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DANCE

    IDEAS

    • Humans Still Pick The Books

      Good Morning,

      The Book of the Month Club turns 100 this year, and its growth strategy is almost a provocation: human curation. The service has added members every year since it dropped “Club” from its name, now past 400,000, on a simple premise — “We don’t depend on algorithms to determine your next book” (Publishers Weekly). Houston’s Menil is making a slower version of the same idea, reopening its long-shuttered fresco building for site-specific commissions that will sit for five years each (Houston Chronicle).

      The harder question underneath the day is who pays for any of it. The Obama Foundation raised its presidential center on six donations of $50 million or more, then declined federal library status altogether — privately capitalized cultural memory, on the donors’ terms (Chicago Sun-Times). Against that, the public sector is thinning: the Louvre’s director told the French Senate his museum is “running on fumes” (ARTnews), the BBC is cutting 550 jobs (The Hollywood Reporter), and a House committee voted to axe the Education Department’s only arts-education grant (Hyperallergic).

      Meanwhile, Trump’s repainted Reflecting Pool came out not flag-blue but Packers-green (The Atlantic). Not quite the look anyone was going for.

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • For His First Work Of Performance Art, Ai Weiwei Will Re-Enact His Imprisonment

      “From 5 p.m. on July 3 (in Manchester), Ai will enter a replica of his 25.92 square-meter cell, recreated by international architecture firm Hawkins\Brown. Inside, (over 24 hours,) he’ll sleep, eat, exercise, write, wash, and face interrogation on personal, political, and philosophical matters by four famed journalists.” – Artnet

    • “Toy Story” Is One Of Disney’s Most Dependable Franchises

      Analysts expect the fifth installment of Disney/Pixar’s “Toy Story” franchise will pull in at least $150 million in the U.S. and Canada, with some predicting as much as $175 million — either of which would set a franchise record, topping the nearly $121-million opening of 2019’s “Toy Story 4.” – Los Angeles Times

    • “The Seduction Of Certainty”: Playwright Moisés Kaufman On The Roald Dahl Bio-Play “Giant”

      “Most plays about prejudice comfort the audience with clarity. They reassure us that we would have recognized it immediately. Giant offers no such reassurance.” – Observer

    • Debating The Color Of The National Mall Reflecting Pool

      The Reflecting Pool now evokes the joy of a Green Bay Packers victory. Or a high-school prank. Or St. Patrick’s Day in Chicago.It most certainly is not the gleaming American-flag blue that Trump’s repainting of the pool was supposed to produce. – The Atlantic

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    PEOPLE

    • Humans Still Pick The Books

      Good Morning,

      The Book of the Month Club turns 100 this year, and its growth strategy is almost a provocation: human curation. The service has added members every year since it dropped “Club” from its name, now past 400,000, on a simple premise — “We don’t depend on algorithms to determine your next book” (Publishers Weekly). Houston’s Menil is making a slower version of the same idea, reopening its long-shuttered fresco building for site-specific commissions that will sit for five years each (Houston Chronicle).

      The harder question underneath the day is who pays for any of it. The Obama Foundation raised its presidential center on six donations of $50 million or more, then declined federal library status altogether — privately capitalized cultural memory, on the donors’ terms (Chicago Sun-Times). Against that, the public sector is thinning: the Louvre’s director told the French Senate his museum is “running on fumes” (ARTnews), the BBC is cutting 550 jobs (The Hollywood Reporter), and a House committee voted to axe the Education Department’s only arts-education grant (Hyperallergic).

      Meanwhile, Trump’s repainted Reflecting Pool came out not flag-blue but Packers-green (The Atlantic). Not quite the look anyone was going for.

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • For His First Work Of Performance Art, Ai Weiwei Will Re-Enact His Imprisonment

      “From 5 p.m. on July 3 (in Manchester), Ai will enter a replica of his 25.92 square-meter cell, recreated by international architecture firm Hawkins\Brown. Inside, (over 24 hours,) he’ll sleep, eat, exercise, write, wash, and face interrogation on personal, political, and philosophical matters by four famed journalists.” – Artnet

    • “Toy Story” Is One Of Disney’s Most Dependable Franchises

      Analysts expect the fifth installment of Disney/Pixar’s “Toy Story” franchise will pull in at least $150 million in the U.S. and Canada, with some predicting as much as $175 million — either of which would set a franchise record, topping the nearly $121-million opening of 2019’s “Toy Story 4.” – Los Angeles Times

    • “The Seduction Of Certainty”: Playwright Moisés Kaufman On The Roald Dahl Bio-Play “Giant”

      “Most plays about prejudice comfort the audience with clarity. They reassure us that we would have recognized it immediately. Giant offers no such reassurance.” – Observer

    • Debating The Color Of The National Mall Reflecting Pool

      The Reflecting Pool now evokes the joy of a Green Bay Packers victory. Or a high-school prank. Or St. Patrick’s Day in Chicago.It most certainly is not the gleaming American-flag blue that Trump’s repainting of the pool was supposed to produce. – The Atlantic

    PEOPLE

    • Humans Still Pick The Books

      Good Morning,

      The Book of the Month Club turns 100 this year, and its growth strategy is almost a provocation: human curation. The service has added members every year since it dropped “Club” from its name, now past 400,000, on a simple premise — “We don’t depend on algorithms to determine your next book” (Publishers Weekly). Houston’s Menil is making a slower version of the same idea, reopening its long-shuttered fresco building for site-specific commissions that will sit for five years each (Houston Chronicle).

      The harder question underneath the day is who pays for any of it. The Obama Foundation raised its presidential center on six donations of $50 million or more, then declined federal library status altogether — privately capitalized cultural memory, on the donors’ terms (Chicago Sun-Times). Against that, the public sector is thinning: the Louvre’s director told the French Senate his museum is “running on fumes” (ARTnews), the BBC is cutting 550 jobs (The Hollywood Reporter), and a House committee voted to axe the Education Department’s only arts-education grant (Hyperallergic).

      Meanwhile, Trump’s repainted Reflecting Pool came out not flag-blue but Packers-green (The Atlantic). Not quite the look anyone was going for.

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • For His First Work Of Performance Art, Ai Weiwei Will Re-Enact His Imprisonment

      “From 5 p.m. on July 3 (in Manchester), Ai will enter a replica of his 25.92 square-meter cell, recreated by international architecture firm Hawkins\Brown. Inside, (over 24 hours,) he’ll sleep, eat, exercise, write, wash, and face interrogation on personal, political, and philosophical matters by four famed journalists.” – Artnet

    • “Toy Story” Is One Of Disney’s Most Dependable Franchises

      Analysts expect the fifth installment of Disney/Pixar’s “Toy Story” franchise will pull in at least $150 million in the U.S. and Canada, with some predicting as much as $175 million — either of which would set a franchise record, topping the nearly $121-million opening of 2019’s “Toy Story 4.” – Los Angeles Times

    • “The Seduction Of Certainty”: Playwright Moisés Kaufman On The Roald Dahl Bio-Play “Giant”

      “Most plays about prejudice comfort the audience with clarity. They reassure us that we would have recognized it immediately. Giant offers no such reassurance.” – Observer

    • Debating The Color Of The National Mall Reflecting Pool

      The Reflecting Pool now evokes the joy of a Green Bay Packers victory. Or a high-school prank. Or St. Patrick’s Day in Chicago.It most certainly is not the gleaming American-flag blue that Trump’s repainting of the pool was supposed to produce. – The Atlantic

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      WORDS