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Fledgling San Antonio Philharmonic Announces Ten-Program Season

The 2023-24 season for the orchestra, founded to fill the void left by the now-closed San Antonio Symphony, will feature two performances of one program each month from September through June. Among the conductors on the roster, all guests, are Sarah Ioannides. Jeffrey Kahane, and Lina González-Granados. - San Antonio Report

Paris’s Pompidou Center To Close In 2025 For Five-Year Renovation

"Although the museum previously announced a long-term shuttering, it was expected to begin this year and last only through 2027. ... During the closure, the Centre Pompidou will focus its efforts on planned satellites in Brussels and Jersey City, which are now slated to open in 2025 and 2026, respectively." - ARTnews

Getty Revives Collaborative Southern-California-Defining Pacific Standard Time Project

PST, as it is known, began in 2011 with the theme of Southern California art history and was reprised in 2017 to focus on Latino and Latin American art. The events will now take place every five years under a new rubric: “PST Art.” - The New York Times

European Movie Box Office Was Up 70 Percent In 2022

Gross box office receipts across the European Union and the U.K. were up 70 percent in 2022 to $5.5 billion (€5.07 billion), with an additional 250 million tickets sold, bringing total attendance figures to 657 million. The return of the studio blockbusters were the main drivers of the theatrical resurgence. - The Hollywood Reporter

Nashville Is A Creative City. It Needs Investment

Today, as costs of living soar and working-class artists still wrestle with the remnants of the pandemic, the creative culture that has been our calling card is facing a crisis. - The Tennessean

Why AI Will Never Compete With Human Creativity

Quality in art is an emergent property: it arises in the doing, in a dialogic dance between the artist and the work. As the work takes shape, it shows the artist what it wants to be. - Persuasion

Science Journals Are Being Overwhelmed By Fake Papers

Journals are awash in a rising tide of scientific manuscripts from paper mills—secretive businesses that allow researchers to pad their publication records by paying for fake papers or undeserved authorship. “Paper mills have made a fortune by basically attacking a system that has had no idea how to cope with this stuff." - Science

Shazam App Now Works With Classical Music, Identifying What You’re Listening To

Users can press the Shazam button to identify a classical music song or search for music. Then, tapping the menu icon on the track page and selecting "Open in Classical" will send the piece to Apple Music Classical. - Apple Insider

This French Tycoon Will Try Almost Anything To Get Regular Folks Interested In Arts And Culture

"To Frédéric Jousset, our most irrational ideas can sometimes be our finest. That thinking has led the 52-year-old thrill-seeker ... to build a giant museum-boat, deploy a fleet of buses to bring 100,000 kids to the British Museum, and tour museum masterpieces around the country in a truck." - Artnet

Commencement Speaker Cancels Amid Investigation At Cleveland Institute Of Music

Anne Midgette, the former longtime classical music critic at the Washington Post, declined an honorary doctorate from the higher education institution and withdrew as keynote speaker at the commencement ceremony on May 20. - The Plain Dealer

Ethereal Words: Famous Writers Huffing Solvents In Late-19th-Century Paris

"The strands of medicine, consciousness expansion, intoxication, addiction, and crime were tightly entangled in fin-de-siècle Paris, where ether and chloroform circulated among bohemian demi-mondaines" such as Guy de Maupassant and Jean Lorrain, in whose works and lives the effects of the fumes were quite evident. - The Public Domain Review

Disney Surprise: Disney+ Loses 4 Million Subscribers

The flagship Disney+ service also lost 4 million paid subscribers during the quarter—its biggest drop ever and a shock to analysts who expected the service to add 1.7 million subscribers. Disney’s shares fell more than 4% following the report. - The Wall Street Journal

A Visit To The World’s Largest Museum Of Latin American Art

The Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires (MALBA), in the city's wealthy and artsy Palermo neighborhood, opened during Argentina's 2001 currency crisis but has survived and thrived — and is now expanding into a second site, due to open next year in the city's northern exurbs. - The Art Newspaper

“Cinderella” Dies: For The First Time In 43 Years, Andrew Lloyd Webber Doesn’t Have A Show On Broadway

"Cinderella" was greeted on Broadway by hostile reviews, garnered zero Tony nominations and struggled at the box office. Last week it played to houses that were only 54 percent full and grossed just $326,303, which made it the lowest-grossing musical on Broadway. - The New York Times

Bollywood Film About ISIS And “Love Jihad” Provokes Firestorm In India

The Kerala Story, set in the southwestern state but produced by Mumbai's Hindi-language industry, purports to tell the story of three out of an alleged 32,000 women lured into marriage by Muslim men ("love jihad," a decades-old conspiracy theory) and taken to join ISIS in Afghanistan. - BBC

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