ArtsJournal Classic

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

DANCE

    IDEAS

    • How America Lost Control Of Its History

      A nation defined by blood and soil—built around a shared religion or ethnicity—can survive divergent narratives. To a country built on an idea, though, and bound together by a shared understanding of our history, the inability to tell a common story might well prove fatal. – The Atlantic

    • AI Backlash: Reaching For Vinyl

      Good Morning,

      Three stories today circle a backlash to AI: when the machines flood the zone, people reach for what they can hold. A wave of artists is now producing deliberate “anti-slop” — work whose entire value proposition is that a human sweated over it (The Guardian). The Walrus argues the real scandal of that prize-winning AI story wasn’t the machine but how fast everyone rushed to defend or dismiss it, instead of asking what we actually want from art (The Walrus). Meanwhile in downtown LA, Dataland opens as the first museum built entirely around AI-generated art (Los Angeles Times).

      The counter-move is showing up at the cash register. Tired of streaming’s churn, audiences are buying physical media again (ABC); vinyl keeps climbing, even as the making of records turns out to be an environmental mess (Yahoo).

      Elsewhere, a group of states is lining up to sue over the Paramount-Warner deal (Gizmodo), and an artist recounts the Kennedy Center meltdown from the inside (NPR). And the Tonys crowned Schmigadoon best musical and Liberation best play (The New York Times).

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • What I Saw From Inside The Kennedy Center Meltdown

      Palermo also said Trump’s Truth Social post about handing control back to Congress sounded like an attempt to distance himself from an institution. He adds that he believes the Trump administration has driven the center into bankruptcy. – NPR

    • Austin Opera seeks Director of Artistic Administration

      Reporting to the General Director & CEO, the Director of Artistic Administration oversees Austin Opera’s artistic staff and works closely with the executive leadership (General Director & CEO, Music Director, and Chief Advancement Officer) and the artistic and production teams to plan and execute season programming at the Butler Performance Center and Long Center. Ensuring the seamless operations of multiple, concurrent artistic programming streams, the Director of Artistic Administration is a key partner in fulfilling the company’s strategic goals to provide outstanding arts experiences that reflect the Austin community.

      Please go to https://austinopera.org/about/join-austin-opera/ to see a full job description.

    • The Problem With Responses To AI Creations

      At its core, this is a debate about values. A short story implies a human artistic act with intentional imaginative labour—the exact practice whose future is now at risk if the literary world doesn’t take a stand. – The Walrus

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    PEOPLE

    • How America Lost Control Of Its History

      A nation defined by blood and soil—built around a shared religion or ethnicity—can survive divergent narratives. To a country built on an idea, though, and bound together by a shared understanding of our history, the inability to tell a common story might well prove fatal. – The Atlantic

    • AI Backlash: Reaching For Vinyl

      Good Morning,

      Three stories today circle a backlash to AI: when the machines flood the zone, people reach for what they can hold. A wave of artists is now producing deliberate “anti-slop” — work whose entire value proposition is that a human sweated over it (The Guardian). The Walrus argues the real scandal of that prize-winning AI story wasn’t the machine but how fast everyone rushed to defend or dismiss it, instead of asking what we actually want from art (The Walrus). Meanwhile in downtown LA, Dataland opens as the first museum built entirely around AI-generated art (Los Angeles Times).

      The counter-move is showing up at the cash register. Tired of streaming’s churn, audiences are buying physical media again (ABC); vinyl keeps climbing, even as the making of records turns out to be an environmental mess (Yahoo).

      Elsewhere, a group of states is lining up to sue over the Paramount-Warner deal (Gizmodo), and an artist recounts the Kennedy Center meltdown from the inside (NPR). And the Tonys crowned Schmigadoon best musical and Liberation best play (The New York Times).

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • What I Saw From Inside The Kennedy Center Meltdown

      Palermo also said Trump’s Truth Social post about handing control back to Congress sounded like an attempt to distance himself from an institution. He adds that he believes the Trump administration has driven the center into bankruptcy. – NPR

    • Austin Opera seeks Director of Artistic Administration

      Reporting to the General Director & CEO, the Director of Artistic Administration oversees Austin Opera’s artistic staff and works closely with the executive leadership (General Director & CEO, Music Director, and Chief Advancement Officer) and the artistic and production teams to plan and execute season programming at the Butler Performance Center and Long Center. Ensuring the seamless operations of multiple, concurrent artistic programming streams, the Director of Artistic Administration is a key partner in fulfilling the company’s strategic goals to provide outstanding arts experiences that reflect the Austin community.

      Please go to https://austinopera.org/about/join-austin-opera/ to see a full job description.

    • The Problem With Responses To AI Creations

      At its core, this is a debate about values. A short story implies a human artistic act with intentional imaginative labour—the exact practice whose future is now at risk if the literary world doesn’t take a stand. – The Walrus

    PEOPLE

    • How America Lost Control Of Its History

      A nation defined by blood and soil—built around a shared religion or ethnicity—can survive divergent narratives. To a country built on an idea, though, and bound together by a shared understanding of our history, the inability to tell a common story might well prove fatal. – The Atlantic

    • AI Backlash: Reaching For Vinyl

      Good Morning,

      Three stories today circle a backlash to AI: when the machines flood the zone, people reach for what they can hold. A wave of artists is now producing deliberate “anti-slop” — work whose entire value proposition is that a human sweated over it (The Guardian). The Walrus argues the real scandal of that prize-winning AI story wasn’t the machine but how fast everyone rushed to defend or dismiss it, instead of asking what we actually want from art (The Walrus). Meanwhile in downtown LA, Dataland opens as the first museum built entirely around AI-generated art (Los Angeles Times).

      The counter-move is showing up at the cash register. Tired of streaming’s churn, audiences are buying physical media again (ABC); vinyl keeps climbing, even as the making of records turns out to be an environmental mess (Yahoo).

      Elsewhere, a group of states is lining up to sue over the Paramount-Warner deal (Gizmodo), and an artist recounts the Kennedy Center meltdown from the inside (NPR). And the Tonys crowned Schmigadoon best musical and Liberation best play (The New York Times).

      All of our stories below.

      Doug

    • What I Saw From Inside The Kennedy Center Meltdown

      Palermo also said Trump’s Truth Social post about handing control back to Congress sounded like an attempt to distance himself from an institution. He adds that he believes the Trump administration has driven the center into bankruptcy. – NPR

    • Austin Opera seeks Director of Artistic Administration

      Reporting to the General Director & CEO, the Director of Artistic Administration oversees Austin Opera’s artistic staff and works closely with the executive leadership (General Director & CEO, Music Director, and Chief Advancement Officer) and the artistic and production teams to plan and execute season programming at the Butler Performance Center and Long Center. Ensuring the seamless operations of multiple, concurrent artistic programming streams, the Director of Artistic Administration is a key partner in fulfilling the company’s strategic goals to provide outstanding arts experiences that reflect the Austin community.

      Please go to https://austinopera.org/about/join-austin-opera/ to see a full job description.

    • The Problem With Responses To AI Creations

      At its core, this is a debate about values. A short story implies a human artistic act with intentional imaginative labour—the exact practice whose future is now at risk if the literary world doesn’t take a stand. – The Walrus

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      WORDS