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Three Major Baltimore Arts Institutions Are Looking For New Leaders. Is Now The Time For An African-American?

The city is two-thirds Black, and the choice of a Black candidate at one or more of them — the American Visionary Art Museum and the Baltimore Museum of Art (executive director) and especially the Baltimore Symphony (music director) — could show the Black community that it's welcome. - MSN (The Baltimore Sun)

Last Summer Alone, Authorities Seized Nearly 10,000 Looted Artifacts

"International law enforcement authorities in 28 countries executing the latest phase of Operation Pandora, an international crackdown on illegal cultural goods trafficking, seized 9,408 cultural artifacts between June and September last year." - Artnet

Actor Jussie Smollett Sentenced To Jail, Probation For Faking A Hate Crime

"Former Empire actor Jussie Smollett was sentenced Thursday to 30 months of felony probation, including 150 days in jail, and ordered to pay restitution of more than $120,000 and a $25,000 fine for making false reports to police that he was the victim of a hate crime in January 2019. - CNN

First Encounters: Making Art For/With Babies

“Because it is the babies who train us really in what works for them and that is crucial. I can’t imagine making the work anymore.” - Irish Times

Starchitecture Dreaming: Their Dystopian Dreams Of Conquering Nature

As more become victims of the city’s fantasies of walling itself off from the climate crisis, what is increasingly obvious is the city’s willingness to sacrifice the older and more decrepit areas—those spaces occupied by the poor and undocumented—to benefit the growth of new and more “resilient” spaces for the wealthy. - The Baffler

TikTok Announces New Program To Pay Musicians

The service will allow musicians to upload songs directly to the app and receive royalties for plays, managed through a designated artists' platform. The platform also includes analytical tools to help artists leverage virality. - Protocol

What Ukrainian Literature Says About Ukraine’s Relationship With Russia

Ukrainians frequently speak of the need to become Ukrainians: to consolidate their culture, language, and institutions after centuries of imperial domination. What Ukrainians see as a work in progress, however, Russia interprets as weakness; it views Ukraine as an accident of history. - The Atlantic

The Ukraine Cultural Sites At Risk Of Being Destroyed

A lot has already been lost or destroyed. Museums in the homes of folk artists and folk production are found throughout the country. - The Conversation

Jed Perl: An Argument For “Freestanding Art”

Living as we are, in a time of social, political, economic, and environmental crisis, I believe we must resist the temptation to view the arts as a subsidiary or accompaniment to our social, political, and economic experiences and concerns. I believe we have to argue for what I call the freestanding value of art. - The Easel

The Slow Death Of The Second-Run Movie Theater

Time was, folks on a budget could see a film at cinemas where titles that were no longer brand-new were shown at discounted ticket prices before being released for home video.  As Hollywood makes that window before video release ever smaller, those theaters are becoming unfeasible. - The Hollywood Reporter

Study: Student Reading Facility Declined During The Pandemic

As the pandemic enters its third year, a cluster of new studies now show that about a third of children in the youngest grades are missing reading benchmarks, up significantly from before the pandemic. - The New York Times

Mezzo-Soprano Josephine Veasey Dead At 91

She sang with such conductors as Bernstein, Solti, and Karajan (whom she told she wouldn't work with him again), with a repertoire from Mozart to Rossini to Verdi to Wagner to Tippett, and she was a mainstay at Covent Garden, where she sang 780 performances in 60 roles. - The Guardian

Scientists Turn To Bacteria To Clean Michelangelo Sculpture

Scientists tested 11 strains of bacteria on marble before it was decided that three non-toxic varieties would be the most effective for Michelangelo’s masterpiece. Serratia ficaria, a bacterium that causes urinary tract infections, managed to remove dirt from the tomb in two days. - The Guardian

After A COVID-Wracked Winter, Broadway Producers Anticipate A Big Spring Comeback

The holiday season in particular was plagued by constant cast changes or cancellations when someone in the company got sick or tested positive.  With the pandemic now receding among the vaccinated, Broadway will have 16 productions opening over about six weeks. - Variety

Humana Festival Says It Won’t Do Festival

The Humana Festival of New American Plays, as envisioned prior to the Global Pandemic, has inspired a new approach to develop and produce new work on multiple platforms year-round,” Fleming’s emailed statement read, in part. - WFPL

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