ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

Today's Stories

Writers Explain Why They Love “The Chicago Manual of Style”

"The Chicago Manual of Style isn’t merely a guide; it’s a testament to the art of textual precision. … CMOS doesn’t skim the surface of grammatical and syntactical conventions but delves deeply into the labyrinthine complexities. The Manual functions as both a meticulous blueprint and a flexible instrument." - Literary Hub

US State Department Turns To Streaming As Global Influencer

“Film and television not only entertain, but they also provide a way to highlight issues, start conversations about difficult topics, and give voice to those whose stories we may not have heard.”  - Los Angeles Times

Reassembling Opera, With Yuval Sharon

“I want a production to constantly unsettle the audience and ask for continuous renegotiations of their experience.” - The Wall Street Journal

“Saturday Night Live” Turns 50, And Lorne Michaels Decides He Won’t Retire After All

Four years ago, Michaels, the series's founding producer, said that by the end of the 50th season, "I think I really deserve to wander off." Now that that landmark has arrived, he says that "as long as (the show is) important and I can be useful, I’ll stay." - The Hollywood Reporter

How Big Tech Has Taken Over Our Culture

These corporations have erected a private state over us. They who have disrupted almost every economic and political balance in the Republic. They who have amassed the power to shape and determine how we speak to one another and share news and information. Even how we think, dream, and perceive our place in the world. - Harper's

How Bookstores Across America Are Taking On Book Bans

Perhaps no bookstore in America’s heartland better exemplifies a commitment to the freedom to read than Loudmouth Books, in Indianapolis. - Publishers Weekly

A Decade On, “The Babadook” Holds Up, And It’s Still A Gold Mine For Memes

"Fans were soon drawing (the) hokey monster against rainbow backdrops. They were bending his rhyming schemes to echo contemporary gay lingo (“BABAYAAAAAAAAASS!!!” one illustration read). They were photoshopping his face onto vintage photos of 1970s muscled men in short shorts." - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

New Immersive Architecture Is Changing Our Urban Experience

"The distinction between theme parks and urban venues is rapidly dissolving" - Dezeen

New UK Culture Minister Says New Regulations For Streaming Are Necessary

“There’s a choice ahead of us, whether we choose to be the last guardians of this chapter, or whether we choose to be the first pioneers of the next.” - The Hollywood Reporter

Argentine Tango In Radical Reinventing

Today, fliers and social media posts use labels including “dissident tango” and “inclusive tango,” while a growing number of the nontraditional lessons and events use “queer tango” – increasingly accepted as the most all-are-welcome way of describing the fluid and open atmosphere of the events. - Christian Science Monitor

It Seems We Are Not The Only Primates Who Dance

Researchers in Germany and France have analyzed the stylized movements of some female gibbons, and they've found that, defining dance as "an intentional movement that’s rhythmic and doesn’t serve a physical purpose" (as does, say, walking or scratching an itch), the gibbons' movements qualify. - The New York Times

Unknown Piece By Mozart Discovered

The piece dates to the mid to late 1760s and consists of seven miniature movements for a string trio lasting about 12 minutes, the Leipzig municipal libraries said in a statement on Thursday. - The Guardian

San Francisco Symphony Finds Few Fans For Its Present Course

"I continue to be struck by the fact that the current leadership of the San Francisco Symphony really has no defenders in any press: local, national, or international. They are getting hammered by all quarters, by all media. And if they were hoping to win over ABC7, that clearly didn’t go well." - Song of the...

About 170 Layoffs At Atlantic Music As Streaming Levels Off

The streaming boom that lifted the music industry’s fortunes in the mid-2010s after years of decline has leveled off, — with the recorded-music industry posting just 4% growth in the first half of 2024 after many years of double-digit increases — and all three major companies have been laying off staff. - Variety

Lin-Manuel Miranda Gives Status Of Possible “The Warriors” Musical

This project started, as Hamilton did, as a concept album, which is being released next month. Miranda said that he won't proceed with creating and producing a stage show until he sees how the album is received. - Fast Company

Federal Court Rules That Big Bird Is Not Racist

Five Black and Hispanic families sued the Sesame Place theme park in suburban Philadelphia, alleging that their children were ignored by costumed performers there due to racial bias. It took the jury less than three hours to reject the plaintiffs' claims. - The Philadelphia Inquirer (MSN)

Soprano Lucine Amara, Met Opera Mainstay For Four Decades, Is Dead At 99

She sang 748 performances in 56 roles at the Met between 1950 and 1991. Many of those performances were last-minute: for many years she was the company's preferred substitute when a leading soprano cancelled. Ultimately, that position held her back, and she sued the company for age discrimination. - The New York Times

Newspaper Giant Axel Springer Is Separating From The Private Equity Firm That Owns It

The finance firm KKR bought the controlling interest in Axel Springer — which owns German news outlets Bild and Die Welt along with US online titles Politico and Business Insider — in 2019. Now Springer is hiving itself off with the media properties while KKR keeps the firm's classified ad businesses. - Axios

San Francisco Symphony Cancels Season Opener As Chorus Goes On Strike

"More than 150 musicians and patrons joined the Symphony Chorus, which formed a picket … in front of Davies Symphony Hall an hour and a half before the Verdi Requiem concert was scheduled to begin. Among the signs held by strikers, one read, 'No contract = No Chorus.'" - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

Frick Collection Names New Director As It Prepares To Return Home

The incumbent, Ian Wardropper, announced last year that he would be retiring in 2025 as the museum returns to its now-renovated Manhattan mansion home. Succeeding him will be Axel Rüger, currently director of the Royal Academy of Arts in London and previously head of Amsterdam's van Gogh Museum. - Artnet

By Topic

How Big Tech Has Taken Over Our Culture

These corporations have erected a private state over us. They who have disrupted almost every economic and political balance in the Republic. They who have amassed the power to shape and determine how we speak to one another and share news and information. Even how we think, dream, and perceive our place in the world. - Harper's

Exploring The Biology Of Radical Self-Delusion

We all suffer from delusions, and we all, like Oedipus, use tricks of self-deception to keep ourselves from acknowledging truths about our lives. Yet understanding, or even describing, this everyday experience can seem like a fool’s errand. - Harper's

The Digital Age And The Collapse Of Self-Worth

What we hardly talk about is how we’ve reorganized not just industrial activity but any activity to be capturable by computer, a radical expansion of what can be mined. Friendship is ground zero for the metrics of the inner world, the first unquantifiable shorn into data points. - The Walrus

Why Do Some People Choke Under Pressure?

The researchers found that, in jackpot scenarios, the activity of neurons associated with motor preparation decreased. Motor preparation is the brain’s way of making calculations about how to complete a movement — similar to lining up an arrow on a target before unleashing it. - Nature

Is Life Simply A Product Of Algorithms?

Today, it can be digitally simulated, biologically synthesised or made from entirely different materials to those that allowed our evolutionary ancestors to flourish. These and other possibilities are inviting researchers to ask more fundamental questions: if the materials for life can radically change – like the materials for computation – what stays the same? 

What If Fact-Checking Just Makes People Dig In More To Their Misbeliefs?

In 2010, a political-science paper came out that made people worry. It suggested fact-checks might actually make people dig in their heels. What if telling people they’re wrong makes them double down rather than change their minds? - The Atlantic

Federal Court Rules That Big Bird Is Not Racist

Five Black and Hispanic families sued the Sesame Place theme park in suburban Philadelphia, alleging that their children were ignored by costumed performers there due to racial bias. It took the jury less than three hours to reject the plaintiffs' claims. - The Philadelphia Inquirer (MSN)

UK Arts Organizations Are Rejecting Corporate Funding. A Risky Strategy?

Could these increasingly messy call-outs and protests, personal attacks on social media and public decouplings result in an already woefully underfunded arts sector destroying itself? - The Stage

Comparing Tim Walz And J.D. Vance On Arts Issues

Vance has spent little effort in the Senate on the arts: his only notable action was introducing a Consequences for Climate Vandals Act, which would increase penalties for protesters damaging art at Smithsonian museums. Meanwhile, Walz is governor of Minnesota, number one in the US in arts funding per capita. - Hyperallergic

California’s New Laws Regulating Use Of AI Now In Force

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday signed a handful of artificial intelligence-related bills that would give actors more protection over their digital likenesses and fight against the spread of deep fakes in political ads, among other regulations aimed at the fast-rising technology. - Los Angeles Times

“Arts For Us All”: A New Plan From Britain’s Oldest Socialist Organization

The report from the Fabian Society, founded in 1884 and one of the progenitors of today's Labour Party, calls for removing the "class ceiling" by issuing every Briton a "universal library card," ensuring every child can learn an artistic practice, and giving older children a "culture pass" to arts institutions. - The Guardian

New Jersey Performing Arts Center Is Building A Major Housing And Retail Complex

The $336 million project, called ArtSide, is one of the largest real estate projects in Newark in decades. It will include roughly 350 apartments, 15 townhouses and ground-floor retail in a seven-story midrise building and a 25-story tower. Profits from the development will go to support NJPAC programming. - The New York Times

Reassembling Opera, With Yuval Sharon

“I want a production to constantly unsettle the audience and ask for continuous renegotiations of their experience.” - The Wall Street Journal

Unknown Piece By Mozart Discovered

The piece dates to the mid to late 1760s and consists of seven miniature movements for a string trio lasting about 12 minutes, the Leipzig municipal libraries said in a statement on Thursday. - The Guardian

San Francisco Symphony Finds Few Fans For Its Present Course

"I continue to be struck by the fact that the current leadership of the San Francisco Symphony really has no defenders in any press: local, national, or international. They are getting hammered by all quarters, by all media. And if they were hoping to win over ABC7, that clearly didn’t go well." - Song...

About 170 Layoffs At Atlantic Music As Streaming Levels Off

The streaming boom that lifted the music industry’s fortunes in the mid-2010s after years of decline has leveled off, — with the recorded-music industry posting just 4% growth in the first half of 2024 after many years of double-digit increases — and all three major companies have been laying off staff. - Variety

San Francisco Symphony Cancels Season Opener As Chorus Goes On Strike

"More than 150 musicians and patrons joined the Symphony Chorus, which formed a picket … in front of Davies Symphony Hall an hour and a half before the Verdi Requiem concert was scheduled to begin. Among the signs held by strikers, one read, 'No contract = No Chorus.'" - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

New York Philharmonic Players Get 30% Raise In New Contract

"The deal with Local 802 of the American Federation of Musicians calls for raises of about 15% in 2024-25, and 7.5% each in 2025-26 and 2026-27. Base pay will rise to $205,000 by the deal’s final season." - AP

New Immersive Architecture Is Changing Our Urban Experience

"The distinction between theme parks and urban venues is rapidly dissolving" - Dezeen

Frick Collection Names New Director As It Prepares To Return Home

The incumbent, Ian Wardropper, announced last year that he would be retiring in 2025 as the museum returns to its now-renovated Manhattan mansion home. Succeeding him will be Axel Rüger, currently director of the Royal Academy of Arts in London and previously head of Amsterdam's van Gogh Museum. - Artnet

Hans Haacke, The First Artist To Confront American Museums With Politics

Before Haacke, museums were considered … 'genteel and politically marginal.' Robber barons might have donated to them to enhance their social clout, but such cultural largess was seldom questioned. Today, though, …, Haacke’s work is more than just relevant — it’s prophetic." - T — The New York Times Style Magazine

Manhattan DA Returns $8.3 Million Of Looted Antiquities To Turkey

The objects in question were linked to several ongoing investigations, among them, a trafficking network that systemically looted the ancient city of Bubon in Turkey and trafficked the works to New York. - ARTnews

The Imperative For Museums To Evolve Into Something New

For museums questioning how to make a sustained and long-term impact, the key factor is access. How do we define the public we’re aiming to serve, and is the current definition sufficiently equitable and global? - The Art Newspaper

Ace Auctioneer: 14 Factors That Make Art Valuable

"I have put together a list of 14 criteria that convey financial value to a work of art. While the first point is emotional, all other points are actually rational." - Artnet

Writers Explain Why They Love “The Chicago Manual of Style”

"The Chicago Manual of Style isn’t merely a guide; it’s a testament to the art of textual precision. … CMOS doesn’t skim the surface of grammatical and syntactical conventions but delves deeply into the labyrinthine complexities. The Manual functions as both a meticulous blueprint and a flexible instrument." - Literary Hub

How Bookstores Across America Are Taking On Book Bans

Perhaps no bookstore in America’s heartland better exemplifies a commitment to the freedom to read than Loudmouth Books, in Indianapolis. - Publishers Weekly

Newspaper Giant Axel Springer Is Separating From The Private Equity Firm That Owns It

The finance firm KKR bought the controlling interest in Axel Springer — which owns German news outlets Bild and Die Welt along with US online titles Politico and Business Insider — in 2019. Now Springer is hiving itself off with the media properties while KKR keeps the firm's classified ad businesses. - Axios

The Slang Of The Victorian Era Was Surprising, Fresh

From the bizarre sense of humour apparent in their Christmas cards – depicting murderous frogs, mice riding lobsters, and even waltzing beetles – to the off-beat slang they used, the Victorians defy their stuffy reputation. There’s an absurdism in their language and witticisms that feels surprisingly modern. - The Conversation

How Robert Caro’s “The Power Broker” Has Remained An Important Book For 50 Years

"Half a century after its publication, (this) epic biography of urban planner and city-destroyer Robert Moses needs no revival. From the moment it was published, … (it) has never gone away. Its durability resembles that of Moses’s own prodigious creation, the redrawn arterial map of New York." - The New York Times Book Review

Six Academic Publishers Targeted In Antitrust Lawsuit

"A group of scientists and scholars … filed a class action lawsuit against Elsevier, Wolters Kluwer, John Wiley & Sons, Sage Publications, Taylor and Francis, and Springer Nature last week. The complaint outlines 'a scheme' that they say resulted in 'perverse market failures that ... slow dramatically the pace of scientific progress.'" -...

US State Department Turns To Streaming As Global Influencer

“Film and television not only entertain, but they also provide a way to highlight issues, start conversations about difficult topics, and give voice to those whose stories we may not have heard.”  - Los Angeles Times

“Saturday Night Live” Turns 50, And Lorne Michaels Decides He Won’t Retire After All

Four years ago, Michaels, the series's founding producer, said that by the end of the 50th season, "I think I really deserve to wander off." Now that that landmark has arrived, he says that "as long as (the show is) important and I can be useful, I’ll stay." - The Hollywood Reporter

A Decade On, “The Babadook” Holds Up, And It’s Still A Gold Mine For Memes

"Fans were soon drawing (the) hokey monster against rainbow backdrops. They were bending his rhyming schemes to echo contemporary gay lingo (“BABAYAAAAAAAAASS!!!” one illustration read). They were photoshopping his face onto vintage photos of 1970s muscled men in short shorts." - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

New UK Culture Minister Says New Regulations For Streaming Are Necessary

“There’s a choice ahead of us, whether we choose to be the last guardians of this chapter, or whether we choose to be the first pioneers of the next.” - The Hollywood Reporter

“The West Wing” At 25: The Politics Were Beside The Point, Says Aaron Sorkin

“I thought, ‘What if there were a show about our leaders where these people are as competent and committed as the doctors and nurses on a hospital show, the police officers on a cop show, the lawyers on a David Kelley show?’” - The New York Times

Hollywood’s Film And TV Business Is In Sharp Decline. What To Do?

Despite differences over solutions, there is a consensus on the problem: California is simply not competitive with many other states and countries that offer more generous incentives to entice film crews. - Los Angeles Times

Argentine Tango In Radical Reinventing

Today, fliers and social media posts use labels including “dissident tango” and “inclusive tango,” while a growing number of the nontraditional lessons and events use “queer tango” – increasingly accepted as the most all-are-welcome way of describing the fluid and open atmosphere of the events. - Christian Science Monitor

It Seems We Are Not The Only Primates Who Dance

Researchers in Germany and France have analyzed the stylized movements of some female gibbons, and they've found that, defining dance as "an intentional movement that’s rhythmic and doesn’t serve a physical purpose" (as does, say, walking or scratching an itch), the gibbons' movements qualify. - The New York Times

How New York’s Jam-Packed Fall For Dance Festival Gets Programmed

Stanford Makishi, vice president and artistic director of dance at New York City Center: "We literally have companies written on Post-it notes on a giant whiteboard, and we’re constantly moving around Post-it notes. It is the most low-tech way of programming that you could possibly imagine.” - Pointe Magazine

Choreographer Silas Farley Takes On The Largest Project Of His Career

Four Loves, a 30-minute ballet with a cast of more than 20, is inspired by C.S. Lewis's book The Four Loves, which examines storge (familial love), philia (friendship), eros (romantic love), and agape (spiritual love). Farley describes his piece as "like a cosmic daughter of (Balanchine's) Four Temperaments." - Dance Magazine

The First-Ever Imax Ballet Features Paris Ballet

This is the first-ever Filmed for Imax ballet, and will be released exclusively in Imax locations globally on November 8. - Deadline

San Francisco Ballet Chooses A New Director

Branislav Henselmann, 49, most recently worked as the deputy general manager of arts, culture and community for the city of Vancouver, where he worked for seven years and previously led the city’s Cultural Services department. He also served as executive director of Ballet BC for nearly five years. - San Francisco Chronicle

Lin-Manuel Miranda Gives Status Of Possible “The Warriors” Musical

This project started, as Hamilton did, as a concept album, which is being released next month. Miranda said that he won't proceed with creating and producing a stage show until he sees how the album is received. - Fast Company

It’s A Brave Actor Who’ll Play Abraham Lincoln At Ford’s Theatre

Yet that's exactly what Scott Bakula will be doing when he assumes the title role in Herbert Mitgang’s 1979 solo play Mister Lincoln at the historic playhouse where the 16th President of the United States was assassinated. - The Washington Post (MSN)

Broadway’s Signature Theatre Names A New Artistic Director

At Ars Nova, Emily Shooltz fostered the work of dozens of early-career playwrights the organization commissioned and developed for production, and over 100 others through the organization’s Play Group and roster of artist residency programs. - Playbill

The Booking System For Comedy Clubs Is Broken

In comparison to the theater, live comedy has recovered from the pandemic in great commercial shape. But with success comes the danger of insularity, and while more new artists are entering the field than ever, the gulf in influence between celebrity comics and gifted young unknowns grows. - The New York Times

British Theatre Cancels Entire Run Of “Midsummer Night’s Dream” Over “Free Palestine” And Trans References

The production at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester, which was to run from last week into early October, was a modern retelling of the Shakespeare fairy tale with a drum-and-bass score. It included a song with controversial references which theatre management requested be cut; the company refused. - The Guardian

Three London Theatre Critics On Ian McKellen’s Portrayal Of Their Profession

Arifa Akbar: "My quotidian reality as chief theatre critic of The Guardian cannot compare: a supermarket sandwich wolfed down before the bell, a frantic filing of copy after the curtain goes down ..., or eating biscuits at my laptop into the small hours if it is a morning deadline." - The Guardian

Soprano Lucine Amara, Met Opera Mainstay For Four Decades, Is Dead At 99

She sang 748 performances in 56 roles at the Met between 1950 and 1991. Many of those performances were last-minute: for many years she was the company's preferred substitute when a leading soprano cancelled. Ultimately, that position held her back, and she sued the company for age discrimination. - The New York Times

Elias Khoury, Among The Greatest Of Arabic Novelists, Is Dead At 76

"As a novelist, (he) was often compared with the American writer James A. Michener, who … attempted to capture epic swaths of history in an intimate narrative. But if his vision was Michenerian, his prose was Faulknerian, driven by interweaving, stream-of-conscious narratives." - The New York Times

Richard Pettibone, Progenitor Of “Appropriation Art,” Has Died At 86

"Nearly 60 years since his gallery debut, Pettibone remains best known for his works copying modern art superstars like Andy Warhol and Frank Stella. Pettibone’s unwitting final exhibition with Castelli Gallery in 2022 presented 15 new paintings, all interpreting flags by Jasper Johns through Pettibone’s signature reduced scale." - Artnet

R. Peter Munves, Master Mass Marketer Of Classcial Recordings, Is Dead At 97

At Columbia Records and RCA, Munves was responsible for such innovative hits as "Switched-On Bach" as well as composers' "Greatest Hits" compendia and, later, titles that made critics cringe but sold well, such as "Liszt for Lovers" and "Puccini and Pasta." - The New York Times

Never Mind, Kathy Bates Is Not Retiring After “Matlock” After All

"Bates said the retirement buzz was 'kind of a misunderstanding' after she referred to Matlock as her 'last dance' in an interview with The New York Times last week. 'I was very flattered that everybody was upset,'" the award-winning actress said on the Emmy Awards red carpet. - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

Tito Jackson, Original Member Of The Jackson 5, Has Died At 70

“Jackson played guitar, sang and, of course, danced his way into homes worldwide as the Jackson 5 became an international sensation in the late ’60s and early ’70s, with a string of smashes hits that included four straight No. 1 hits.” He was touring as recently as last week. - Variety

AJ Premium Classifieds

Executive Director – San Juan Islands Museum of Art

SJIMA’s mission is to create a nationally accredited art museum featuring regional, national, and international exhibits that excite, educate, and inspire.

Head of Exhibitions, Museum of Fine Arts – Houston

The ideal candidate is someone who can maintain a detailed calendar, communicate clearly with relevant parties, troubleshoot unforeseen problems effectively and enjoys working closely with many different kinds of personalities.

Nancy Savage Skinner ’79 Director- Prior Performing Arts Center at The...

The Prior serves as a catalyst for an integrative, cross-disciplinary liberal arts education, centering the creative and performing arts within the development of Holy Cross students.

Managing Director – Syracuse Stage

Over the past half-century, Syracuse Stage has produced more than 300 plays, including a number of world, American, and East Coast premieres.

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Director of Programming and Booking – Hult Center for the Performing Arts

The Director of Programming and Booking is responsible for developing and implementing the artistic vision and focus of the Hult Center for the Performing Arts.

Part Time – Visual Arts – Emerging Artist in Residence

The Penn State Altoona Visual Art Studies program invites applications for its Spring 2025 Emerging Artist in Residence.

Vice President, Audience Strategy – New York Botanical Garden

The role demands expertise in utilizing research, real-time data, audience sentiment, and industry trends to grow NYBG’s relevance and market share within the cultural landscape.

Executive Director – Annapolis Symphony Orchestra

The Executive Director will manage all business operations of the ASO, with a primary focus on leading community engagement, donor cultivation, and strategic planning processes.

Executive Director, American Visionary Art Museum

The American Visionary Art Museum seeks a dynamic leader to partner with board, staff, and constituents to envision and build the next chapter for this extraordinary museum dedicated to visionaries of all sorts.

Director of Development – New Art Center

The Director of Development (DoD) will design, shape, and lead all fundraising initiatives to advance New Art’s annual and strategic goals.

Box Office Manager/Marketing Assistant

The Box Office Manager / Marketing Assistant manages the orchestra’s box office operations with a strong commitment to customer relations and audience experience.

Director of Development and Marketing – School of American Ballet

The Director of Development and Marketing leads SAB’s fundraising and marketing strategy and operations in support of SAB’s mission and long-term financial vitality.

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

Executive Director – Colonial Theatre Group

The Executive Director of the Colonial Performing Arts Center will report directly to the Board of Directors and serve as the Colonial’s chief executive officer.

How Big Tech Has Taken Over Our Culture

These corporations have erected a private state over us. They who have disrupted almost every economic and political balance in the Republic. They who have amassed the power to shape and determine how we speak to one another and share news and information. Even how we think, dream, and perceive our place in the world....

San Francisco Symphony Cancels Season Opener As Chorus Goes On Strike

"More than 150 musicians and patrons joined the Symphony Chorus, which formed a picket … in front of Davies Symphony Hall an hour and a half before the Verdi Requiem concert was scheduled to begin. Among the signs held by strikers, one read, 'No contract = No Chorus.'" - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

Hans Haacke, The First Artist To Confront American Museums With Politics

Before Haacke, museums were considered … 'genteel and politically marginal.' Robber barons might have donated to them to enhance their social clout, but such cultural largess was seldom questioned. Today, though, …, Haacke’s work is more than just relevant — it’s prophetic." - T — The New York Times Style Magazine

The Digital Age And The Collapse Of Self-Worth

What we hardly talk about is how we’ve reorganized not just industrial activity but any activity to be capturable by computer, a radical expansion of what can be mined. Friendship is ground zero for the metrics of the inner world, the first unquantifiable shorn into data points. - The Walrus

New Jersey Performing Arts Center Is Building A Major Housing And Retail Complex

The $336 million project, called ArtSide, is one of the largest real estate projects in Newark in decades. It will include roughly 350 apartments, 15 townhouses and ground-floor retail in a seven-story midrise building and a 25-story tower. Profits from the development will go to support NJPAC programming. - The New York Times

Culture Of De-Culturation: Is Our Culture Dying?

Olivier Roy believes that a range of abstract and apparently unstoppable forces—globalization, neoliberalism, postmodernism, individualism, secularism, the Internet, and so on—are undermining culture by rendering it “transparent,” turning our cultural practices into “a collection of tokens” to be traded and displayed. - The New Yorker

University Of The Arts In Philadelphia Files For Liquidation, Will Sell Its Buildings

"Philadelphia’s nearly 150-year-old University of the Arts has filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy after (suddenly) closing this summer. The process will allow the school to sell its real estate holdings in the Center City neighborhood, estimated in value at $87 million, in an effort to meet $46 million in bond debt." - Artnet

San Francisco Symphony Chorus Authorizes Strike Ahead Of Thursday’s Season Opener

"According to AGMA, 100% of the paid choristers voted in favor of the authorization, with 98% of eligible members participating. Additionally, 81% of the unpaid singers scheduled to perform pledged to honor a picket line." The announced work on the program: Verdi's Requiem - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

San Antonio Philharmonic Plagued By Board And Staff Turnover

"The resignation, on the day before the opening concert of the season, of CFO Sylvia Romo, hired by Executive Director Roberto Treviño in January, follows a string of staff resignations, terminations and nonrenewed contracts throughout Treviño’s 14-month tenure. - San Antonio Report

The Historian Who Understood Immediately That Putin’s Invasion Was A Threat To Ukraine’s Cultural Heritage

“Marushchak has achieved something quite extraordinary. He has organised the evacuation of dozens of museums across Ukraine’s frontline – packing, recording, logging and counting each item and sending them to secret, secure locations away from the combat zone." - The Guardian (UK)

The Memes That Could Start – Or Perhaps End – Wars

“Digital disinformation is a growing shadow industry. It thrives because of the weak enforcement of content-moderation policies, the increasing influence of social-media figures as political intermediaries, and a regulatory environment that fails to hold tech companies accountable.” And it’s getting worse. - The Atlantic

Two Iranian Directors Are Still Under House Arrest For A Gentle Comedy About An Old Married Couple

“The couple never meant to make political movies, Sanaeeha . ‘But in Iran, everything is political.’” (The issue here? A 70-year-old woman character doesn’t wear hijab … inside her own home.) - The Guardian (UK)
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