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Five Stories From Last Week’s AJ You Shouldn’t Miss (Meaning Of Art Edition)

June 20, 2016 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

Can computers help us better understand art? What the world thinks is creative. Why is it still okay to discriminate against stupid people? How gaming is taking over. And the "Rotten Tomatoes of Books" reveals a problem with how books are reviewed. What's New In Understanding Art: How do we understand art? Of course there are the tangible technical qualities anyone can see. But there are also … [Read more...]

This Week’s Top AJ Stories, When Blockbusters Fail Edition

June 12, 2016 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

Maybe our biggest problem with teaching music in schools is the way we teach it. Hollywood thought making blockbusters would save it. Surprise! How charity auctions take advantage of artists. The internet is changing what we value in the world. And the wonder of Bill T. Jones... Music Teacher: We should change the way we teach music in schools Currently we teach it based on classical music … [Read more...]

Sorry – A (Respectful) Dissent On A Well-Meaning Statement On Arts Equity

June 6, 2016 by Douglas McLennan 5 Comments

I would say based on the thousands of stories we sift through every day at ArtsJournal, diversity and cultural equity (along with funding) are right now probably the biggest issues being talked about in the arts community. And rightly so. It's astonishing to see article after article documenting  inequalities in gender, race, sexual orientation and age in our cultural industries. The … [Read more...]

Five Highlights From This Week’s ArtsJournal, College Crisis Edition

June 5, 2016 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

A new music director for the Met Opera, and what it means. A looming college crisis and what it means. How art is changing politics. Is art driving ISIS? And flooding threatened the Louvre, D'Orsay. Metropolitan Opera Gets Its First New Music Director Since 1976: Confirming a fairly open secret, the Met chooses Yannick Nézet-Séguin, music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra. But there are … [Read more...]

Five Highlights From Last Week’s AJ, Endless Arts Planning Edition

May 29, 2016 by Douglas McLennan 1 Comment

When arts planning becomes the point rather than the process. Why your creativity may be dependent on being bored. Are MFA degrees a waste of time if you want to be an artist? Broadway breaks more records. And three new ways to see traditional art. Boston Arts Plan - All Process, No Beef? The new mayor of Boston aspired to to his city being an arts town, a place where culture flourishes. So … [Read more...]

Five Stories From Last Week’s AJ: Likes And Dislikes Edition

May 22, 2016 by Douglas McLennan 8 Comments

Why aren't the arts something we can all get behind? Maybe it's somewhere in the psychology of how we like what we like? Revealed: nobody reads arts reviews anymore (says an editor who hates to run them but wants to "support" the arts). Where the money is in music (hint: not for musicians). And is "This American Life" undermining public radio? Go Team! Why Don't The Arts Unite Communities … [Read more...]

Doug’s List: Last Week’s Eye-Catching AJ Stories, Playing God Edition

May 15, 2016 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

Disrupting the orchestra model, doing away with artistic directors, a cure for what ails the Met Opera, how our ideas about knowledge are changing, and recreating Leonardo (no kidding!) What does Disruption Look Like In The Orchestra World? Does it seem odd that there have been so few experiments in orchestra models? Of course many of the things that make an orchestra are fixed - musicians, … [Read more...]

Doug’s List: Highlights From This Week’s AJ, Cautionary Tale Edition

May 8, 2016 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

This week: a great example of the de-monetization of audience, the deadening burden of being a critic, some contradictions about how we use data in the arts, why technology is complicating our fetishment of original art, and remembering a time before words were processed and forever changed how we write. Cautionary Tale: I created a video. It went viral with hundreds of millions of views, but … [Read more...]

Five Notable Stories From Last Week’s ArtsJournal: Alternative Reality Edition

May 2, 2016 by Douglas McLennan 2 Comments

What Does "Inclusive" Mean To A Performing Arts Center? The Kennedy Center held an event to talk about inclusiveness of its offerings. But no one seemed to be able to define exactly what that means. Why is it that many in the arts believe that "inclusiveness" means getting more people to define culture the way in ways that might not feel inclusive to a lot of people? Is inclusivity merely another … [Read more...]

Money, Diversity And Power: This Week’s Top AJ Stories (04.24.16)

April 24, 2016 by Douglas McLennan 1 Comment

This week: Do the Met Museum's financial woes say anything about today's museum business? Who wants to see art in mobbed museums anyway? Prince's career as a control freak. A realignment of power in cities. And diversity as fetish object. Met Versus MoMA: Lessons About Popular Taste In The Balance Sheets? Last week the Metropolitan Museum announced a deficit of about $10 million and plans to … [Read more...]

Ballet Brawl In Romania – This Week’s Biggest AJ Arts Stories (04.17.16)

April 17, 2016 by Douglas McLennan 2 Comments

This week, a groundbreaking deal for Broadway actors and dancers, James Levine finally decides to retire from the Met Opera, a debacle at the National Ballet of Romania that quickly escalated to involve the country's Prime Minister, a warning about fetishizing "creativity" as the key to success, and a cautionary question about what machine intelligence might look like. James Levine finally … [Read more...]

Art-Is-Always-Messy Edition: Five Highlights From This Week’s ArtsJournal 04.10.16

April 10, 2016 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

What business success in theatre looks like, our over-obsession with creativity as a catch-all answer to success, how the art markets really work, how taste gets confused with pretension, and machines' inroads to art. Theatre is a big gamble but when it hits it REALLY hits: We're used to being dazzled by the huge budgets and box office of movies. Theatre not so much. Mostly, theatre is a risky … [Read more...]

What Is Greatness? – Six Highlights From This Week’s ArtsJournal 04.03.16

April 3, 2016 by Douglas McLennan 1 Comment

A number of stories this week tackled the meaning of greatness in art (even if they didn't explicitly frame it that way). A changing culture requires changing definitions of greatness, but defining "great" has often been problematic. Wealthy patrons have funded great art throughout history. And of course the wealthy have had many different reasons for their patronage. One of the strongest was … [Read more...]

The Existential Arts – This Week’s Best Reads On ArtsJournal (03.27.16)

March 27, 2016 by Douglas McLennan 3 Comments

This week's best reads hover around existential questions. What arts organizations should exist? Does truth exist? Can theatre really change anything, and should it even try? Canada's new government makes an existential bet on culture. And do our tools define art? Arts Organizations At The Existential Crossroads: Some have argued that when arts organizations have outlived their missions, they … [Read more...]

The Five Most-Interesting Stories We Collected On ArtsJournal This Week 03.20.16

March 20, 2016 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

My picks for the five most interesting stories we gathered this week. The Arts' Existential Challenge Arts organizations, along with every business sector trying to cope with sweeping changes wrought by the internet, are struggling with how to reinvent for the future while not alienating its past or present. "What's the answer? Some would say that reinvention invariably is brutal — in the … [Read more...]

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Douglas McLennan

I’m the founder and editor of ArtsJournal, which was founded in September 1999 and aggregates arts and culture news from all over the internet. The site is also home to some 60 arts bloggers. I’m a … [Read More...]

About diacritical

Our culture is undergoing profound changes. Our expectations for what culture can (or should) do for us are changing. Relationships between those who make and distribute culture and those who consume it are changing. And our definitions of what artists are, how they work, and how we access them and their work are changing. So... [Read more]

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  • David E. Myers on How Should we Measure Art?: “A sophisticated approach to “measuring” incorporates all of the above, with clear delineation of how each plays a part if…” Nov 3, 16:20
  • Tom Corddry on How Should we Measure Art?: “Reading this brought to mind John Cage’s delineation of different ways to experience a Beethoven symphony–live in concert, on a…” Nov 3, 01:58
  • Abdul Rehman on A Framework for Thinking about Disruption of the Arts by AI: “This article brilliantly explores how AI is set to revolutionize everything, much like the digital revolution did. AI tools can…” Jun 8, 03:49
  • Richard Voorhaar on Classical Music has Lost a Generation. Blame the Metadata (in part): “I think we’ve lost several generations. My parents generation was the last that really supported, and knre something about classical…” May 15, 12:08
  • Franklin on How Subsidy for Big Tech Wrecked the Arts (and Journalism): “Language, yes; really characterization. Investments and margins don’t become subsidies and taxes whether or not markets “are working” – I’m…” Mar 8, 07:13
  • Douglas McLennan on How Subsidy for Big Tech Wrecked the Arts (and Journalism): “So what you’re arguing is language? – that investments aren’t subsidies and margins aren’t taxes? Sure, when markets are working.…” Mar 7, 21:42
  • Franklin on How Subsidy for Big Tech Wrecked the Arts (and Journalism): “Doug: You can, if you like, buy a jailbroken Android, install GrapheneOS, and sideload apps from the open-source ecosystem at…” Mar 7, 16:17
  • Douglas McLennan on How Subsidy for Big Tech Wrecked the Arts (and Journalism): “Franklin: Thanks for the response, But a few points: My Chinese solar panel example was to make the point that…” Mar 7, 12:46
  • Steven Lavine on How Subsidy for Big Tech Wrecked the Arts (and Journalism): “Terrific essay, with no prospect to a different future” Mar 7, 09:53
  • Franklin on How Subsidy for Big Tech Wrecked the Arts (and Journalism): “The economics of this essay are incoherent. The CCP was creating yuan ex nihilo and flooding it into domestically produced…” Mar 7, 08:49

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  • When “Vacuum Cleaner for Babies” Beat Taylor Swift: Fixing the Music Streaming Problem

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