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Willem de Kooning On Escaping the Formulaic

Since today is the 120th anniversary of Willem de Kooning's birthday, I am reminded by my staff of thousands of his fervent efforts "to break the willed articulation of the image." Which, as it happens, is not dissimilar to the goal of the cut-up procedure in writing, intended by Brion Gysin and William Burroughs to free the mind and language itself from preconceived formulations. Nor is it a bad follow-up to yesterday's blogpost about "Cut Up or Shut Up."

The Mellon Foundation Did a Nice Thing. Next Time, Look at Where the Action Is.

If the Mellon Foundation would start to look at the next-level budgets, they’ll find transformation is the purview of better-run ...

Are the Arts Inimical to our Democratic Ethos?

The starting point of my new book The Propaganda of Freedom is the core tenet of the cultural Cold War as prosecuted

Beat Scene All About Cut Up or Shut Up (and Me, Weissner, & Ploog)

Kevin Ring, the indefatigable editor of Beat Scene magazine, emailed me a few months ago to ask about the new reprint of "Cut Up or Shut Up" released by the German publisher Mokolo Print in a facsimile edition in English with a new cover design by Robert Schalinski and a modest intro by yours truly. Ever curious about all things Beat, Ring wanted to know the back story of the book's origin and development. Et voilà!

Influenced by the Limitations of a Lifeboat in a Tidal Wave

​Before I needed to earn a living from writing, I was a member of the avant-garde — fervent and full of high opinion. The other day I came across a typescript of "Synchronic Non-Causative Agent," an unpublished paper of mine written more than half a century ago. Reading it over, I got the bright idea of posting here despite its age.

Leah Lowe talks about theatre’s role in environmental activism

Leah Lowe, Professor of Theatre and Director of the Curb Center for Art, Enterprise and Public Policy at Vanderbilt University, talks about the ability for theatre to impact environmental activism.

Campus Ruckus: Back to the ’60s

We geezers who were college students in the late Sixties felt a rush of déjà vu at the sight of

Grapes of Wrath at Carnegie Hall: A story whose time has come – again

Any adaptation needs to be epic. Few works of literature go so deep into the need for home and family as the John Steinbeck novel The Grapes of Wrath. And Ricky Ian Gordon’s 2007 opera version packed the Carnegie Hall stage April 17 with the necessary magnitude of resources, plus extra relevance. No longer a piece of American history and...

Mahler on Solo Trombone — Coming Up at Colorado Mahlerfest This May

David Taylor and JH perform Schubert’s “Der Doppelganger” at the 2023 Brevard Music Festival Writing in The American Scholar, Sudip Bose

Quick Study: Cultural Districts and Well-Being Strategies

In this episode, we learn how leaders of a global network of arts and cultural districts regard their influence on community health and well-being. A transcript is available on the NEA website.

How Do You Solve a Problem Like Mentorship on Broadway? with Amanda Morton

Katie checks in with music director, supervisor, conductor, and pianist (Gutenberg!, The Who's Tommy, and KPOP on Broadway; Anne of Green Gables; Diary of a Wimpy Kid; Picnic at Hanging Rock), Amanda Morton.

A Marathon Reading: Gertrude Stein’s The Making of Americans

My staff of thousands thinks of it as the Moby Dick of modernism.

Why Public Funding for the Arts: A Personal View

I wrote a book looking at how different ways of moral and political theorizing drew different conclusions regarding whether the state should, or should not, subsidize the arts. At the very end of the book I give something of a personal view. There is a review circulating that is terribly confused about this (I won’t link – I read it so...

It’s Jazz Appreciation Month: Hail Jazz Heroes!

Since 2001, the Jazz Journalists Association (over which I preside) has celebrated some 350 “activists, advocates, altruists, aiders and abettors of jazz,” as Jazz Heroes. The class of 2024 Jazz Heroes has just been announced, recognizing the good works of 33 people whose efforts extend from the Baja-San Diego borderland to Ottawa, Canada, through 27 U.S cities, from Akron...

Something to Surprise You: Everywhere You Look

A. Robert Lee is such a prolific author in both his creative and academic books that I won’t try to characterize his writings other than to say they invariably illuminate life and literature with a wealth of scholarship, intelligence, and linguistic mastery. I will say, however, that his sense of humor is one aspect of his writings that I most treasure.

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