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Italian Police Present An Exhibition Of Artworks Seized From The Mafia

"Eighty works, confiscated by the Italian authorities, went on show at Milan‘s Palazzo Reale this week. The exhibition, 'Save Arts: From Confiscations to Public Collections,' features paintings, graphic works, and sculptures by Andy Warhol, Salvador Dalí, Robert Rauschenberg, Christo, and other prominent artists." - ARTnews

U.S. Appeals Court Upholds Law Requiring Sale Or Ban of TikTok

"A three-judge panel from the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled on Friday that a law designed to force a TikTok sale or ban is constitutional." - Business Insider

If You Can’t Tell If The Music Is Created By AI, It Doesn’t Matter

Background music for commercials, once the domain of human composers, can now be generated by AI in minutes, meeting technical and emotional requirements at a fraction of the cost. Why would a business pay a premium for human creators if AI can deliver similar or better metrics? - Shelly Palmer

Has BookTok Passed Its Prime?

We’ve had enough of endless, disappointing BookTok recommendations that promise payoff, not to mention its other cons. So are we finally at the end of BookTok’s chapter? - BookRiot

The Most Arts-Vibrant States, Ranked 1 To 50

"In its second annual release, our State of the Arts: Arts Vibrancy Rankings analyzes measurements of arts-vibrancy for all 50 states, using a comprehensive, data-driven approach that considers factors like supply, demand, and public support for arts and culture, along with adjustments for cost of living and population size." - SMU DataArts

Report: Podcast-Listening Continues Strong Growth

While podcasts’ popularity grows overall, the strongest momentum is with watchable podcasts. The data shows four in ten say they like actively watching a podcast, while another 29% prefer listening to a podcast while the video is minimized or playing in the background — for what one might consider an audio-like experience. - Inside Radio

New Black-Centered Arts Center Is Coming To Boston

"Castle of Our Skins, an arts institution that celebrates and aims to generate curiosity in Black music, cut the ribbon on Thursday … at its new location," to open in 2027. "The 2,491-square-foot space, which will be called Gold Hall, will function as a performance and community space." - WBUR (Boston)

Yuval Sharon Is Leaving The Industry, The Experimental L.A. Opera Company He Founded

"The company's executive director, Tim Griffin, who came on board in summer 2023, will ... become both executive and artistic director. Co-artistic directors, Ash Fure and Malik Gaines, who joined forces in an artistic director cooperative with Sharon in 2021, will form a new artistic advisory council." - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

Bayreuth Festival Makes Deep Cuts To Its 150th Anniversary Season

Blaming its cash shortfall on the public-service sector employee contracts it has with staff and an inability to raise more revenue, Bayreuth management cut four productions from the summer 2026 schedule, leaving only Rienzi and the Ring cycle along with a concert performance of Beethoven's 9th Symphony.. - AP

“The Nutcracker” Is Saved! San Francisco Ballet Dancers’ Union And Management Agree On Contract

"San Francisco Ballet’s Nutcracker season will kick off as planned, despite concerns that opening night would be canceled due to a stall in contract negotiations. Ballet management … reached a tentative two-year agreement with its union members on Thursday." - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

The Guardian Approves Sale Of The Observer To Tortoise Media

"Tortoise agreed to invest £25 million ($31.9 million) in the British title over the next five years and has pledged to keep publishing the print edition of the approximately 230-year-old paper. Under the terms of the deal, the Scott Trust will become a key shareholder in Tortoise Media." - Bloomberg (MSN)

In His 80s, Claude Monet Developed A Visual Superpower

When cataracts had rendered him almost completely blind, Monet finally agreed to the eye surgery he had been avoiding for years. When he recovered, he evidently gained the ability to see ultraviolet light, and thereby could see colors normally invisible to human eyes. - Artnet

Lessons Learned From A Century Of Hollywood Box Office Flops

There are three rules for avoiding a cinematic flop.Rule one: don’t pick a title that is boring, misleading or hard to pronounce. - Literary Review

What Do Right-Wing Media And Improv Theater Have In Common? A Lot

Two researchers of information ecosystems find that the structures and mechanisms of improv theater and the right-wing media ecosystem are surprisingly similar — which explains why the latter's followers become so devoted. - The Conversation

Workers Found More Than 1000 Artifacts Under Notre Dame

It would have been unfathomable to dig up the famous cathedral before the fire. However, archaeologists now had the chance per a French law on preventative archaeology, which can be used “to detect and undertake the scientific study of archaeological remains. - ARTnews

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