ArtsJournal (text by date)

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  • An AI “Digital Twin” for the Performing Arts
    In the evolving world of AI, marketing is moving from getting messages out to engaging in dialog with the consumer. Messages get lost in the Sea of Messages. Persuasion asks what you’re interested in first and engages you in opportunities.
  • How To Assemble A Film Cast And Crew While Hiding The Entire Project From Iran’s Authorities

    And this project — Jafar Panahi’s Cannes-winning It Was Just an Accident — was extra-sensitive, since it’s about torture victims hunting down a man they think was their interrogator. – Los Angeles Times (MSN)

  • Elite Universities Are Cutting Their Art History Admissions

    Amid widespread budget deficits, several top universities have suspended admissions to their art history graduate programs or cut the size of the cohorts they will admit, along with modifications to other humanities concentrations. – ARTnews

  • At Florence’s Uffizi Galleries, Temp Workers Protest: “No More Precarious Lives”

    “Some temporary workers at the museum — assigned to roles in security, reception, ticketing, the bookshop, and the coatroom — lost their jobs following a change in service providers at the institution last fall. That raised the ire of the trade union Sudd Cobas, which organized the protest.” – ARTnews

  • Movie Theatre Association Comes Out Against Warner Sale To Netflix

    “We are deeply concerned that this acquisition of Warner Bros. by Netflix will have a direct and irreversible negative impact on movie theaters around the world,” Cinema United, the largest trade organization representing exhibitors, said. – The Hollywood Reporter

  • A Plan To Map Europe’s Dance Heritage

    That lack of recognition has real consequences. Across Europe, most public heritage funding is absorbed by monuments, libraries and museums. Dance, which exists only in the moment of its performance, is rarely included. – Horizon

  • Kenneth Turan: I Lost My Library In The LA Fires. Should I Start Collecting Again?

    My entire collection of something like 4,000 volumes, acquired one by one over all those decades, had turned to smoke and ash in the Palisades Fire. The question before me was not just about this particular book, but about whether it made sense, in my late 70s, to begin collecting all over again. – The Atlantic

  • Kurt Vonnegut Estate Joins Lawsuit Against Utah For Banning Books In Schools

    The estate of the author of Slaughterhouse-Five (one of the banned books) joins three (living) novelists and two anonymous high school students as plaintiffs, represented by the ACLU of Utah, in a complaint challenging the state’s “sensitive material review” law. – Publishers Weekly

  • Renee Nicole Good Merch Pops Up On Amazon And Etsy

    Less than 24 hours after the horrifying shooting of a woman by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent in Minneapolis, merchandise related to the slain U.S. citizen is already proliferating on e-commerce shopping sites, including on Amazon and Etsy. – Fast Company

  • Renee Nicole Good Was A Poet. Here’s Some Of Her Work

    The bio from a now-private Instagram account belonging to Good describes her as a “Poet and writer and wife and mom and shitty guitar strummer from Colorado; experiencing Minneapolis, MN.”  – LitHub

  • The Mythology Of The Friend Group

    If friend groups seem ubiquitous, so does a quiet underclass of people like me, bemoaning their lack of them. – The Atlantic

  • French Researchers Have Used AI To Write A Molière Play

    Mind you, this script wasn’t just spit out by a bot after one prompt. The French AI collective Obvious spent two years developing the script with the Théâtre Molière Sorbonne: training the software on the playwright’s structure and themes, then producing new drafts after feedback from scholars and actors. – The New York Times

  • AI-Created Novel Loses Publication Prize After Being Voted Winner In Reader’s Choice

    Contest-winning AI novel loses physical publication and manga adaptation after guidelines were updated to ban AI-generated works. – Automation

  • Are We Living In An Age Of Bad Painting?

    Walking through Frieze London’s carpeted aisles in October, a long-developed hunch was confirmed emphatically: we are amid a deluge of bad painting. – The Art Newspaper

  • So How Are Libraries Going To Get Their Books Now?

    The company faced several challenges in recent years, including a data breach in 2022 – after the company was acquired by a private investment group in 2021 – that put it in what independent library consultant Marshall Breeding called “a weak financial position.” – NPR

  • Broadway Production Will Rework “The Fantasticks” As Gay Love Story

    “In the re-envisioned Fantasticks, the central romantic pair – traditionally Matt and Luisa – are now Matt and Lewis, reinterpreting the story’s ‘allegory of love, longing, and reconciliation through a gay lens,’ according to producers. The show’s original pair of fathers, who secretly orchestrate the clandestine love affair between their children, are now mothers.” – Deadline

  • Béla Fleck Talks About Why He Canceled His Kennedy Center Concerts

    “As this thing became more and more charged, it wasn’t any longer something where I’m under the radar playing this gig. I am actually taking a position by playing at the Kennedy Center now. By not canceling, I’m taking a position, and I don’t want to take that position.” – The Washington Post (MSN)

  • Thoughts While Not Thinking
    <a href="https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/2026/01/thoughts-while-not-thinking.html" title='Thoughts While Not Thinking‘ rel=”nofollow”><img width="150" height="150" src="https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/P1310432-cropped-400-150×150.jpg" class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual wp-post-image" alt="Untitled © by Gerard Bellaart" link_thumbnail="1" decoding="async" srcset="https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/P1310432-cropped-400-150×150.jpg 150w, https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/P1310432-cropped-400-100×100.jpg 100w, https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/P1310432-cropped-400-200×200.jpg 200w" sizes="(max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" data-attachment-id="29738" data-permalink="https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/p1310432-cropped-400" data-orig-file="https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/P1310432-cropped-400.jpg" data-orig-size="400,572" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta='{"aperture":"3.3","credit":"","camera":"DMC-TZ10","caption":"","created_timestamp":"1517278688","copyright":"","focal_length":"4.1","iso":"400","shutter_speed":"0.033333333333333","title":"","orientation":"1"}' data-image-title="P1310432 cropped (400)" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

    Untitled © by Gerard Bellaart

    ” data-medium-file=”https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/P1310432-cropped-400-210×300.jpg” data-large-file=”https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/P1310432-cropped-400.jpg”>Stealthy quantum words phantoms of expectation and suicides of time riddle us with springs and traps.
  • Bruce Crawford, Ad Exec Who Led Metropolitan Opera And Lincoln Center, Has Died At 96

    In his primary career, he ran agencies BBDO Worldwide and Omnicon. As the Met’s general manager, he erased the company’s big deficits and stabilized operations; he also served twice as board chairman. As chair of Lincoln Center, he established peace among feuding resident organizations and set big projects in motion. – The New York Times

  • Did Someone Just Figure Out How To Decode The Voynich Manuscript?

    Not exactly, no, but science journalist Michael Greshko may have taken a big step toward that goal. No one had yet figured out a workable approach to even attempt reading the famously indecipherable 15th-century codex, but Greshko has demonstrated that a medieval-style cipher using cards and dice is plausible. – Live Science

  • What’s The Ultimate Goal Behind The Trump Administration’s Attacks On The Smithsonian? To Finally Win The Culture Wars

    Charlotte Higgins: “’The goal,’ as one senior employee of the Smithsonian told me, ‘is to reframe the entire culture of the United States from the foundation up.’” – The Guardian

  • Smithsonian Faces New Ultimatum From Trump Administration

    “After a monthslong lull in tensions, the Smithsonian is facing an ultimatum from the White House to comply next week with a demand” to produce a very long list of internal documents for “a comprehensive review of the institution’s content and plans — or risk potential cuts to its budget.” – The New York Times

  • Another Former Student At Richmond Ballet Sues For Abuse

    “A former Richmond Ballet student is suing the performance organization for $11.5 million, alleging sexual, emotional and psychological abuse at the hands of staff members during her eight years (there). The 85-page complaint … is the third lawsuit filed by a former student … in the past five years.” – WTVR (Richmond)

  • “Ur Kind of Music?”

    I cannot think of a better conversationalist about music, and about the state of things musical today, than the conductor Kenneth Woods. Ken is an American based in the UK, where he conducts the English Symphony Orchestra in Worcester and resides in Wales. He programs bravely and insightfully. He presides

  • Good Morning

    Today’s AJ Highlights: In Washington, the boycott of the Kennedy Center has widened, as 17-time Grammy winner Béla Fleck became the latest artist to cancel appearances, stating that performing at the renamed venue has become too “charged and political” (San Francisco Chronicle (Yahoo!)). The financial fallout for public media is coming into focus: while listener “rage giving” has raised an impressive $100 million since Congress defunded the system, stations still face a substantial $435 million gap to maintain operations (Inside Radio).

    In Europe, museum crises are boiling over. The Louvre strike has intensified over a specific grievance: management wants to spend millions on a new VIP entrance for the Mona Lisa, while staff argue the basic building is crumbling around them (Artnet). In Belgium, a plan to close Antwerp’s oldest contemporary art museum and move its collection to a smaller venue has been decried by artists as “illegal” and “insane” (The Guardian).

    A new report finds that an increasing share of “elite artist” visas for entry into the U.S. are now being awarded to OnlyFans models and influencers, reshaping the government’s definition of artistic merit (Newsweek). Finally, experts argue we need to cultivate the skill of “critical ignoring” to survive the internet age (The Wall Street Journal).

    All of today’s stories below.

  • How Hard Is The Training To Become A Peking Opera Star? This Hard.

    Zhang Wanting spent an entire semester practicing standing on one foot on a three-inch chair handle while lifting her other leg backward and leaning forward with an arched back. And that was maybe the easiest of the tricks she had to learn just with the chair, leaving aside all the other skills necessary. – AP

  • Insider Art Market Predictions For 2026

    If nothing else, the new year will likely reveal whether the art world’s pivot to the Gulf, and auction houses’ deepening emphasis on luxury categories, were good choices. – ARTnews

  • New Vision For Your Car: An AI Companion

    Across the show floor, the car emerged less as a machine and more as a companion as automakers and tech companies showcased vehicles that can adapt to drivers and passengers in real time — from tracking heart rates and emotions to alerting if a baby or young child is accidentally left in the car. – Fast Company

  • America’s Only Weather Museum May Have To Close Down

    “The National Weather Museum and Science Center in Norman, Oklahoma, the only US museum dedicated to weather artifacts, said late last month that it is at risk of closing. The nonprofit, launched in the early 2000s, has relied completely on donations, grants, and partnerships for funding, and receives no federal funding.” – ARTnews

  • Remembering Literary Critic John Carey

    Pugnacious, fearless and disdainful of academia’s more pretentious mores, Professor Carey was a paradoxical figure in the British literary establishment for more than half a century. – The New York Times

  • How Great Musicians Steal

    “I suppose a composer imagines a certain piece of music for certain instruments; he has a sound picture and wants the things that instrument can do. But that doesn’t negate the situation where you make a new sound picture, perhaps with the same materials. – Early Music America

  • Hollywood Is Being Destroyed By Oligopolies

    Effectively, in only three years, the Warner Bros. Discovery merger has validated nearly all the concerns that critics of “market first” policymaking have warned about for years. Once it had a dominant market share, the company started providing less and charging more. – The Conversation

  • When Oscar Wilde’s Buddy Concocted A Massive Lesbian Literary Hoax

    How, in 1894, just when literary interest in Sappho was reviving, Belgian-French author Pierre Louÿs (yes, he was a friend of Oscar’s) invented an ancient Greek poetess called Bilitis, composed erotic poetry he attributed to her (he claimed only to have translated it), and created a classic of lesbian literature. – Aeon

  • The Man Who Has Four Shows Currently On Broadway

    “If I step back and think about what unites the shows, it’s probably they’re all trying to be joy-forward experiences and shows where the audience is acknowledged,” says Alex Timbers, now 47. – AP News

  • Report: Increasing Share Of Artist Visas Into The US Are Going To Influencers And Models

    A growing share of O‑1B visas are now being granted to social media influencers and OnlyFans models, according to an immigration attorney. – Newsweek