AJBlogs

Gut Punch

(Lee J. Cobb and Mildred Dunnock in the original Broadway production of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, 1949). In a guest essay in the New York Times, former Washington Post theater critic Naveen Kumar writes that “Broadway is Serving Up Liberal Comfort Food.” His piece concludes: Not everyone goes to the theater hoping to be confronted with big questions, the kind that compel audiences to...

AJ Chronicles: A New Policy to Eliminate Arguments for the Arts

This notion that the ultimate measure of American educational value is economic is an impoverishing one. We measure for success. If that measure is earnings then we optimize for earnings. Social value measured on an earnings scale doesn't just get deprioritized, it doesn't exist.

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.

“What if JFK had not been assassinated? What would have been the impact on the American arts?”

The USC Center on Public Diplomacy has published an interview with me pondering the implications of my study of the

Gary Dunning

My introduction of Gary Dunning at New England Conservatory’s Commencement ceremony on Sunday May 17, 2026. He received an honorary degree. Let me speak of Gary Dunning who has spent decades reminding Boston — and reminding this country, demonstrating — that the arts are not a luxury. They are a lifeline. Gary Dunning has led one of Boston’s most admired cultural...

Is Trump’s Wreckage of the Kennedy Center an Opportunity for Something Better?

The Kennedy Center is a treasure. Not just for what it has been, but because of what it represents. But the practicalities of providing a roof for a bunch of artistic enterprises that essentially have nothing much to do with one another — or worse, having to squabble dysfunctionally among themselves for resources — are an argument for the need for something better.

Stadtlichter Presse Makes My Heart Beat Stronger

It's a wonder that the most intriguing publisher of American poets of the Beat Generation happens to be a German publisher, Stadtlichter Presse. Its "Heartbeat" series features not only the most notable Beats — Kerouac, Ginsberg, Burroughs, Corso, and Ferlinghetti — in bilingual editions, but dozens of less famous Beats and Beat-era or Beat-related eminences as well.

“America’s Greatest Opera Boss Has Died”

Norman Lebrecht’s obituary notice for Speight Jenkins, which ran today, is titled “America’s Greatest Opera Boss Has Died.” I couldn’t

Statement of Fact

In my generation's war, our peaceful protests kept the peace the best we could — yet could not.

AJ Chronicles: Google Just Changed the way We’re Going to Find Culture

What Google presented this month was revolutionary, a declaration that the web as we know it is dead, and an operating manual for how the new web will work. More important, it suggests how we all will find — or fail to find — culture over the next decade.

Neil Barclay shares strategies for sustainability for BIPOC organizations

Neil Barclay, President & CEO of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, talks the evolving landscape for BIPOC organizations and avenues for sustainability.

Who Was Alma Mahler?

https://youtube.com/watch?v=7bhDcSZYZUs&version=3&rel=1&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&fs=1&hl=en-US&autohide=2&wmode=transparent Esther van Zyl as Alma Mahler in my play “The Marriage,” as performed at Colorado Mahlerfest two

“The World’s Greatest Orchestra” — Take Two: Today’s Metropolitan Opera

Yevgeny Mravinsky I find myself still gorging on live recorded performances by the greatest orchestra I ever encountered –

Reckoning with Pierre Bourdieu and Cultural Policy

On the weekend John Ganz had an interesting discussion of our rich tech-elites and aesthetic taste, of which they have little, and who would hope to destroy what for now remains that is human and beautiful. This leads him to consider Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Judgement (1790) and Pierre Bourdieu’s Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste (1979), where the latter book’s title...

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?

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