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DANCE

    IDEAS

    • Music that affects you physically

      Good Morning:

      Bettina Varwig’s research focuses on how 17th and 18th-century listeners responded to music. “When you read about how music affected listeners in Bach’s time, their testimonies are striking in their bodily intensity. Music contracted their innards and made their hearts leap.” (The Guardian)

      The arts world has started spending real effort to prove the obvious. The Commonwealth Short Story Prize ran its winners through a forensic review to certify them AI-free before handing out the award (The Bookseller). The AI music generator Suno, meanwhile, is courting the people it’s accused of replacing with an “incubator” program for artists who use its AI (The Hollywood Reporter) — a peace offering or a laundering operation, depending on your perspective. And A24, the studio that built a brand on handmade cool, torched some of it overnight with a Google DeepMind deal (The Hollywood Reporter). The AI divide is widening.

      Chicago’s creative sector is now the city’s third-largest industry (WBEZ) — says a new report. Meanwhile, London’s Royal Ballet and Opera is eliminating 64 positions amid financial turmoil (OperaWire). And after 83 years in private hands, Norman Rockwell’s White House painting finally goes on public view (USA Today).

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • Why Ballet Is A Natural Subject For Horror Movies

      “Anyone who spends even a day with a professional dancer or a ballet troupe could likely come away and already have the core of a body horror flick ready just from seeing all the injuries strapped up and ignored, or hearing the stories of cut-throat auditions.” – Far Out

    • A New Print-On-Demand Books Program For Libraries

      Ingram Library Services and Penguin Random House have announced a print-on-demand program designed to supply libraries with popular backlist titles.  – Publishers Weekly

    • How A24 Blew Its Cool Factor With One Corporate Announcement

      The indie movie studio was, for a sizable set of Americans under 40 or so, about as cool as a studio could get. (You never saw anyone wearing a Focus Features hoodie, right?) Then A24 announced a $75 million deal with Google’s AI venture, DeepMind. The fan base is furious. – The Hollywood Reporter

    • Crystal Bridges Gets a New Chief Curator

      Courtenay Finn is currently chief curator and director of programs at the Orange County Museum of Art, which merged with the University of California, Irvine last year. She has previously served as the chief curator at moCa Cleveland in Ohio, senior curator at the Aspen Art Museum in Colorado, and curator at Art in General in New York.

    ISSUES

    • Crystal Bridges Gets a New Chief Curator

      Courtenay Finn is currently chief curator and director of programs at the Orange County Museum of Art, which merged with the University of California, Irvine last year. She has previously served as the chief curator at moCa Cleveland in Ohio, senior curator at the Aspen Art Museum in Colorado, and curator at Art in General in New York.

    • After 83 Years, Norman Rockwell’s White House Painting Is Finally On Public View

      In 1943, Rockwell painted a four-panel portrait of people waiting to see President Roosevelt. The artwork, called So You Want to See the President!, spent 40 years hanging in the West Wing; last year the White House Historical Association purchased the piece, which is now in a nearby museum. – USA Today

    • Ancient Roman “Curse Tablet” Translated

      Dutch archaeologists found this curse tablet in a pit beneath Heerlen‘s town hall square. Archaeologists often frequent this area situated amid the former site of Coriovallum, a Roman military settlement along the Via Belgica, which once connected Belgium’s Tongeren region to Cologne.  – Artnet

    • Archaeologists Discover Intact Ancient Mayan City

      Located deep within the jungles of the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, the city—which the researchers have named “Minanbé,” a Maya Yucatec phrase meaning “there is no road”—had been hidden by vegetation for over a thousand years. – ARTnews

    • NYC’s Street-Scaffolding Sheds Are Ugly. Can We Design Something Better?

      The city wants structures that will go up smoothly, look good while they last, and go away quickly. Those are separate goals, none of them easy to achieve. – New York Magazine (MSN)

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    PEOPLE

    • Music that affects you physically

      Good Morning:

      Bettina Varwig’s research focuses on how 17th and 18th-century listeners responded to music. “When you read about how music affected listeners in Bach’s time, their testimonies are striking in their bodily intensity. Music contracted their innards and made their hearts leap.” (The Guardian)

      The arts world has started spending real effort to prove the obvious. The Commonwealth Short Story Prize ran its winners through a forensic review to certify them AI-free before handing out the award (The Bookseller). The AI music generator Suno, meanwhile, is courting the people it’s accused of replacing with an “incubator” program for artists who use its AI (The Hollywood Reporter) — a peace offering or a laundering operation, depending on your perspective. And A24, the studio that built a brand on handmade cool, torched some of it overnight with a Google DeepMind deal (The Hollywood Reporter). The AI divide is widening.

      Chicago’s creative sector is now the city’s third-largest industry (WBEZ) — says a new report. Meanwhile, London’s Royal Ballet and Opera is eliminating 64 positions amid financial turmoil (OperaWire). And after 83 years in private hands, Norman Rockwell’s White House painting finally goes on public view (USA Today).

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • Why Ballet Is A Natural Subject For Horror Movies

      “Anyone who spends even a day with a professional dancer or a ballet troupe could likely come away and already have the core of a body horror flick ready just from seeing all the injuries strapped up and ignored, or hearing the stories of cut-throat auditions.” – Far Out

    • A New Print-On-Demand Books Program For Libraries

      Ingram Library Services and Penguin Random House have announced a print-on-demand program designed to supply libraries with popular backlist titles.  – Publishers Weekly

    • How A24 Blew Its Cool Factor With One Corporate Announcement

      The indie movie studio was, for a sizable set of Americans under 40 or so, about as cool as a studio could get. (You never saw anyone wearing a Focus Features hoodie, right?) Then A24 announced a $75 million deal with Google’s AI venture, DeepMind. The fan base is furious. – The Hollywood Reporter

    • Crystal Bridges Gets a New Chief Curator

      Courtenay Finn is currently chief curator and director of programs at the Orange County Museum of Art, which merged with the University of California, Irvine last year. She has previously served as the chief curator at moCa Cleveland in Ohio, senior curator at the Aspen Art Museum in Colorado, and curator at Art in General in New York.

    PEOPLE

    • Music that affects you physically

      Good Morning:

      Bettina Varwig’s research focuses on how 17th and 18th-century listeners responded to music. “When you read about how music affected listeners in Bach’s time, their testimonies are striking in their bodily intensity. Music contracted their innards and made their hearts leap.” (The Guardian)

      The arts world has started spending real effort to prove the obvious. The Commonwealth Short Story Prize ran its winners through a forensic review to certify them AI-free before handing out the award (The Bookseller). The AI music generator Suno, meanwhile, is courting the people it’s accused of replacing with an “incubator” program for artists who use its AI (The Hollywood Reporter) — a peace offering or a laundering operation, depending on your perspective. And A24, the studio that built a brand on handmade cool, torched some of it overnight with a Google DeepMind deal (The Hollywood Reporter). The AI divide is widening.

      Chicago’s creative sector is now the city’s third-largest industry (WBEZ) — says a new report. Meanwhile, London’s Royal Ballet and Opera is eliminating 64 positions amid financial turmoil (OperaWire). And after 83 years in private hands, Norman Rockwell’s White House painting finally goes on public view (USA Today).

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • Why Ballet Is A Natural Subject For Horror Movies

      “Anyone who spends even a day with a professional dancer or a ballet troupe could likely come away and already have the core of a body horror flick ready just from seeing all the injuries strapped up and ignored, or hearing the stories of cut-throat auditions.” – Far Out

    • A New Print-On-Demand Books Program For Libraries

      Ingram Library Services and Penguin Random House have announced a print-on-demand program designed to supply libraries with popular backlist titles.  – Publishers Weekly

    • How A24 Blew Its Cool Factor With One Corporate Announcement

      The indie movie studio was, for a sizable set of Americans under 40 or so, about as cool as a studio could get. (You never saw anyone wearing a Focus Features hoodie, right?) Then A24 announced a $75 million deal with Google’s AI venture, DeepMind. The fan base is furious. – The Hollywood Reporter

    • Crystal Bridges Gets a New Chief Curator

      Courtenay Finn is currently chief curator and director of programs at the Orange County Museum of Art, which merged with the University of California, Irvine last year. She has previously served as the chief curator at moCa Cleveland in Ohio, senior curator at the Aspen Art Museum in Colorado, and curator at Art in General in New York.

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      WORDS