ArtsJournal Classic

AJ Four Ways: Text Only (by date) | headlines only

DANCE

    IDEAS

    • A bend in the culture

      This Week’s Highlights:

      The question running through this week’s stories isn’t whether cultural institutions are in trouble. It’s who gets to decide what they’re for. At the Kennedy Center, a former staffer describes being told to “get rid of everything” in the permanent collection (The Atlantic). In Paris, more than 100 authors walked out of the storied publisher Grasset after its billionaire owner forced out the editor who’d run it for 26 years (The Guardian). The V&A quietly censored its own exhibition catalogues to satisfy a Chinese printer (The Guardian). And the Trocks — beloved for 50 years — say some American venues are now afraid to book them (The Irish Times).

      Meanwhile, the gulf between haves and have-nots is widening. The Met is mid-renovation at $1.5 billion (New York Times). NPR landed $110 million in philanthropic gifts (Editor & Publisher). But a 36-year-old Berkeley theater is closing because nobody wanted the job (San Francisco Chronicle), Hampshire College is shutting down (WBUR), and San Diego wants to slash city arts funding by 85% (San Diego Union-Tribune). The money hasn’t disappeared. It’s just not going where it used to.

      All this week’s stories below, organized by topic.

    • AJ Chronicles: This Week — Perils of the Algorithmic Culture
      The threat isn’t that AI replaces artists. It’s subtler and more coercive: that an algorithmically saturated environment erodes the capacity for the kind of thinking that we like to think art requires. Tolerance for ambiguity. Patience with difficulty. The willingness to be bored before a breakthrough.
    • Anna Weber shares the importance of collaborative partnerships

      Anna Weber, General Manager for Artistic and Operations at Carnegie Hall, shares the depth of their festival programming and focus on collaborative partnerships.

    • The OnlyFans Approach To Spreading Climate Change Awareness

      “Headline Newds, a new series of web videos, … is made up of bite-size (segments) in which the climate emergency is broken down and raunchily explained to us by a variety of OnlyFans models.” Now, isn’t this better than throwing soup at paintings in art museums? – The Guardian

    • English National Opera Gets A New Chief Exec

      At Rambert, Helen Shute has led partnerships with The Royal Ballet and Manchester International Festival expanding Rambert’s international reach and developing new initiatives, including Rambert2, a new ensemble for early career dancers. – Opera Now

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    PEOPLE

    • A bend in the culture

      This Week’s Highlights:

      The question running through this week’s stories isn’t whether cultural institutions are in trouble. It’s who gets to decide what they’re for. At the Kennedy Center, a former staffer describes being told to “get rid of everything” in the permanent collection (The Atlantic). In Paris, more than 100 authors walked out of the storied publisher Grasset after its billionaire owner forced out the editor who’d run it for 26 years (The Guardian). The V&A quietly censored its own exhibition catalogues to satisfy a Chinese printer (The Guardian). And the Trocks — beloved for 50 years — say some American venues are now afraid to book them (The Irish Times).

      Meanwhile, the gulf between haves and have-nots is widening. The Met is mid-renovation at $1.5 billion (New York Times). NPR landed $110 million in philanthropic gifts (Editor & Publisher). But a 36-year-old Berkeley theater is closing because nobody wanted the job (San Francisco Chronicle), Hampshire College is shutting down (WBUR), and San Diego wants to slash city arts funding by 85% (San Diego Union-Tribune). The money hasn’t disappeared. It’s just not going where it used to.

      All this week’s stories below, organized by topic.

    • AJ Chronicles: This Week — Perils of the Algorithmic Culture
      The threat isn’t that AI replaces artists. It’s subtler and more coercive: that an algorithmically saturated environment erodes the capacity for the kind of thinking that we like to think art requires. Tolerance for ambiguity. Patience with difficulty. The willingness to be bored before a breakthrough.
    • Anna Weber shares the importance of collaborative partnerships

      Anna Weber, General Manager for Artistic and Operations at Carnegie Hall, shares the depth of their festival programming and focus on collaborative partnerships.

    • The OnlyFans Approach To Spreading Climate Change Awareness

      “Headline Newds, a new series of web videos, … is made up of bite-size (segments) in which the climate emergency is broken down and raunchily explained to us by a variety of OnlyFans models.” Now, isn’t this better than throwing soup at paintings in art museums? – The Guardian

    • English National Opera Gets A New Chief Exec

      At Rambert, Helen Shute has led partnerships with The Royal Ballet and Manchester International Festival expanding Rambert’s international reach and developing new initiatives, including Rambert2, a new ensemble for early career dancers. – Opera Now

    PEOPLE

    • A bend in the culture

      This Week’s Highlights:

      The question running through this week’s stories isn’t whether cultural institutions are in trouble. It’s who gets to decide what they’re for. At the Kennedy Center, a former staffer describes being told to “get rid of everything” in the permanent collection (The Atlantic). In Paris, more than 100 authors walked out of the storied publisher Grasset after its billionaire owner forced out the editor who’d run it for 26 years (The Guardian). The V&A quietly censored its own exhibition catalogues to satisfy a Chinese printer (The Guardian). And the Trocks — beloved for 50 years — say some American venues are now afraid to book them (The Irish Times).

      Meanwhile, the gulf between haves and have-nots is widening. The Met is mid-renovation at $1.5 billion (New York Times). NPR landed $110 million in philanthropic gifts (Editor & Publisher). But a 36-year-old Berkeley theater is closing because nobody wanted the job (San Francisco Chronicle), Hampshire College is shutting down (WBUR), and San Diego wants to slash city arts funding by 85% (San Diego Union-Tribune). The money hasn’t disappeared. It’s just not going where it used to.

      All this week’s stories below, organized by topic.

    • AJ Chronicles: This Week — Perils of the Algorithmic Culture
      The threat isn’t that AI replaces artists. It’s subtler and more coercive: that an algorithmically saturated environment erodes the capacity for the kind of thinking that we like to think art requires. Tolerance for ambiguity. Patience with difficulty. The willingness to be bored before a breakthrough.
    • Anna Weber shares the importance of collaborative partnerships

      Anna Weber, General Manager for Artistic and Operations at Carnegie Hall, shares the depth of their festival programming and focus on collaborative partnerships.

    • The OnlyFans Approach To Spreading Climate Change Awareness

      “Headline Newds, a new series of web videos, … is made up of bite-size (segments) in which the climate emergency is broken down and raunchily explained to us by a variety of OnlyFans models.” Now, isn’t this better than throwing soup at paintings in art museums? – The Guardian

    • English National Opera Gets A New Chief Exec

      At Rambert, Helen Shute has led partnerships with The Royal Ballet and Manchester International Festival expanding Rambert’s international reach and developing new initiatives, including Rambert2, a new ensemble for early career dancers. – Opera Now

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      WORDS