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  • AUDIENCE

The Art Of Designing Sounds For Our Devices

IDEAS Posted: June 10, 2019 8:29 am

Toss a file and you’ll hear the sound of crumpled paper hitting a wastebasket rim. Lock your iPhone and you’ll hear a padlock snap. As Apple sound designer Hugo Verweij explained at a recent developer conference, “it’s like using a universal language that is already understood by everyone.” – Wired

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IDEAS Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Wired Published: 05.20.19

Meet The Man Who Invented The Languages For ‘Game Of Thrones’

WORDS Posted: May 24, 2019 8:11 am

It took David J. Peterson about six weeks to create Dothraki and a summer in a subsequent year to create Valyrian — and, as with Elvish and Klingon before them, those languages have taken on a life beyond the work they were created for. Indeed, there are now more British people who understand Valyrian than do Scots Gaelic. – The Times (UK)

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WORDS Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in The Times (UK) Published: 05.20.19

33 Lessons From 33 Pros On How To Succeed As A Dancer

DANCE Posted: May 23, 2019 9:02 am

“Dance Magazine spoke to 33 people from all corners of the industry” — among them Paloma Herrera, Judith Jamison, Liz Lerman, David Dorfman, Meredith Monk, Donald Byrd, and Trey McIntyre — “to get their advice on the lessons that could help us all, no matter where we are in our careers.” – Dance Magazine

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DANCE Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Dance Magazine Published: 05.20.19

No One Can See Or Touch These Objects But Ordained Ethiopian Priests. The British Museum *Might* Take Them Out Of Storage And Loan Them To Ethiopia

VISUAL Posted: May 23, 2019 5:34 am

The objects are called tabots, they’re plaques meant to respresent the Ark of the Covenant, and their presence is what makes an Ethiopian church a sacred space. The British Museum has 11 of them, most of them looted by soldiers after the 1868 Battle of Maqdala; since no layperson may see them (including museum curators), they’re kept in a locked basement. The government of Ethiopia has requested their return; a spokesperson says “the suggestion of a long-term loan of the tabots may be discussed.” – The Art Newspaper

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VISUAL Published: 05.20.19, sj

Read the story in The Art Newspaper Published: 05.20.19, sj

Spoiler Alert: Does Knowing The Ending Of A Story Ruin Or Enhance Enjoyment?

AUDIENCE, IDEAS Posted: May 22, 2019 1:31 pm

A 2013 study Offers some answers: “After sneakily revealing the end of short stories when describing them to test subjects, he found that their enjoyment of the fictional narratives actually increased – a conclusion that perhaps isn’t so surprising if you think about how many times you’ve watched your favourite movie or read your favourite book.” – Aeon

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AUDIENCE, IDEAS Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Aeon Published: 05.20.19

Theatre For Deaf Kids And (Especially) Their Hearing Parents

AUDIENCE, THEATRE Posted: May 22, 2019 11:01 am

Director Paula Garfield, mother of two deaf children and deaf herself, created Horrible Histories: Dreadful Deaf “just as much for hearing parents as for their deaf children. It’s a chance for parents and children to experience a BSL-led show together, and for parents in particular (who Garfield explains are often ‘terrified’ when they discover their child is deaf) to see deaf actors happily go about their business, utterly at home in the spotlight.” – The Guardian

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AUDIENCE, THEATRE Published: 05.20.19, sj

Read the story in The Guardian Published: 05.20.19, sj

How To Reshuffle The Historical Great Books Canon

WORDS Posted: May 22, 2019 8:24 am

The “great anthology” collections of books drew readers’ attention to books of the past. But most of the works chosen were from the historical mainstream. How to change it? A couple of publishers are creating new anthologies and purposefully picking writing from outside the tradition. – Vox

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WORDS Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Vox Published: 05.20.19

Staff At Another New York City Arts Mecca Move To Unionize

ISSUES Posted: May 22, 2019 5:32 am

Following in the footsteps of workers at MoMA and the New Museum, employees of the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) have signed a formal petition to join United Auto Workers Local 2110. “While they haven’t yet posed any official demands, several workers [are] alleging worsening working conditions including the reduction of benefits, 401k matching, and healthcare, in addition to transforming full-time jobs to hourly part-time jobs, which render workers ineligible for benefits.” – Hyperallergic

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ISSUES Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Hyperallergic Published: 05.20.19

NYTimes Executive Editor: Most Local Newspapers Will Die Within Five Years

WORDS Posted: May 21, 2019 4:05 pm

Dean Baquet: “The greatest crisis in American journalism is the death of local news . . . I don’t know what the answer is. Their economic model is gone. I think most local newspapers in America are going to die in the next five years, except for the ones that have been bought by a local billionaire.” – Fast Company

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WORDS Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Fast Company Published: 05.20.19

Upon Further Consideration: Maybe New Plans For LACMA Aren’t So Bad

VISUAL Posted: May 21, 2019 2:02 pm

Justin Davidson: “I, too, joined the scoffer’s chorus when the latest designs emerged in March, but the longer I’ve spent studying these paltry materials and pacing the site, the more promise I feel the project has.” – New York Magazine

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VISUAL Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in New York Magazine Published: 05.20.19

Bradley Cooper Talks About Music, Directing, And GaGa

PEOPLE Posted: May 21, 2019 11:28 am

“When Cooper talks about A Star Is Born being deeply personal, you can see why. It’s about art that crosses cultural lines, it’s about a love of music, and it’s about the conflict between art and fame, the way celebrity can box you in and interfere with artistic goals — like his desire to direct.” – Philadelphia Inquirer

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PEOPLE Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Philadelphia Inquirer Published: 05.20.19

Historically, Many Civilizations Have Collapsed. This Time Might Be Different

ISSUES Posted: May 21, 2019 10:31 am

In the past, civilization often declined gradually. Also, sometimes the decline was good for some members of society as their rulers were overthrown. But we live in a much more interconnected world, and our fates are intertwined. – Aeon

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ISSUES Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Aeon Published: 05.20.19

‘Out’ Magazine Has Been Stiffing Freelancers, And Its Top Editor Is Threatening To Quit

WORDS Posted: May 21, 2019 6:16 am

“Over the past year, the magazine has been locked in a bizarre intra-company battle between writers and photographers with a web of companies and individuals all seemingly blaming each other for the missed payments.” – The Daily Beast

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WORDS Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in The Daily Beast Published: 05.20.19

Columbus Dance Theatre Has Funding Taken Away By Local Council

DANCE Posted: May 21, 2019 6:01 am

“Amid a year of turmoil, the Columbus Dance Theatre will enter its 2019-20 season without support from the Greater Columbus Arts Council. … Spokeswoman Jami Goldstein said of Columbus Dance Theatre that ‘the concerns included missed deadlines, a balance of payroll taxes owed dating back to 2012, increased debt, negative net assets, leadership misconduct and lack of board recruitment and oversight.'” – The Columbus Dispatch

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DANCE Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Columbus Dispatch Published: 05.20.19

The Louvre’s Attempts To Get Works Loaned For Its Leonardo 500 Show Aren’t Going So Well

VISUAL Posted: May 21, 2019 5:47 am

First of all, there’s the on-again, off-again attempt by Italy’s new-ish nationalist government to make da Vinci and the Louvre show a cultural battleground. But there are also the perpetually uncertain status of loans from the Hermitage (again, politics), the fact that works on wood are too fragile to travel, and the mysteriously missing Salvator Mundi. – The Art Newspaper

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VISUAL Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in The Art Newspaper Published: 05.20.19

Making Opera With Homeless People In England’s Rust Belt

MUSIC Posted: May 21, 2019 5:03 am

“A charity which helps tackle homelessness and mental health issues has been hailed for changing people’s lives. Streetwise Opera runs musical groups in [the North Yorkshire city of] Middlesbrough, giving the singers confidence to move on with their lives.” (video) – BBC

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MUSIC Published: 05.20.19, sjm

Read the story in BBC Published: 05.20.19, sjm

Funding Cuts Force UK Theatres To Earn More Of Their Budgets

THEATRE Posted: May 20, 2019 3:05 pm

The most recent annual survey data from NPOs found they continued to make more of their own income through ticket sales and other activity in 2017/18, with earned income representing 55% of total revenue and generating £889.6 million. This represented a 4.8% increase on the previous year. – The Stage

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THEATRE Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in The Stage Published: 05.20.19

A NY City Ballet Star Returns – Unannounced And Under A Cloud

DANCE Posted: May 20, 2019 2:31 pm

Brian Siebert: “In short, this rushed, business-as-usual reintroduction of Amar Ramasar won’t do, though I understand the company’s desire to downplay it.”  – The New York Times

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DANCE Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in The New York Times Published: 05.20.19

Have Music Copyright Suits Gotten Out Of Hand?

MUSIC Posted: May 20, 2019 1:32 pm


There’s been a surge in copyright claims ever since Marvin Gaye’s family sued Robin Thicke over the single Blurred Lines in 2015. “The odds of getting sued in this day and age are so high, we’re going to get to a point where nobody can write anything – because everything will be derivative of something else. – BBC

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MUSIC Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in BBC Published: 05.20.19

Transcending The Biological: Consider The Pointe Shoe

DANCE Posted: May 20, 2019 12:02 pm

“Pointe shoes are a strangely enduring anachronism that epitomises the enduring desire for ballerinas to embody the unnatural, to portray an illusion. And their intention as a tool to evoke ethereal beings is in direct contrast with their actual biological impact on very real humans.” – Aeon

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DANCE Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Aeon Published: 05.20.19

The Good Knife

AJBlogs Posted: May 20, 2019 11:57 am

I’d never had a knife in my life like the new nakiri. It was crackling sharp (though not for long), but something else made it exceptional: the calm ease with which the knife held my hand, as well as the uncanny confidence it gave me. Once the blade came within range of a leek or rolling radish, it knew what to do. – Jeff Weinstein

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AJBlogs Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Jeff Weinstein Published: 05.20.19

Musicals I … (fill in the blank)

AJBlogs Posted: May 20, 2019 11:56 am

Here is a real meme, plucked from the Web over the weekend, filled out, and posted solely for your amusement. – Terry Teachout

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AJBlogs Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in Terry Teachout Published: 05.20.19

New Financing, New Partners: Woodstock 50 Is On Again?

MUSIC Posted: May 20, 2019 11:29 am

Perhaps. The music festival, planned to commemorate the iconic original fifty years ago, has been plagued by financing and organizational issues. But after a favorable court ruling and new partners, organizers say it’s on again. – New York Magazine

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MUSIC Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in New York Magazine Published: 05.20.19

‘Bound To Win’: Jill Lepore On The Evolution Of The Presidential-Candidate Memoir

WORDS Posted: May 17, 2019 7:03 am

“Before the nineteen-sixties, the books Presidential candidates wrote weren’t usually memoirs; they were collections of speeches.” Now? “Sometimes Presidential candidates write books about their vision for the country; sometimes they write books about themselves. And then, sometimes, their vision for America is a vision of themselves.” – The New Yorker

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WORDS Published: 05.20.19

Read the story in The New Yorker Published: 05.20.19

  • Pandemic Polemics: Metropolitan Museum’s Off-Key NPR Message vs. Cleveland’s Harmonious Storage Show
    The Metropolitan Museum’s premature revelation that it might take advantage of the Association of Art Museum Directors’ relaxed deaccession standards, by selling art to help pay for “care of the collection,” was... Read more
    Source: CultureGrrl Published on: 2021-03-01
  • Just because: Flannery O’Connor appears in a 1932 newsreel
    A five-year-old Flannery O’Connor appears in a rare 1932 Pathé newsreel segment about a chicken she taught to walk backwards: (This is the latest in a series of arts- and history-related videos... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-03-01
  • Almanac: Flannery O’Connor on writers and their childhood
    “I think you probably collect most of your experience as a child—when you really had nothing else to do—and then transfer it to other situations when you write. Flannery O’Connor, letter to... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-03-01
  • Afa Dworkin Talks Diversity & Arts Leadership
    Afa Dworkin, President & Artistic Director of the Sphinx Organization speaks about the importance of diversity in the arts and leadership attributes that empower organizational excellence.... Read more
    Source: Aaron Dworkin Published on: 2021-02-27
  • More on live jazz streaming, Chicago to Zurich and beyond
    Saxophonist Chico Freeman, a third-generation Chicago jazzman, live-streams his new international band from Zurich on Saturday 2/27 at 2:30 pm ET, and I moderated their Zoom talk of coming together for the... Read more
    Source: Jazz Beyond Jazz Published on: 2021-02-26
  • Joseph Brodsky on the Life of Books
    On the whole, books are less finite than ourselves. Even the worst among them outlast their authors. ... Often they sit on the shelves absorbing dust long after the writer himself has... Read more
    Source: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-02-26
  • Simply splendid Sondheim
    In today’s Wall Street Journal, I review Signature Theatre’s Simply Sondheim and the Mint Theater Company revival of Hazel Ellis’ Women Without Men. Here’s an excerpt. *  *  * Lovers of large-scale musicals have been... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-02-26
  • Almanac: Tennessee Williams on theatrical characters
    “The theatre is a place where one has time for the problems of people to whom one would show the door if they came to one’s office for a job.” Tennessee Williams... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-02-26
  • What Patricia Highsmith wrought
    In today’s Wall Street Journal, I write about Patricia Highsmith. Here’s an excerpt. *  *  * The next time you watch a movie or TV series about a heartless serial killer, say a silent word... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-02-25
  • Almanac: Samuel Butler on sickness
    “I reckon being ill as one of the great pleasures of life, provided one is not too ill and is not obliged to work till one is better.” Samuel Butler, The Way of... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-02-25
  • The Relativity Switch
    This story may sound like a metaphor. But it’s actually a case-in-point: When preparing to launch the Navigation Technology Satellite 2 (NTS-2) in 1977, the NAVSTAR GPS engineering team was in a... Read more
    Source: The Artful Manager Published on: 2021-02-24
  • Lawrence Ferlinghetti Dies at 101 His Pictures of a Gone World Remain
    A literary era passes. It was already past, yet it still has influence. Maybe the biggest. Because ArtsJournal was down yesterday—I know not why—I couldn’t post this. The world didn't miss it.... Read more
    Source: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-02-24
  • Snapshot: Lieber and Stoller appear on What’s My Line?
    Jerry Lieber and Mike Stoller appear as the mystery guests on What’s My Line? John Daly is the host and the panelists include Arlene Francis, Dorothy Kilgallen, and Vincent Price. This episode was originally... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-02-24
  • Almanac: Robert Benchley on sneezing
    “I am pretty sure that, if you will be quite honest, you will admit that a good rousing sneeze, one that tears open your collar and throws your hair into your eyes,... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-02-24
  • Gary Lee-Nova: ‘Oblique Trajectories’
    A survey exhibition of the artist's work over more than four decades. The exhibition at the Burnaby Art Gallery in Burnaby, B.C., Canada, will run until April 18, 2021.... Read more
    Source: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-02-23
  • “Black Art’s” Blackout: Who’s Absent from HBO’s Survey of “Today’s Top African American Artists”?
    We haven’t reached the promised land. We’ve got a long way to go. The above marching orders, alluding to the words of Martin Luther King Jr.‘s last speech, are the last words... Read more
    Source: CultureGrrl Published on: 2021-02-23
  • Lookback: on not getting too big for your britches
    From 2010: The twin successes of Pops and The Letter have left me with an exhilarating sense of possibility, a feeling that I can do anything to which I set my mind. When you’re feeling that... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-02-23
  • Almanac: Graham Greene on the danger of changing standards
    “It is a great danger for everyone when what is shocking changes.” Graham Greene, Our Man in Havana Continue reading Almanac: Graham Greene on the danger of changing standards at About Last... Read more
    Source: About Last Night Published on: 2021-02-23
  • The Library Is Closed
    ...and thoughts come in verse: 'The stone lion at the gate / wears a mask like mine. / This is where I used to wait / for books that bind / that... Read more
    Source: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-02-21
  • The Sleep of Dreams
    A contemporary artist visualizes an idea by the 17th-century 'father of modern philosophy.'... Read more
    Source: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-02-21
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