AJBlogs

AJ Chronicles: Are Our Attention Spans Killing Culture or Reassembling It?

Depth hasn't disappeared. Perhaps it's gone lateral. The vertical architecture that produced "official" cultural memory has cracked, but the appetite for tradition — for context, for lineage, for the why — has migrated to wherever audiences and individuals can build their own context and throughlines. Sometimes those lines are deep

Kaneza Schaal talks about America 250 at the Detroit Opera

Kaneza Schaal, Theater & Opera Artist & Director, talks about the extraordinary upcoming America at 250 season at Detroit Opera and its impact for audiences and community.

“Are We Rotting Our Brains? Is This the End of Classical Music?”

I know the conductor Thomas Fortner, now based in Berlin, from his years as assistant conductor of the remarkable South Dakota Symphony. Thomas recently posted a 70-minute podcast posing earnest questions about the state of classical music. Excerpts follow. JH (1:55):  People are not attentive to the arts. People don’t

Stop Asking the Wrong Questions: How is the Advisory Board for the Arts Killing the Industry?

The survey they just asked nonprofit arts leaders to complete proves that they really, really, really don’t get it.

Local earmarked taxes for arts funding: a checklist

I read a story yesterday about the attempts to make a local arts tax in Portland, Oregon slightly less bad, and since I used to teach about this sort of thing I thought it might be worth giving my personal quick-and-dirty checklist on local earmarked taxes for the arts. Here are

Just How Big is the Culture Economy?

Most arts policy debates happen at one scale. Most cultural activity happens at another. It turns out the gap between those two scales — between the world that the arts, funding fights, and nonprofit board meetings live in, and the world where most people actually encounter culture — is so

“Pre-Eminent among the American Newspaper Critics of his Generation”

My review of “Defending Music: Michael Steinberg at the ‘Boston Globe’ — 1964-1976” (Oxford University Press) is today published online by “The American Scholar.” The kicker, at the end, reads: “Michael Steinberg was never intended to make a career writing concert reviews. He was ever courageously drawn to what would

AJ Chronicles: Perils of Philanthropy — The Metropolitan Opera

We collected 118 stories on ArtsJournal this week. Here’s what I learned. The detail that stuck out in the Metropolitan Opera’s announcement last fall that it had made a $200 million deal with the Saudi government to take the company to perform in the Kingdom for three weeks every winter

Awaiting an Uncrackable Code

If poetry make nothing happen, as W.H. Auden once wrote, it sometimes uncannily anticipates what will.

Jeremy Rothman talks about championing composers beyond the standard cannon

Jeremy Rothman, Chief Artistic Officer of The Philadelphia Orchestra and Ensemble Arts, shares their 125-year history championing composers beyond the standard canon.

LACMA’s New Building: What’s the purpose of art in a Museum?

LACMA proposes a new model for museums. For a long time now, context has been an essential deliverable when you go to a museum. It’s how meaning gets constructed. Just what was so remarkable about the way Constable painted light, and how did it have an effect on the painters

Sir Humphrey Appleby at the Opera

Yes, Minister ran on BBC television in the early 1980s, the early Thatcher years (I’ll come back to the importance of this). I enjoyed it at the time (I was pretty young), and recalled it when I went to work in government myself in the 1990s. Canada has a UK-style Westminster

The Bard Died 410 Years Ago Today. His Poems Live On

Sometimes he rewrote them. See an example and decide which you prefer: the early or the later version.

In Honour of Shakespeare’s Birthday, A Six-Minute, Five-Act Play

To think that music hath the charms to heal! This arts nonprofit surely needs support.

“The Marriage” – Enacting Gustav Mahler’s Demise and Alma’s Indecision

My play The Marriage: The Mahlers in New York was just premiered (as a work-in-progress) at the University of Michigan/Ann Arbor. It’s my good fortune to be working with a terrific actress and director: Esther van Zyl and Jack Tamburri. We next produce the play (this time with lighting design)

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