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Berlin Taxi Drivers Put On A Makeshift Film Festival In The Backs Of Their Cabs

The TaxiFilmFest is in part a protest against the august Berlin Film Festival, currently in full swing, which signed an exclusive agreement with Uber to ferry participants between cinemas. But it's also a celebration of "the taxicab's iconic place in the urban landscape." - The New York Times

How We Picture Sound In Our Minds

​​​​If you think of a sound, such as a dog barking, a loved one’s voice, or a favorite tune, to what extent can you hear that sound in your mind? Not at all? As vividly as actually hearing it in real time and space? Somewhere in between? - Nautilus

How One Of Metro DC’s Best Stage Directors Came Back From A Catastrophic Highway Crash

After midnight on Nov. 30, 2022, Synetic Theater co-founder Paata Tsikurishvili was sitting in traffic when another car rear-ended his and knocked it into the HOV lane, where it was hit at full speed by a third vehicle. Astoundingly, he was back at work in under a year. - The Washington Post (MSN)

Machines That Can Read Minds Are Teaching Us About Ourselves

Results are overturning assumptions about brain anatomy, for example, revealing that regions often have much fuzzier boundaries and job descriptions than was thought. - Nature

“The City Hall Powerhouse Shaping London’s Cultural Landscape”

Meet Justine Simons, Mayor Sadiq Khan's deputy mayor for culture. - The Standard (London)

Why The Neighbors Are Not Happy That The Burned Herculaneum Scrolls Are Being Deciphered

The news that a team of students, using AI on digital scans, has deciphered the text on one of the scrolls carbonized in the 79 AD eruption of Vesuvius was greeted with excitement in many places — but not among the current residents of the site. - Artnet

When And Where Did The First Indo-European Language Develop? There’s A New Argument About That.

"Most linguists think those speakers were nomadic herders on the steppes of Ukraine and Russia about 6,000 years ago. Yet a minority put the origin 2,000 to 3,000 years earlier, (in agricultural) Anatolia. ... Now a new analysis, using techniques borrowed from evolutionary biology, has come down in favor of the latter." - Knowable

Finally We’ve Gotten Around To Recognizing That Some of The “Monuments Men” Were Women

"The Dallas-based foundation honoring the group updated its name ... to recognize their contributions, highlighted their work in a new exhibit ..., and is set to publish for the first time in English a memoir in which one of the women describes spying on the Nazis while working at a Paris museum." - AP

Did A Moscow Auction House Just Sell A Painting Looted From A Ukrainian Museum?

The work in question, sold for roughly $1 million early this week, is Ivan Aivazovsky's painting Moonlit Night. Ukraine's prosecutor-general tweeted that the item had been looted from the Mariupol Museum of Local Lore. The auction house claims that it sold a different Aivazovsky work with the same title. - Artnet

Dallas Arts Groups Nervously Hope Voters Will Approve Ballot Measure With New Arts Funding

"Dallas residents will vote on a $1.25 billion bond package in May, which includes one of the largest allocations for cultural facilities in decades. The Dallas City Council allocated $75.2 million of the package last Wednesday for cultural facilities or a little over 6% of the package." - KERA (Dallas)

Cash-Strapped Metropolitan Opera Has Cut Back On Productions

"(The company) will present 18 productions in 2024-25, matching the current season and pandemic-curtailed 2019-20 for the fewest since 14 in strike-shortened 1980-81." There's only one completely new production (Michael Mayer directing Aïda), plus five which are new-to-the-Met, four of those being contemporary works. - AP

AM Radio Is Dying. Bernie Sanders And Ted Cruz Want To Save It

According to Ford’s internal data gathered from some of its newer vehicles, less than 5 percent of all in-car listening is to AM radio. Which is perhaps why Ford decided last year to drop AM from all of its vehicles, not just EVs. - The Atlantic

TV Industry Contracts And Talent Scrambles For Jobs

On top of fewer shows and virtually no pilots, the available acting gigs pay less than they used to amid rising cost of living, talent sources say. - Deadline

The Unwinding Of Art Publisher Louise Blouin

Ms. Blouin plowed resources into an art news site, ArtInfo, staffing it with young journalists. She also moved into philanthropy with the founding of the Louise T. Blouin Foundation, an international nonprofit organization. - The New York Times

The “Art Crime” Professor And The State Of The Art

"I am frustrated by how often repatriation activists have to reinvent the wheel, which is another reason that I think social media has been so important." - ARTnews

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