Vincent Van Gogh Was His Own Worst Enemy (Just Read His Letters)

"The tone of the letters consistently is that of a man still aflame after a violent argument, gradually subsiding into a hot puddle of...

LA Opens A Tiny Home Village For Homeless People

“The city keeps investing in these temporary shelters, but everyone acknowledges that there’s nowhere to move to from these shelters. And if it’s not...

Blackface Didn’t Start With American Minstrel Shows. It’s Been Around For Centuries

"The origins of blackface minstrelsy are much older than most people know, with deep roots in the English medieval and Shakespearean theatrical traditions. Understanding...

Machines Are Getting Pretty Damn Good At Writing

In July of 2019, Microsoft invested a billion dollars, which allowed OpenAI to create a supercomputer with two hundred and eighty-five thousand C.P.U. cores,...

If You Don’t Start Until Your Teens, Can You Still Make It In Ballet?

"The ballet world is filled with stories of dancers who first pointed their toes as toddlers and became professionals as teenagers. But what about...

Indonesian Theme Park Ordered To Take Down Lights That Violate Chris Burden Copyright

The theme park had recreated Burden's collection of street lamps that he made for the front of the LA County Museum in Los Angeles....

How Kate Winslet Went About Mastering The Notoriously Tricky Philadelphia Dialect

"Few sounds are as difficult to master as the rounded Os, erratic As, dropped consonants and smushed syllables of the Philadelphia accent — or...

These $63 Million Paintings, Literally Kidnapped And Held For Ransom, Are Now The Subject...

The Shchukin Gallery, which sells Russian art in Paris and New York, is suing a Russian oligarch for damages and attorney fees of $950...

How Pixar Pushes The Boundaries Of Color To Push The Buttons of Moviegoers

"In a way, every filmmaker is really just playing with moving light and color on surfaces. That's the whole ball game, a filmic given....

Germany Takes Care Of Its Opera Houses, Even Through COVID — But There’s A...

"'What we learned in the crisis was that the public purse was very much willing to keep alive in Germany,' says Dieter Haselbach,...

Amsterdam Branch Of The Hermitage In Danger Of Closing Permanently

"After laying off 25% of its full-time staff, including those who had been there since opening day," the only Western European satellite of the...

France’s Cultural Venues Get An Official Reopening Date

"Museums, theatres, cinemas and concert halls will reopen on May 19, along with non-essential shops and outdoor seating at cafes and restaurants, Macron...

Scottish Government Ordered To Reconsider Six-Foot-Distance Reopening Rule After Arts Groups Rebel

Following a personal intervention by the culture minister, "controversial new guidelines which will force Scotland's arenas, concert halls and comedy clubs to impose two...

UK Artists Demand Action On Post-Brexit Touring Crisis

"We are extremely concerned by the lack of progress which has been achieved over the last three months to unravel the mountain of costly...

A $2 Billion Plan Would Transform LA’s Arts District

An Arts District cold-storage plant dating to the 1890s would be replaced with housing, offices, a hotel and shops in a proposal unveiled Thursday...

Theatre Festivals Are Reopening In The UK. But What Should Their Role Be?

Many will grapple with an uncertain theatre landscape and uncertainty over how audiences might behave as society opens up. And this is at a...

Poetry Foundation Picks A New President

Michelle Boone’s appointment "may mark a turning point for the foundation, which has been criticized as insular and slow to respond to changing times....

Bard Center Explores Connections Between Arts And Human Rights

The two-year, interdisciplinary MA plans to host in-person classes at Bard’s Annandale-on-Hudson campus and welcomes “current and aspiring activists, artists, and researchers” who are...

Getting In To A Concert Got A Lot More Complicated In The COVID Protocols

"Gone was the chance to rush to a concert after work and plop down into your seat as the curtain rose. Before they entered...

Is Music Universal Or Not? Depends On What You Mean

Kevin Berger: "In the past two years, the debate over whether music is universal, or even whether that debate has merit, has raged like...

How Imagination Drives Answers

The sense of wonder we get when looking at a star-studded sky is a powerful one, even today an intense and even emotional experience,...

The Young Pipsqueak Professor Who Changed The Way Everyone Thought About Homer’s Epics

"Milman Parry was arguably the most important American classical scholar of the 20th century, by one reckoning 'the Darwin of Homeric Studies.' At age...

Ted Gioia On Finding Creative Success Outside The System

"For many of us in the creative economy, too much energy is spent on working the system. My response has been to operate in...

Because Of COVID, TV Production Had To Change The Way It Works. Some Of...

"It has been a year of struggle and experimentation for the television industry, which has had to learn on the fly while trying to...

Inside James Turrell’s Roden Crater

It is Turrell’s most ambitious project, but also his most personal. He has spent 45 years designing a series of tunnels and chambers inside...