at Ravinia, talks about the unique impact of their One Score, One Chicago program.

    • The Robot Fight Clubs Of San Francisco Are Now Having Dance Wars

      Yes, this is a thing. – The San Francisco Standard

    • Is Arts Criticism A Moral Good?

      We no longer argue about whether art as such is a matter of life and death—we assume that it’s not. Consequently, critics aren’t prompted to ask about the political valence of their own activity: Is criticism itself a moral good? – Artforum

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    PEOPLE

    • Who gets to be in the room?

      This Week’s Highlights:

      The most revealing arts story this week was a hire that, by the old rules, wouldn’t have happened. The San Francisco Symphony passed over the marquee conductors and handed its podium to Elim Chan — the first woman to lead one of America’s “Big 7” orchestras and, by critic Joshua Kosman’s own count, the most unproven music director the institution has chosen in four decades. His verdict: the choice “could not have been wiser” (San Francisco Chronicle). Potential.

      Chicago arts groups are locking patrons’ phones in pouches to sell something a screen can’t (WBEZ). And a Philadelphia orchestra that programs Rainbow Road and the Sonic theme is growing like a weed. What’s the secret? (Philadelphia Inquirer).

      The field’s top honors kept landing in unexpected places, too. The Regional Theatre Tony went to American Players Theatre, in a Wisconsin town of 1,500 (Wisconsin Public Radio). And the International Booker, for the first time in its history, went to a novel written in Mandarin Chinese (AP).

      None of these are the same story, but they pose the same question: the map of what counts — who leads, who belongs in the room, what’s allowed on the program — is being redrawn from the edges in.

      Which is the bigger question I take up in this week’s AJ Chronicles: Hollywood has completely reinvented its core business model six times in a century. The nonprofit arts have managed it once. Is the second time finally being forced?

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

    • AJ Chronicles: Hollywood, 6; Non-Profit Arts, 1
      Hollywood has reinvented its core model at least six times in a century. The nonprofit arts model has reinvented itself exactly once. Now there may no choice. But what’s the case?
    • Christine Taylor Conda talks about the One Score, One Chicago program

      Christine Taylor Conda, Executive Director of Education and Community Engagement at Ravinia, talks about the unique impact of their One Score, One Chicago program.

    • The Robot Fight Clubs Of San Francisco Are Now Having Dance Wars

      Yes, this is a thing. – The San Francisco Standard

    • Is Arts Criticism A Moral Good?

      We no longer argue about whether art as such is a matter of life and death—we assume that it’s not. Consequently, critics aren’t prompted to ask about the political valence of their own activity: Is criticism itself a moral good? – Artforum

    PEOPLE

    • Who gets to be in the room?

      This Week’s Highlights:

      The most revealing arts story this week was a hire that, by the old rules, wouldn’t have happened. The San Francisco Symphony passed over the marquee conductors and handed its podium to Elim Chan — the first woman to lead one of America’s “Big 7” orchestras and, by critic Joshua Kosman’s own count, the most unproven music director the institution has chosen in four decades. His verdict: the choice “could not have been wiser” (San Francisco Chronicle). Potential.

      Chicago arts groups are locking patrons’ phones in pouches to sell something a screen can’t (WBEZ). And a Philadelphia orchestra that programs Rainbow Road and the Sonic theme is growing like a weed. What’s the secret? (Philadelphia Inquirer).

      The field’s top honors kept landing in unexpected places, too. The Regional Theatre Tony went to American Players Theatre, in a Wisconsin town of 1,500 (Wisconsin Public Radio). And the International Booker, for the first time in its history, went to a novel written in Mandarin Chinese (AP).

      None of these are the same story, but they pose the same question: the map of what counts — who leads, who belongs in the room, what’s allowed on the program — is being redrawn from the edges in.

      Which is the bigger question I take up in this week’s AJ Chronicles: Hollywood has completely reinvented its core business model six times in a century. The nonprofit arts have managed it once. Is the second time finally being forced?

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

    • AJ Chronicles: Hollywood, 6; Non-Profit Arts, 1
      Hollywood has reinvented its core model at least six times in a century. The nonprofit arts model has reinvented itself exactly once. Now there may no choice. But what’s the case?
    • Christine Taylor Conda talks about the One Score, One Chicago program

      Christine Taylor Conda, Executive Director of Education and Community Engagement at Ravinia, talks about the unique impact of their One Score, One Chicago program.

    • The Robot Fight Clubs Of San Francisco Are Now Having Dance Wars

      Yes, this is a thing. – The San Francisco Standard

    • Is Arts Criticism A Moral Good?

      We no longer argue about whether art as such is a matter of life and death—we assume that it’s not. Consequently, critics aren’t prompted to ask about the political valence of their own activity: Is criticism itself a moral good? – Artforum

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      • Is Arts Criticism A Moral Good?

        We no longer argue about whether art as such is a matter of life and death—we assume that it’s not. Consequently, critics aren’t prompted to ask about the political valence of their own activity: Is criticism itself a moral good? – Artforum

      • AI Passes Turing Test For The First Time

        Researchers discovered that when equipped with specific “persona” prompts, advanced models like GPT-4.5 were judged to be human 73% of the time, significantly outperforming actual human participants and fundamentally altering our understanding of machine intelligence. – Neuroscience News

      • How Does Your Brain Process Beauty?

        “Neuroaesthetics is a search to give a value, a quantity, to beauty—to locate it, perhaps, in the brain and in the heart.” – Smithsonian

      • Always On: Pretty Much Everything We Do Now Is Being Recorded

        The next time you conduct a delicate bit of office diplomacy or share a romantic or financial secret with a friend over drinks, a sensor built into someone’s glasses, necklace, or lapel pin might be watching you and listening. – The Atlantic

      • The Slop Before The AI Slop

        In 1962, a programmer at Librascope, a California-based defense contractor, announced that “a computer can be programmed to write meaningful and relevant sentences in proper English.” – The New Yorker

      WORDS