ArtsJournal (text by date)

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  • Rex Reed Hated Everything

    In my ongoing conversations with him, along with the despairingly pungent emails he regularly sent from his AOL address Rex seemed to interpret the glut of mediocre films he was forced to endure as a highly personal affront to strict standards of taste, decency and class. – The Hollywood Reporter

  • New from MolokoA. Robert Lee’s Omnibus Edition Is Here to Go
    <a href="https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/2026/06/new-from-molokoa-robert-lees-omnibus-edition-is-here-to-go.html" title="New from Moloko
    A. Robert Lee’s Omnibus Edition Is
  • The Song Company, Australia’s Leading Vocal Chamber Ensemble, Is Closing Permanently

    Founded in 1984 in Sydney, The Song Company, which consisted of six to eight singers, regularly performed music ranging from the Middle Ages and Renaissance through the Romantic era up to newly-commissioned works. The ensemble went into receivership in 2019 due to financial difficulties; now it has filed for liquidation. – Limelight (Australia)

  • Cincinnati Opera Launches Major New Opera Initiative

    “Lalovavi” launches Cincinnati Opera’s Black Opera Project, a $6 million three-opera endeavor. The first of its kind, the project aims to tell Black American stories of resilience and joy, written and composed by Black creators. Three new works – one each season – will provide increased opportunities for cast members and artistic teams of color. – Cincinnati Business Journal

  • Misty Copeland On Drive and Motivation

    What people do not always see is the aspect of drive that is perhaps the hardest to name — the will to keep going in those moments when the path is unclear, when recognition may never come. You stay focused on the work while navigating a life on the public stage. – The New York Times

  • Highmark Mann Center Opens On A Roll

    The Highmark Mann opened five decades ago as the Robin Hood Dell West, the local summer retreat for the Philadelphia Orchestra, and it has evolved into a bona fide arts center that feels both sylvan and city. – Philadelphia Inquirer (MSN)

  • Sydney Dance Company Artistic Director Rafael Bonachela: The Exit Interview

    “The amount of things that I didn’t get! … We will never get to fulfil the potential of what we want to achieve. There are so many versions of our life.” – The Saturday Paper (Australia)

  • Why Older People Are Happier, And What We Can Learn From Them

    Research spanning 145 countries has identified a U-shaped happiness-age curve, whereby self-reported wellbeing tends to dip in mid-adulthood and peak in old age. – Psyche

  • Generational Change In Australia’s First Nations Dance

    Australian dance is undergoing a generational transfer of leadership. At the same time, First Nations choreography has never been more visible. Yet visibility and authority are not the same thing. – ArtsHub

  • Publishers Sue Website For Pirating

    Fresh off of last month’s victory against pirate web site Anna’s Archive, 13 publishers across all segments of the industry have allied to sue yet another pirate site, WeLib, for copyright infringement. – Publishers Weekly

  • Theatre In London’s West End To Be Renamed For Judi Dench

    “The Shaftesbury Theatre will be known as the Judi Dench Theatre from February 2027. … Dench has a long association with the Shaftesbury, which is one of the largest independent theatres in London.” – The Guardian

  • Why Movie Production Is Leaving Hollywood

    Everything costs more in L.A., starting with labor, due to the high cost of living and elaborate union agreements. Other states and countries have developed crew bases of their own, are more solicitous of producers’ needs and offer more generous incentives. Producers are also under pressure from the audience to deliver ever more spectacular experiences. – Variety

  • Dance Jumps Into Lincoln Center In A Big Way

    In the years since American Dance Theater, the descendants of modern dance have performed at Lincoln Center with varying frequency. But the new festival counts as the center’s biggest commitment since the early years and part of the reason this year’s Summer for the City series is being called Summer of Dance. – The New York Times

  • New Owners Roxane Gay And Debbie Millman Relaunch Online Lit Magazine The Rumpus

    “We’ll still be covering, with the same rigor and integrity, fiction, essays, poetry, book reviews, author interviews, and so forth,” said Millman. “But we’re also going to include more design criticism, art criticism, and overall cultural coverage. The soul of the writing … will be very similar; topically, it will be different.” – Publishers Weekly

  • Have New Books Gotten More Expensive? Yes, But …

    Hardcovers which for years cost around $20 are now routinely marked at $30 or more. However, both publishing executives and booksellers maintain that the price of new books has not kept up with post-2020 inflation in the economy as a whole (including their own supply chains). – USA Today

  • Why Fox Bought Roku

    Ever since the old Fox sold off most of its entertainment assets to Disney, Lachlan Murdoch — son of Rupert and CEO of Fox Corp. — has been using the money from that deal to rebuild his father’s TV empire for the streaming era. – Vulture (MSN)

  • The Hague’s Mauritshuis Museum May Keep Its Rembrandts, Rules Judge

    Abraham Bredius, museum director from 1889 to 1909, bequeathed the Mauritshuis 25 of his own Old Master paintings — by Rembrandt, Jan Steen, and others — on condition that the works be displayed and not lent out. Because the museum doesn’t display all of them all the time, Bredius’s heirs sued — and lost. – ArtDependence

  • University Of Texas Fires General Manager Of Austin’s NPR Station

    “The University of Texas at Austin has dismissed Debbie Hiott as General Manager of KUT Public Media, ending the tenure of a … public media executive whose public dispute with university officials over the KUT Festival drew statewide attention and raised questions about the relationship between the university and its NPR-affiliated station.” – Inside Radio

  • Paramount-Warner Bros. Merger Has Become Far More Politically Charged Than Most Corporate Megadeals

    “Opponents allege the Ellison family’s acquisition of so many media properties — CBS News, CNN and Larry Ellison’s stake in TikTok — threatens free speech and democratic society itself. Meanwhile, Paramount insists it’s trying to save Hollywood, and that there are untoward political and racial motivations to kill its deal from far-left forces.” – TheWrap (MSN)

  • Preservationists Sue To Block Trump’s “National Garden Of American Heroes”

    “Congress has made clear that the National Mall is … not a personal sandbox for each President to renovate however he likes,” argues the lawsuit. “To that end, Congress has decreed that no new ‘commemorative work’ shall be located within ‘the great cross-axis of the Mall’.” – USA Today

  • Federal Court Orders Kennedy Center To Make A Plan For Staying Open And Offering Programming

    “Judge Christopher R. Cooper of Federal District Court in Washington asked for a status report from the Kennedy Center that would include plans for ‘public access and ongoing programming, activities and operations’ should the center stay open past July 4, which the president proposed as a closing date.” – The New York Times

  • Evidence is Mounts: What AI is Doing to Writing (and Thinking)

    Good Afternoon,

    When AI can spin out endless essays in seconds and whole novels in minutes, what’s left for human writers? The Atlantic makes the case that AI writing’s smooth blandness is exactly what hands human literature its opening, because value shifts from the words to the why something exists in the first place (The Atlantic). A professor grading a semester of suspiciously fluent essays is less hopeful about what AI does to how students think (The New Yorker), and the Boston Review asks whether outsourcing reasoning itself to machines amounts to a slow collapse of knowledge (Boston Review).

    Not done with the Kennedy Center yet. The KC board has set up a new endowment, named — are you surprised? — after Donald Trump (CBS News).

    And here’s innovation at the micro-level. Broke but inventive, San Francisco’s Magic Theatre is splitting its top job three ways instead of hunting for a single savior (Yahoo) — a constraint treated as a design problem.

    Lighter note: the pointe shoe is long overdue for reinvention, if only ballerinas would let anyone touch it (Dance Magazine).

    See you tomorrow.

    Doug

  • Executive Director – Cantabile Youth Singers of Silicon Valley

    Cantabile Youth Singers of Silicon Valley (www.cantabile.org)invites interest from leaders passionate about the arts and youth programming to serve as its Executive Director. 

    WHO ARE WE?

    Cantabile Youth Singers is an internationally renowned choral program providing world-class music education, vocal training, high-profile performances and leadership opportunities for the youth of the greater Silicon Valley communities in Northern California. Founded in 1994 by Signe Boyer and under the leadership of Artistic Director Elena Sharkova since 2004, the Cantabile Youth Singers’ innovative music curriculum and artistically superb, deeply moving, genre-defying concert programs received the highest praise from the international choral community and garnered several awards from professional associations, including the coveted Chorus America award for adventurous programming in 2020.

    Explore Cantabile’s Work

    LISTEN: Sound Cloud

    PRESS: SF Classical Voice – Cantabile 30th Anniversary Cantabile a Winner at European Choir Games

    SOCIAL: Instagram YouTube Facebook

    WATCH: Get to Know Cantabile Youth Singers What is your favorite thing about Cantabile?

    With over 180 singers ages 6 to 18, Cantabile offers six performing choirs and three levels of preparatory classes. Its groundbreaking program includes solo voice coaching and choral singing, stage presence training, and a graduated music theory curriculum. Instruction is enhanced by mindfulness and yoga, choreography and improvised movement, as well as focus on self-realization and compassion, and an appreciation for the diversity of humankind, cultures, languages, and the arts.

    Cantabile singers engage their hearts, minds, and voices in joyful, creative learning that fosters life skills such as community building, art appreciation, advocacy, the pursuit of excellence, self-discipline, leadership, and teamwork.

    Vocalise, Cantabile’s premier choir, has been chosen to perform at such prestigious professional forums as the XII World Symposium on Choral Music (New Zealand, 2020), the American Choral Directors Association National Convention (Kansas City, MO, 2019), the California State Convention (San Jose, 2018), the XI World Symposium on Choral Music (Barcelona, 2017), and the Western Division Conference (Los Angeles, 2016). Cantabile claimed a top-level Gold Medal at the European Choir Games in Sweden in 2019, earning top honors and recognition in a category that featured youth choruses from around the world. Now in its 14th year, Cantabile’s Young Men’s Division provides training, concert opportunities, and camaraderie for boys & young men with changed voices.

    Every year Cantabile singers appear with local professional arts organizations: San Jose Symphony and Chorale, Opera San Jose, New Ballet, and have performed with prominent ensembles and notable musicians such as Kronos Quartet, Conspirare, composer Joe Hisaishi, among others.

    Cantabile’s commitment to promoting new choral music for young singers was the driving force behind the creation of a New Music Commission Fund in 2014. Since then, Cantabile has commissioned and premiered more than twenty choral compositions by Jocelyn Hagen, Sarah Quartel, Will Todd, Tim Sharp, Andrea Ramsey, Stephen Hatfield, Eric Tuan, and Tom Shelton, among others. In 2020, Cantabile was awarded the Chorus America/ASCAP Award for Adventurous Programming in recognition of its dedication to fostering and promoting new music. In June 2025, Cantabile presented the world premiere of We Are the Garden by Jocelyn Hagen at Bing Concert Hall, a large-scale collaborative work celebrating youth voices, environmental stewardship, and community connection. The organization will bring the work to Carnegie Hall in June 2027, continuing its tradition of championing significant contemporary repertoire for young singers on internationally recognized stages. In June 2026, Cantabile’s top choirs will tour England with concerts in London, Cambridge, Stratford-upon-Avon and Barnsley.

    “What I want for my students, and I know they are doing it already, is to listen to their own voice, listen to the unique song that they have in their heart and most importantly hear the songs of others.”  
    Elena Sharkova, Artistic Director

    “Cantabile is much more than ‘club choir.’ We are a group of musical enthusiasts, ambitious artists, and a community that thrives in cultural collaboration and appreciation. From performing unique Indonesian choreographies to blending with German vocalists, my experience in Cantabile has played a crucial role in widening my global perspective and instilling my fascination with international cultures. We truly care about the origin of our pieces and carry that essence throughout every performance. It is truly a special moment when everyone comes together in harmony.” Cantabile Graduate                              .

    Cantabile Youth Singers reflect the diverse community of Silicon Valley and include students from over three dozen cultural origins. Cantabile views its diversity as a wealth of shared experience upon which to build empathy and appreciation for others – it regularly performs music that directly addresses relevant issues of social justice, and empowers young people to engage in musical activism, leading with the notion that “people who make music together cannot be enemies.”                           .

    In 2015, Cantabile was the first youth chorus in the country to establish its own student chapter of the American Choral Directors Association to offer mentorship and leadership opportunities for advanced students. Each year, ten or more students are engaged in musical, social, and administrative assistantships. Cantabile graduates attend prestigious collegiate programs, most of them continue to sing with top a cappella groups and university choirs.

    Organizationally, Cantabile’s Board and staff have recently prioritized investments in organizational capacity. From 2024 to 2025, Cantabile Youth Singers completed a full professional human resources audit and created new committees of the board dedicated to technology and benefits. The current Board is six members and the goal is to expand to 9 members by 2027. In March 2026, Cantabile celebrated its 32nd anniversary at a sold-out gala concert.

    What Cantabile is looking for in its Executive Director

    • An entrepreneurial and strategic business leader. The Executive Director will bring a personal drive to develop long-term strategies that focus on the organization’s health and sustainability. They will be responsible for fundraising and board development efforts and supervise the day-to-day operations.

    • A self-starter with strong interpersonal skills. The Executive Director will be a grounded, proactive individual who will partner with the Artistic Director and the Board to drive artistic ambition, human resource capacity, and financial & operational practicality. They will support and mentor Cantabile’s committed professional staff.                                                                  .

    • An outgoing relationship builder who is passionate about youth programming. The Executive Director will be enthusiastic to champion the value of vocal music and youth choral singing to parents, students, donors, and partners. They will bring a high cultural and emotional intelligence that allows them to build authentic relationships with diverse groups. They will seek out new and sustained methods to spread Cantabile’s message throughout Silicon Valley.

    Responsibilities

    • Serve as a trusted partner and collaborator with the Artistic Director, operationalizing their vision and producing the organizational structures and resources to achieve it. Lead the development and implementation of Cantabile’s strategic trajectory, supporting alignment and accountability among stakeholders and constituencies.
    • Provide responsible, disciplined financial leadership—balancing organizational sustainability with artistic risk-taking and ensuring the proper resources for long-term planning.

    • Oversee the Director of Operations and supervise the development of lean and practical internal operations that deliver high customer service and leverage technology.
    • Lead Cantabile’s organizational marketing effort that increases the organization’s visibility, reputation and profile; communicates its distinctive approach; and lays the groundwork for enrollment, fundraising, and board engagement efforts below. Leverage digital marketing and social media. Develop diversified strategies to maintain and increase enrollment.
    • Lead Cantabile’s fundraising efforts. Structure effective fundraising processes, serve as the relationship manager for donors, and partner with the Board in these efforts.

    • Support the Board of Directors in their effort to grow opportunities for board member engagement and expand the Board.

    • Provide supportive, collaborative leadership to the staff, ensuring the organization has the necessary human resource capacity to support its growth and deliver an exceptional experience.

    • Represent Cantabile within the professional arts & education field and to the press, in coordination with the Artistic Director who also serves as an organizational spokesperson. Represent Cantabile throughout the region’s communities, proactively seeking opportunities.

    Who the Executive Director works with                                                                 .

    The Executive Director and Artistic Director dually report to the Board of Directors (currently seven members) and work in close partnership with one another, in service of the Artistic Director’s vision.

    The Executive Director’s direct reports include two full-time staff (Director of Operations and Program & Communications Coordinator) as well as external administrative contractors (currently supporting finance and development). The Artistic team reports to the Artistic Director and includes Conductors/ Educators (two full-time and two part-time) and part-time accompanists.

    Cantabile’s operating budget is approximately $1,000,000, averaging 70-80 percent attributable to earned income and 20-30 percent attributable to contributed income.                                            .

    Qualifications

    • 5+ years of progressively responsible management experience in the nonprofit sector.
    • Grounded demeanor with exceptional interpersonal skills and high emotional intelligence, including the ability to speak persuasively about Cantabile’s mission and programs and build trusting relationships.
    • Demonstrated ability to develop and advance long-term organizational strategies while overseeing day-to-day operations.
    • Experience directing, supporting, and mentoring a professional staff or team.
    • Experience in youth-serving programming, education, and/or performing arts valued. Passion for supporting youth-serving programming.
    • Experience with marketing and enrollment efforts, in a youth-serving context valued.
    • Experience in fundraising, with experience with individual donors and special events a plus.
    • High integrity and ethical standards.
    • If not already based within commuting distance of Silicon Valley, willing to relocate and spend time building relationships in the vibrant community.

    Leaders with some, but not all, qualifications and who bring transferable experience are invited to apply, as well as leaders with similar arts/music education experience.

    Employment and Compensation

    • Salary: The compensation package will be competitive and informed by a variety of factors, including but not limited to, experience, qualifications, and training needs at the time of hiring. The hiring range will start at $125,000. The Board is committed to developing a meaningful bonus structure that acknowledges individual and organizational performance.

    • Start Date: Negotiable, Targeting Late 2026. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis and will continue to be accepted until the position is filled.

    • Cantabile operates in a flexible hybrid working environment.All administrative work is performed remotely. Full-time employees work 40 hours per week on a mutually agreed upon schedule that balances staff, chorister, donor, and community engagement. Staff and Board meetings are conducted virtually. In-person activities encompass weekly attendance at select rehearsals, donor & prospective parent meetings, and marketing/visibility/relationship building opportunities, as well as seasonal attendance at performances and events (fundraising events, parent sing-a-longs, staff/board retreats, and similar). There are some weekend and evening hours for the aforementioned activities. The Executive Director will design their schedule to best achieve the organization’s strategic goals and support and engage the staff and Board in these efforts. Cantabile’s core programming aligns with the academic year and summer months are slower. Candidates who wish to be considered for a modified leadership commitment, such as 32 hours a week, may note this on their application. Cantabile is committed to finding a long-term partner to support their growth and sustainability and is willing to discuss individual candidate’s preferences and accommodations to achieve this.

    • Compensation package includes a health insurance stipend, competitive paid time off, and professional development funding. A technology stipend is provided to cover the use of one’s personal cell phone and home office. The Board is supportive of partnering with the incoming Executive Director to continue to research and expand employee benefits as the organization’s revenue grows. A relocation stipend will be considered for non-local candidates. A company laptop will be provided.

    How to Apply
    This search is being facilitated by Syrah Gunning, Senior Consultant, Executive Search & Development of the DeVos Institute of Arts and Nonprofit Management, a leading provider of arts management services, training and thought leadership for arts, cultural, and educational sectors worldwide. Learn more here.

    To apply, please upload your resume and answer the following brief questions online here.

    If you have questions or require accommodation of any kind throughout the process, please email Syrah Gunning at segunning@devosinstitute.net.

    Click here to read the Supplemental Materials.

  • AJ Chronicles: There’s no Shortage of Art. We Ran Out of Ways to Find It.
    The major disconnect of contemporary culture: Findability has detached from the ability of traditional cultural narratives to agree on what’s important. Instead of art evolving in coherent strands that are traceable and linear, there are now multiple cultural universes, each with their own languages and conventions. Each has its own creative masters, famous within that universe. But from the outside, these adjacent universes are all but invisible and their languages opaque.
  • Trying To Improve The Pointe Shoe, Whose Customers Are Resistant To Change

    “Ballet is an art form bound by tradition, with limited financial resources to support forward-thinking change. But that hasn’t stopped artists and artisans from trying. And recently, some manufacturers have made waves with nontraditional designs that incorporate very 21st-century technologies.” – Dance Magazine

  • The Art Commissioned By The Obama Presidential Library

    For the Obama Presidential Center on the South Side of Chicago, Barack and Michelle Obama commissioned original works by 30 artists from diverse backgrounds, a bold move never seen at such scale at a presidential library. – The Guardian

  • “Graphic Journalist” Joe Sacco Says Penguin Random House India Censored His Book On Sectarian Riots

    The Indian subsidiary of the publishing giant has withdrawn Sacco’s The Once and Future Riot, an account of the 2013 street battles between Hindus and Muslims in Muzaffarnagar. Sacco says the publisher sent him a list of edits that amounted to “finding excuses” not to release the book. – The Wire (India)

  • A Professor Despairs Of What AI Reveals About Students

    There will always be idealistic, ink-stained people who want to devote their lives to scholarly pursuits—their role to inspire young people to love ideas as they do. But this transfer, more than anything else in the academy, has been increasingly blocked by A.I. in the classroom. – The New Yorker

  • “Teaser” Events Have Become A Powerful Way For Pop Stars To Introduce Their Projects

    From a marketing perspective, this approach blends internet culture and storytelling to create a memorable experience for fans. These teaser releases are particularly effective at generating fan theories, sparking speculation, creating memes and helping create stories with fans. – The Conversation

  • Are Most Children’s Books “Crud”?

    “There are so many bad kids’ books,” Mac Barnett writes, “and kids’ books are bad in so many different ways.” He states that “a big reason for our low opinion of children’s books is simply that lots of children’s books are bad.”  – The New Yorker

  • As It Struggles Financially, San Francisco’s Magic Theatre Tries A Three-Leader Management Structure

    “Actor and former Magic Theatre board member Sarah Nina Hayon, who also founded New York’s 24SevenLab, is artistic director; actor Daniel Duque-Estrada is producing director; and video designer Joan Osato … is director of sustainability and growth.” – San Francisco Chronicle (Yahoo!)

  • Mathematics And The Tools Of Reasoning That Ai Is Tackling

    Understanding is a lively topic for philosophers, but not for the tech industry. In their race to the ultimate prize of AGI, Silicon Valley’s main players instead see the mechanization of reasoning as the main hurdle. For them, mathematics is the supreme AI challenge because it is the purest form of reasoning. – Boston Review

  • The Problem With AI Writing (And The Opportunity For Human Literature)

    If, as a French saying has it, “style is the man himself,” what does the style of AI writing tell us about it? For one thing, it has no fixed style, revealing that it has no fixed self. It’s happy to burn tokens saying the same thing in as many ways as you want.  – The Atlantic

  • Film Critic Gene Shalit Dies At 100

    Shalit started on Today in 1970, according to NBC’s report on his passing, and became its arts editor in 1973, interviewing celebrities and reviewing books as well as films. His role on the show was reduced in his later years and he retired at age 84 in 2010, saying, “It’s ​enough already.” – CBC

  • Alan Cumming’s Theatre In The Scottish Highlands Will Present Its Own Mini-Version Of Edinburgh Fringe

    Pitlochry Festival Theatre’s five-day event — called “Edinlochry” — won’t be as chaotic as the actual Edinburgh Fringe can be, mainly because it will be curated rather than open-access. – The Edinburgh Reporter