ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

Today's Stories

Art Of The Farm (With A Bit Of Opera And Ballet Thrown In)

The world’s first ever “Hay Rake Ballet” was a high point of what may be the last iteration of Farm/Art DTour, a 50-mile circuit of temporary art installations that has drawn hundreds of thousands of visitors to the farmlands of Sauk County since 2011. - Hyperallergic

The Rich Hidden World Of The Music Archivist

For every song that is in print and available, there are at least 10 that are mothballed in storage, an estimated 2.5m pieces that may as well not exist. Popular taste has decreed that these lost songs are failures. But tastes change, markets shift and yesterday’s flop might be today’s buried treasure. - The Guardian

Thirty Years Ago Arlene Croce’s Non-Review Review Of Bill T. Jones Ignited A Firestorm

Has a piece of criticism, much less of dance criticism, made such a mark on the culture since? “Discussing the Undiscussable” was in conversation with the world, not just dance or art. It didn’t matter if you’d ever seen a dance, never mind a dance by Jones. Everyone was talking about it. - The New York Times

Can AI Be Taught To Sing Opera?

The challenge of how to bridge the final gap for synthetic voices will occupy scientists for a while to come. Along the way, opera does feel like an apt forum in which to explore the ethical dilemmas and expressive aspirations behind engineered voices. - The New York Times

Decline Of The Working Musician

Some of the musicians have mixed feelings about their chosen careers. “It depends on the day,. Today I feel like a tired old whore. Some days I feel like a god. Most of the time I feel like an ambitious T-shirt salesman with entitlement issues.” - The New Yorker

“My Fair Lady” At 60: A Linguist Takes A Look

It is no coincidence that women and working-class people (and Cockneys who are often seen as emblematic of the working class) often bear the brunt of accent prejudice. - The Conversation

Penguin Random House Adds Anti-AI Statement To Its Copyright Notice

It’s a notable departure from other large publishers, such as academic printers Taylor & Francis, Wiley, and Oxford University Press, which have all agreed to license their portfolios to AI companies. - Gizmodo

The Idea Of Who Owns Ideas In The AI Age Is Getting Blurry

Whether AI can achieve true imagination is an open question, but for now, what separates humans from machines is not the ability to invent out of whole cloth—it’s the skill required to create something new out of something old. - The Atlantic

Writing Across Difference

Writing across difference is often maligned in contemporary conversations of literary craft—and for good reason—but I am of the opinion that the skill, in some form, is an essential one for any novelist. - LitHub

How Romance Novels Became A Hit In The Digital Age

“Why did romance writers, arguably the most mocked, maligned, and mistreated group of authors in history, become the most successful and innovative writers in the e-book revolution?” - Christian Science Monitor

The UK’s Northern Ballet May Start Sharing An Orchestra With Opera North

Northern Ballet said that it was “under financial pressure, brought about largely by rising production and touring costs” - and in order to save money, it’s been using recorded music at some stops. - Arts Professional

No, Marvel Didn’t Kill The Movie Star, Whatever That Is Anyway

"The problem with this theory is that it stems from a rather conservative sense of cultural terror." - The Guardian (UK)

Why Nostalgia Is Taking Over Television

What an expert says: "In times of disagreement and dissent, nostalgia peaks. COVID was an example of what stimulates nostalgia. … Vintage TV wants to slow you down.” - HuffPost

A Dog’s Relationship To Art

"Oscar seems to like interacting with the art, and his way of interacting seems ideal to me—kinetic, bodied, hyperpresent to the granular details of scent and texture.” - Paris Review

How The Artists Of The Third Generation Since The Holocaust Are Dealing With Historical Trauma

“The third-generation perspective on the Holocaust is carefully hedged, defiantly distanced, explicitly filtered, supremely self-aware. These stories fundamentally do not belong to the writers or artists.” - The New York Times

Ten Important Oscar Movies Questions

And answers. For instance: Why would this be the year the Academy finally embraced Sean Baker? - Vulture

Norway’s TV Station Run By, And For, People With Learning Disabilities

“In Norway, as in every country, people with learning disabilities face issues ranging from low employment rates to access to support and housing. Being able to understand the news empowers the wider community.” - BBC

Has Michel Houellebecq Truly Written His Last Book?

The French novelist “is such a sly and ambiguous writer that I’m not always sure when he’s kidding. I often identify with his characters, and even when I find certain pages repellent, Houellebecq challenges my perceptions.” - NPR

Will Reality TV Franchises Kill Reality TV?

“As a risk-averse industry relies more and more on safe, conventional choices in a genre built on provocation and experimentation, reality’s franchise explosion raises questions about the long-term viability of the business.” - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

Can Democracy Survive?

Anne Appelbaum, who has written many a book on autocratic dictators, says there’s a real case for optimism, or at least against pessimism. “It is easier just to accept the idea of decline. But let’s remember what’s at stake.” - The Atlantic

By Topic

The Idea Of Who Owns Ideas In The AI Age Is Getting Blurry

Whether AI can achieve true imagination is an open question, but for now, what separates humans from machines is not the ability to invent out of whole cloth—it’s the skill required to create something new out of something old. - The Atlantic

Why Nostalgia Is Taking Over Television

What an expert says: "In times of disagreement and dissent, nostalgia peaks. COVID was an example of what stimulates nostalgia. … Vintage TV wants to slow you down.” - HuffPost

How The Artists Of The Third Generation Since The Holocaust Are Dealing With Historical Trauma

“The third-generation perspective on the Holocaust is carefully hedged, defiantly distanced, explicitly filtered, supremely self-aware. These stories fundamentally do not belong to the writers or artists.” - The New York Times

Can Democracy Survive?

Anne Appelbaum, who has written many a book on autocratic dictators, says there’s a real case for optimism, or at least against pessimism. “It is easier just to accept the idea of decline. But let’s remember what’s at stake.” - The Atlantic

The Thirty-Year-Old Encrypted Code That Helped End Apartheid

Once apartheid fell apart, the man who created the code encrypted the disk it was on - and eventually forgot the password. - Wired

How To Write The Biography Of A Woman

“Dilemmas on how to depict a woman so that she is taken seriously and how to navigate the archival violence previously done against her, is something biographers of women must think about.” - LitHub

Art Of The Farm (With A Bit Of Opera And Ballet Thrown In)

The world’s first ever “Hay Rake Ballet” was a high point of what may be the last iteration of Farm/Art DTour, a 50-mile circuit of temporary art installations that has drawn hundreds of thousands of visitors to the farmlands of Sauk County since 2011. - Hyperallergic

There Is No Way To Make Teenage Fame Safe

“Fame, like football, takes a toll. The effects can be particularly destabilizing when the star in question is still just a kid. And all too often, the people who should be looking out for these valuable, vulnerable quantities are, instead, cashing in.” - The New York Times

A Documentary Exposing The Far-Right In The UK Was Yanked From A London Film Festival

The director: “Fear is its own form of censorship, it’s not deliberate, but it works out that way and the only people benefiting from that decision are the far right.” - Variety

When Writing Criticism Feels Like Dumping Your Time Into Quicksand

"Sometimes we study a text so closely that we see past the violence right in front of us. … There is no objective analysis.” - Slate

Toronto’s Mayor Announces Five-Year, Multi-Million Plan To Boost Arts And Culture

Mayor Olivia Chow's plan would increase the budget of the city's arts funding agency by $2 million annually over the next five years, double the budgets of local arts service organizations, index all cultural grants to inflation, and increase investment in creative industries, festivals and special events. - CBC

Why Some Schools In Los Angeles Can’t Access Prop 28’s Extra Arts Education Funding

A report from the nonprofit Arts for LA says that, while many schools in California are taking full advantage of the funding offered, other schools are not — simply because they don't have the necessary infrastructure or can't find qualified teachers. - MyNewsLA.com

The Rich Hidden World Of The Music Archivist

For every song that is in print and available, there are at least 10 that are mothballed in storage, an estimated 2.5m pieces that may as well not exist. Popular taste has decreed that these lost songs are failures. But tastes change, markets shift and yesterday’s flop might be today’s buried treasure. - The...

Can AI Be Taught To Sing Opera?

The challenge of how to bridge the final gap for synthetic voices will occupy scientists for a while to come. Along the way, opera does feel like an apt forum in which to explore the ethical dilemmas and expressive aspirations behind engineered voices. - The New York Times

Decline Of The Working Musician

Some of the musicians have mixed feelings about their chosen careers. “It depends on the day,. Today I feel like a tired old whore. Some days I feel like a god. Most of the time I feel like an ambitious T-shirt salesman with entitlement issues.” - The New Yorker

Composer Max Richter On The Most Streamed Classical Album Of All Time, And Working With Margaret Atwood

Richter’s 8.5-hour Sleep, based on the neuroscience of sleeping, is 10 years old, and still popular. But the composer’s newest music is for a ballet based on Margaret Atwood’s 2013 book MaddAdam. - The Observer (UK)

Looks, Ten; Sound, Exciting

The remodeled symphony hall in San Diego has stepped up, as has its entire neighborhood. But how does it sound? - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

Why Concert Halls Still Matter Enough That We Spend Hundreds of Millions Of Dollars Building And Renovating Them

"A room that’s consecrated to music is one where people come together, sit in quiet communion, listen rather than shout, and focus for a couple of hours instead of getting peppered with notifications. … Such an institution is one of the few sacramental spaces we have outside of explicitly religious buildings." - Curbed (MSN)

A Dog’s Relationship To Art

"Oscar seems to like interacting with the art, and his way of interacting seems ideal to me—kinetic, bodied, hyperpresent to the granular details of scent and texture.” - Paris Review

When The Art Of Tirzah Garwood Finally Came Back Into The Light

Most of her work belongs to private collectors, and she was, before now, known more as a wife to an artist than as an artist in her own right. - The Guardian (UK)

Architects Love A Tricky Site

“Some projects seek to soar above the mucky stuff. Others embrace the difficulties, making them into an occasion to create something that would never otherwise have come into being.” - The Observer (UK)

The Ur-Designer Who Knows Apple Has Lost Its Way

Don Norman: "Apple fell prey to the disastrous part of design, which is that design is about making something beautiful and elegant. And I say, nonsense.” - El País

The Azure Buildings Of India’s Blue City Are Fading

A historic neighborhood in the center of the city of Jodhpur is famous for the old homes and buildings clad in blue plaster. In recent years, though, the blue has been fading as the price of indigo has soared, making it too expensive for many to touch up their homes. - BBC

Paris To Spend $55 Million Greening The Spaces Around Notre-Dame Cathedral

The project will create roughly 20,000 square feet of green space with 160 new trees, adapting the cathedral's underground parking garage into a visitor center, a new riverfront promenade, and a viewing platform overlooking the Seine and the Ile Saint-Louis. - AP

Penguin Random House Adds Anti-AI Statement To Its Copyright Notice

It’s a notable departure from other large publishers, such as academic printers Taylor & Francis, Wiley, and Oxford University Press, which have all agreed to license their portfolios to AI companies. - Gizmodo

Writing Across Difference

Writing across difference is often maligned in contemporary conversations of literary craft—and for good reason—but I am of the opinion that the skill, in some form, is an essential one for any novelist. - LitHub

How Romance Novels Became A Hit In The Digital Age

“Why did romance writers, arguably the most mocked, maligned, and mistreated group of authors in history, become the most successful and innovative writers in the e-book revolution?” - Christian Science Monitor

Has Michel Houellebecq Truly Written His Last Book?

The French novelist “is such a sly and ambiguous writer that I’m not always sure when he’s kidding. I often identify with his characters, and even when I find certain pages repellent, Houellebecq challenges my perceptions.” - NPR

What It’s Like To Be A Poet Whose Home Is Gaza

Poet Mosab Abu Toha, who fled with his family last year: “My frightening childhood shaped me. And I'm still traumatized from childhood. And I'm also traumatized as a father who could barely protect his children in Gaza.” - NPR

How Navalny’s Prison Diaries Made It Into Print

“Navalny wrote about how it was becoming more difficult to get his messages and memoir pages out. 'Everything that I write and keep, or take along when I meet my lawyer … is both attentively read and photographed by my keepers.’” - The New York Times

No, Marvel Didn’t Kill The Movie Star, Whatever That Is Anyway

"The problem with this theory is that it stems from a rather conservative sense of cultural terror." - The Guardian (UK)

Ten Important Oscar Movies Questions

And answers. For instance: Why would this be the year the Academy finally embraced Sean Baker? - Vulture

Norway’s TV Station Run By, And For, People With Learning Disabilities

“In Norway, as in every country, people with learning disabilities face issues ranging from low employment rates to access to support and housing. Being able to understand the news empowers the wider community.” - BBC

Will Reality TV Franchises Kill Reality TV?

“As a risk-averse industry relies more and more on safe, conventional choices in a genre built on provocation and experimentation, reality’s franchise explosion raises questions about the long-term viability of the business.” - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

Netflix Seems To Be Bouncing Back

Subscribers, money, growth, live sports, Christmas Day NFL games … what is happening to the streamer that for a while seemed doomed to fall behind? - Los Angeles Times

Instagram And Facebook Are Tagging Searches For Megalopolis With A Really Creepy Warning

“Instead of seeing posts about Francis Ford Coppola’s latest film, they’re shown a warning, titled, ‘Child sexual abuse is illegal.’” - The Verge

Thirty Years Ago Arlene Croce’s Non-Review Review Of Bill T. Jones Ignited A Firestorm

Has a piece of criticism, much less of dance criticism, made such a mark on the culture since? “Discussing the Undiscussable” was in conversation with the world, not just dance or art. It didn’t matter if you’d ever seen a dance, never mind a dance by Jones. Everyone was talking about it. - The New...

The UK’s Northern Ballet May Start Sharing An Orchestra With Opera North

Northern Ballet said that it was “under financial pressure, brought about largely by rising production and touring costs” - and in order to save money, it’s been using recorded music at some stops. - Arts Professional

Fired Dallas Black Dance Theatre Members Aren’t Giving Up The Fight

“The dispute threatens to cloud the company’s new season, with the fired dancers demanding to be reinstated and vowing to form picket lines at coming performances. Many of the fired dancers have previously worked with their replacements, adding another layer of resentment and unease.” - The New York Times

Does Money Change Everything? Five Major Dance Artists Talk About Winning Major Grants

Donald Byrd, Michelle Dorrance, Miguel Gutierrez, Rosie Herrera, and Annabelle Lopez Ochoa discuss how receiving six-figure prizes such as the Doris Duke Artist Award and the MacArthur "genius" fellowship changes (and doesn't change) their lives and work. - Dance Magazine

Philadelphia Ballet At 60, As Ángel Corella Completes Ten Years As Artistic Director

"'They really flew,' he said of the years. 'I could think like a few days ago it was when I arrived, and a lot has changed since then. But I think that this year sort of represents the past, the present, and the future of who we are and where the company is heading.'"...

The Dancer And Choreographer Bringing A Hip-Hop Fantasy To The Big Screen

“Often in films, this type of dance can become commercial. There’s nothing wrong with that, but there’s a different type of beauty to the dancing in this film.” - The New York Times

“My Fair Lady” At 60: A Linguist Takes A Look

It is no coincidence that women and working-class people (and Cockneys who are often seen as emblematic of the working class) often bear the brunt of accent prejudice. - The Conversation

British Film And Drama Schools Aren’t Exactly Filled With Working-Class Students

Actor Naomi Scott, who didn’t go to drama school, would like to change the chances for young working-class Brits interested in acting with material support. “We can do our small bit to maybe help some people have a clearer path to what they want to do.” - BBC

The Emergency Tailors Of New York Comic Con

"Armed with glue guns, zip ties, Popsicle sticks and safety pins, the Paladins of Cosplay come ready to fix.” - The New York Times

John Leguizamo Has Written His First Play For More Than One Actor

Not to worry: it's still about Hispanic Americans, and he's still starring. "Not bragging on myself, but Molière wrote all his plays for himself and he was the lead in all his plays," Leguizamo says. "So I’m fancying myself a little bit as a Latin Molière." - The Washington Post (MSN)

How Julie Taymor Staged “The Lion King” And Made It The Most Successful Musical In History

"Her work's distinctly international flavour and its heavy use of masks and puppetry inspired by Indonesian and Japanese traditions didn't necessarily scream family-friendly commercial juggernaut. Nonetheless, (Disney Theatricals chief) Thomas Schumacher had a hunch Taymor's highly visual style of theatre could be just the thing." - BBC

Fragments From Two Lost Plays By Euripides Discovered

The text — 98 lines, of which only 20 were previously known, from the plays Ino and Polyidus — were written on a piece of parchment found in the ancient village of Philadelphia, 62 miles southwest of Cairo. - History Today

Mitzi Gaynor, Queen of 1950s Movie Musicals, Has Died At 93

"A dancer, singer, actress and comic impersonator since childhood, Ms. Gaynor was much admired for her stamina and versatility over more than seven decades in show business" — ranging from movie musicals (most notably, South Pacific) to Las Vegas revues to TV variety shows to cabaret. - The Washington Post (MSN)

Why Newly-Minted Nobel Lit Prize Winner Han Kang Isn’t Celebrating Her Win

“She said that with the wars raging between Russia and Ukraine, Israel and Palestine, with deaths being reported every day, she could not hold a celebratory press conference,” Seung-wo told Korean reporters. - LitHub

Being Theaster Gates

"Gates’s business dealings and art making are not at odds: Salvage from the buildings goes into his art installations; proceeds from his art sales fund his building renovations and community programs. … He hopes to demonstrate "an open model for what an artist can be.'" - T — The New York Times Style Magazine

She Used To Be China’s Biggest Movie Star — Until The Government Tanked Her Career. After Five Years, She’s Coming Back

"Fan Bingbing, once one of China’s most famous film stars, is returning to the screen after a more than five-year hiatus following her alleged involvement in a massive tax evasion scandal." - The Guardian

The Unraveling Of Alice Munro

No writer who heard it would touch it. From bookstores to biographers to journalists, the literary world had everything to gain from an untarnished Alice Munro. Open secrets require closed doors. - The Walrus

Trial For Attempted Murder Of Salman Rushdie Postponed Again

"The attempted murder trial of (Hadi Matar,) the man charged with severely injuring author Salman Rushdie in a 2022 knife attack was put on hold Friday while judges consider a request to move it to another county. Jury selection had been scheduled to start on Tuesday." - AP

AJ Premium Classifieds

Erie Philharmonic seeks next Executive Director

The Erie Philharmonic welcomes nominations and applications for the position of Executive Director, available in the fall of 2024.

Fall + Winter 2025 Applications Open for MS in Leadership for...

Northwestern University’s MS in Leadership for Creative Enterprises (MSLCE) program develops leaders across Entertainment, Media and the Arts. Earn your Master’s in One Year.

Executive Director – Northwest Choirs Seattle

Considered one of the premier youth choral programs in the nation, Northwest Choirs provides world-class musical education and performance opportunities that serve as a platform for personal growth and development.

The Cabot – Executive Director

The Cabot Performing Arts Center (“The Cabot”), located in Beverly, Massachusetts, serves as a cultural centerpiece for the local community, offering a wide range of artistic events.

Managing Director – Alley Theatre

Alley Theatre seeks interested...

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Director, John J. Cali School of Music

The John J. Cali School of Music seeks a dynamic, innovative, and collaborative leader to serve as its next Director.

Academic Operations Coordinator, Extension Division (The Juilliard School)

The Juilliard School seeks an Academic Operations Coordinator to manage the day-to-day logistical and operational facets of Juilliard Extension’s academic programs.

School of Art Director at Texas Tech University

The J.T. & Margaret Talkington College of Visual & Performing Arts and the faculty, staff, and students of the School of Art at Texas Tech University enthusiastically seek nominations and applications for a visionary leader

Dean & Head of School – New York Studio School

The Dean and Head of School (Dean) will maintain the existing standards of NYSS while remaining open to the evolution of what art can be in the 21st century.

Octopus Theatricals – Business Manager

Octopus Theatricals, an award-winning independent producing company, seeks a highly detail-oriented and proactive Business Manager to oversee, execute and manage general business and financial operations.

Artistic Director – Children’s Musical Theater San Jose

Children’s Musical Theater San Jose (CMT) seeks an engaging, collaborative, and strategic Artistic Director to help guide its next chapter.

Global Executive Arts Management Fellowship

Led by DeVos Institute Chairman Michael M. Kaiser and President Brett Egan, the high-intensity program provides training and guidance in strategic planning, leadership, fundraising, marketing, board governance, human resources, and financial planning.

Payroll/HR Administrator, Mark Morris Dance

This position supports the entire organization, interacting regularly with all supervisors as well as all employees and independent contractors.

Chief Development Officer, Lyric Opera of Kansas City

The Chief Development Officer, an accomplished strategic thinker who is focused on growth and who has comprehensive fundraising experience in major gifts, will act as Lyric Opera of Kansas City’s senior and leading development professional.

Music Director/Conductor of Opera at USC and Collaborative Pianist

The University of South Carolina School of Music is accepting applicants for a Assistant or Associate Professor, 9-month, tenure-track, faculty position.

Fired Dallas Black Dance Theatre Members Aren’t Giving Up The Fight

“The dispute threatens to cloud the company’s new season, with the fired dancers demanding to be reinstated and vowing to form picket lines at coming performances. Many of the fired dancers have previously worked with their replacements, adding another layer of resentment and unease.” - The New York Times

There Is No Way To Make Teenage Fame Safe

“Fame, like football, takes a toll. The effects can be particularly destabilizing when the star in question is still just a kid. And all too often, the people who should be looking out for these valuable, vulnerable quantities are, instead, cashing in.” - The New York Times

A Novelist Shared Her Notes About The Dust Bowl With John Steinbeck

He got The Grapes of Wrath; Sonora Babb’s novel contract was cancelled; and Steinbeck dedicated his book to her male supervisor. What would Tom Joad say? - The New York Times

The Emergency Tailors Of New York Comic Con

"Armed with glue guns, zip ties, Popsicle sticks and safety pins, the Paladins of Cosplay come ready to fix.” - The New York Times

The Death Of The Auteur

Directors used to have power - maybe too much power, of course, but their visions were important. Then came superhero everything. - The Guardian (UK)

Why Concert Halls Still Matter Enough That We Spend Hundreds of Millions Of Dollars Building And Renovating Them

"A room that’s consecrated to music is one where people come together, sit in quiet communion, listen rather than shout, and focus for a couple of hours instead of getting peppered with notifications. … Such an institution is one of the few sacramental spaces we have outside of explicitly religious buildings." - Curbed (MSN)

Hard To Take, But More Right Than Ever: Jeremy Denk On The Music Of Charles Ives

"You do not see advertisers beating at the door of the Ives estate to use his music in commercials. His music is not ready to package or post on Instagram. But there is knowledge in it. … His music suggests America will just have to muddle through." - The New York Times

Mitzi Gaynor, Queen of 1950s Movie Musicals, Has Died At 93

"A dancer, singer, actress and comic impersonator since childhood, Ms. Gaynor was much admired for her stamina and versatility over more than seven decades in show business" — ranging from movie musicals (most notably, South Pacific) to Las Vegas revues to TV variety shows to cabaret. - The Washington Post (MSN)

Transport For London’s Elizabeth Line Wins Stirling Prize For Architecture

Oliver Wainwright: "The Lizzie line is a worthy winner, providing a dazzling demonstration that, for all chaos surrounding HS2, Britain is still capable of pulling off gargantuan transport infrastructure projects with style and panache." - The Guardian

Classical Radio Host Says He Was Fired For A Disability

Dennis Moore, the morning host at Chicago-based WFMT, returned from a medical leave earlier this year and asked for schedule or other changes as an accommodation for a sleep-related issue. When station management declined and Moore rejected a buyout, he says, he was fired. - Chicago Sun-Times

How To Become A Blue Man

"They must become expert drummers. They’ll also learn to spit paint onto a spinning canvas, catch a dozen rapid-fire marshmallows in their mouths and then be prepared for absolutely anything the audience might throw at them. Hundreds audition every year across the globe. Only a handful ultimately get hired." - WBEZ (Chicago)

How “Pulp Fiction” Was Produced And Shot — An Oral History

"To commemorate the 30th anniversary of Pulp Fiction, Variety spoke with more than 20 members of the film’s cast and crew about their experiences, recollections and insights." - Variety
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