ArtsJournal Classic

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

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    • Louvre Discovers $12 Million Ticketing Scam

      When officials at the Louvre in Paris suspected a couple of tour guides of reusing tickets in late 2024, they did not expect to learn that a broad scamming network had cost the museum nearly $12 million over a decade. – The New York Times

    • Tate Modern Serves Frida With a Side of Capitalism

      When museums pivot from contemplation to consumption, even revolutionary icons get commodified. Tate’s Kahlo experience trades artistic liberation for lifestyle branding—because apparently unibrows sell better with appetizers. – The Conversation

    • University Gets Cold Feet Over Hot ICE Criticism

      When your art hits too close to home, apparently even universities develop sudden institutional amnesia about academic freedom. Victor Quiñonez’s immigrant-focused work got the silent treatment—no notice, no discussion, just gone. — Hyperallergic

    • African Art Market Caught Between Home and Away

      As Middle Eastern buyers flex their newfound muscle, African dealers face the classic dilemma: chase the international money or build local infrastructure first? Turns out you can’t auction your way out of everything. — Artnet

    • The Women Of Bauhaus

      “The German art school turned political and cultural engine [was] founded in 1919,” and its “principles included absolute equality between male and female participants — or they did at first, at any rate.” – Open Culture

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    • The Machines Are Coming for Your Plot Twists

      What seemed preposterous in a 1962 novel—story-writing machines—is now Silicon Valley gospel. As AI churns out narratives, we’re left wondering: who’s really telling the story, and does anyone care about the difference? — 3 Quarks Daily

    • IMLS Makes America’s Grants Great Again

      Federal cultural funding now comes with ideological strings attached, as museums and libraries discover their grant applications must suddenly harmonize with presidential vision statements. Creative freedom, meet creative financing. — Artnet

    • When Words Have No Liability

      We now live alongside AI systems that converse knowledgeably and persuasively—deploying claims about the world, explanations, advice, encouragement, apologies, and promises—while bearing no vulnerability for what they say. – The Atlantic

    • How Cornwall Shaped British Writers, And British Imagination

      Winston Graham of Poldark, Virginia Woolf, Daphne du Maurier, and many other writers drew – and continue to draw – inspiration from the moors, cliffs, rugged coastline, and mines of the rural county. – BBC

    • How Many Times Can One Man Win Cowboy Poet Of The Year, A Real Award That We Did Not Make Up?

      At least three. “The Western Music Association describes the award as recognizing a person who writes ‘with imaginative power and beauty of thought, with the ability to enable audiences to develop a deeper understanding of and appreciation for the Western lifestyle through performance.’” – Oregon ArtsWatch

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