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Weekend, April 16-17




Ideas

Will Pills Replace Psychoanalysis? As we learn more about how the brain works, we are starting to understand how moods and feelings are controlled by brain chemistry. So what happens to pschoanalysis - talk therapy - that has been popular since Freud? "Advances in neurology, and especially in pharmacology, have called such therapy into question. When psychological and emotional disturbances can be traced to faulty brain chemistry and corrected with a pill, the idea that sitting and talking can treat a problem such as clinical depression might seem outdated." The Economist 04/15/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 5:13 am

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Visual Arts

Predock To Design $300 Million Human Rights Museum Architect Antoine Predock has been chosen to design the new Human Rights Museum in Winnipeg. "The $300-million museum aims to be the largest human-rights institution and education centre in the world. Scheduled to open in 2009 or 2010, the museum will be built at the historic Forks site in Winnipeg, at the confluence of the Red and Assiniboine Rivers." CBC 04/15/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:43 am

California's Venice Fights Over Nude Sculpture In usually free-wheeling Venice California, a controversy has sprung up over plans to erect a headless nude sculpture. "In keeping with the community's contrarian reputation, unexpected alliances have formed on both sides: Conservative church leaders have joined with staunch feminists in opposition; some old-guard activists have connected with ambitious developers to defend the torso." Los Angeles Times 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:16 am

Couple To Give Birth In Berlin Gallery A Berlin couple plan to deliver their baby in a local art gallery. The manager of the DNA-Galerie in central Berlin said the artistic couple wanted to challenge conventional norms. 'It's a bit of test to see if society can cope'." CNN.com 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:02 am

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Music

Does The Met Need A Star System? The Metropolitan Opera is doing okay, but not as well as it used to. So what would set the buzz just a little bit higher? "Suppose, for the sake of argument, that the Met were to set up shop as a star factory along the lines of MGM in the 1930's, leveraging the reputations of its best talents in its own institutional interest." The New York Times 04/17/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 9:38 am

Davies: Where's The Promised Support For Classical Music? Composer Peter Maxwell Davies is using his position as Master of the Queen's Music to argue loudly for support of classical music. "In his lecture Sir Peter will condemn the fact that the government, despite launching a music manifesto last year which promised greater access to instrumental tuition for schoolchildren, has put no money towards its fulfilment. The Guardian (UK) 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 5:09 am

Opera North Embarks On Rebuilding The UK's Opera North is about to be ousted from its house for a year while the building is upgraded. "The £31.5m, two-phase renovation and building project involves, in the first instance, construction of rehearsal rooms and an overhaul of the auditorium. The second phase will see the 19th-century Assembly Rooms, next to the theatre, converted into a public space that will serve as a recital hall and room for education work." The Guardian (UK) 04/15/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 5:04 am

Cubs Fans, Meet "Ring" Fans (Hey, It's Chicago) "Perhaps it's a stretch to insist that a passion for baseball and a passion for opera are related, though the link is documented. But as Placido Domingo intimated, the link seems most intense in Chicago, where the ache for a baseball victory is palpable (the White Sox are virtually as hapless as the Cubs), where theater, the symphony and the opera are virulent inspirers of local pride, and where a recent newspaper poll asking whether sports or the arts were more thrilling ended in a dead heat." The New York Times 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:29 am

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Arts Issues

Remaking Denver Denver is remaking itself "combining an old pragmatism with an intensifying progressive bent. Some longtime residents are worried the large flock of newcomers are reshaping Denver to resemble the coastal cities they left behind, while others celebrate the new push toward public transit and a vibrant downtown." Christian Science Monitor 04/15/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:59 am

In Australia: Just Give Them The Money! The Sydney Dance Company and Australia's symphony orchestras are underfunded and endangered. Now a popular swell of support is rising up, with Sydney's leading radio host taking up the cause: "Are we cultural slobs, or are we prepared to step up to the plate and get behind our orchestras and the Sydney Dance Company, when we know their cultural worth and the level of community support that they enjoy? So let's forget the debate. Provide the money, and get on with it." The Australian 04/17/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:33 am

A New California Arts Tax? A member of the California state assmbly proposes a dedicated tax to support the arts. "The bill calls for imposing a 1% surcharge on arts and entertainment admissions — a dime for a $10 movie ticket, about 53 cents for admission to Disneyland or a buck for a $100 seat at the opera or a top arena-rock band. That would raise at least $23 million in annual guaranteed funding for the California Arts Council, the state's main arm for fostering nonprofit arts organizations through annual grants. From a peak of more than $30 million four years ago, the Arts Council has seen its annual funding cut to just more than $3 million." Los Angeles Times 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:06 am

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People

The Hardest Working Man In Music Valery Gergiev "has become, since the deaths of Herbert von Karajan and Leonard Bernstein, the most talked-about maestro on the planet. Known also as 'the hardest working man in music,' Gergiev would have his hands full just being artistic director of the Kirov or Mariinsky Theatre, with its 2,000 employees, including an opera company, a ballet company and a giant orchestra. But when he is not in St. Petersburg, he can often be found in New York, at The Met, where he has been principal guest conductor since 1997 (a new three-year contract is about to be signed), or in Rotterdam, where he has been principal conductor of the Philharmonic since 1995, or at one of several festivals he organizes annually." Toronto Star 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:25 am

Ashkenazy Named Liverpool Laureate Pianist and condusctor Vladimir Ashkenazy has been named the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra's first "artist laureate" in Liverpool's capital of culture year, 2008. The Guardian (UK) 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:11 am

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Theatre

The New Vaudeville Is Off-Off "There are still plenty of musicals and one-man shows on Broadway, but the classic boulevard comedy - once the backbone of commercial theater - has become scarce. By contrast, Off Off Broadway, home base for the avant-garde of Big Ideas and Serious Intentions, is filled with vaudevillian high jinks and lowbrow satire." The New York Times 04/17/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 9:42 am

Why Is The 90-Minute Play The Norm? Michael Billington is afraid plays are getting into a rut: "While I've no wish to lay down laws, I find myself increasingly disturbed by the fashionable tyranny of the 90-minute play. It is everywhere; and I believe it is crippling ambition, ironing out contradiction, and effectively de-politicising drama." The Guardian (UK) 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 5:02 am

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Publishing

Did Scholar Plagiarize In cummings Bio? A critic charges in the new issue of Harper's magazine that a major new biography of e.e. cummings has plagiarized extensively from a 25-year-old biography. The New York Times 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 3:57 am

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Media

DVD's Now Drive The Movie Biz "The avalanche of money generated by DVDs has transformed Hollywood, swinging profitability from the multiplex ticket window to the Wal-Mart checkout line. Income from the sale and rental of new movies, television series and classic films accounts for as much as 60% of a major studio's profits, as DVDs have become a consumer electronics phenomenon. Yet even in a business that trumpets every nickel of box-office grosses, a title's precise DVD profits remain one of the industry's best-kept — and, increasingly, most divisive — secrets." Los Angeles Times` 04/17/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 9:49 am

Ontario Asks For Extension On Film Censorship Ban A year ago an Ontario judge stripped the Ontario Film Review Board of its censorship powers, ruling that "sections of the Theatres Act, which require all films and videos to be submitted to the board for approval, violate guarantees of freedom of expression under the Charter and are an unjustified form of prior restraint." Now the Ontario government is seeking an extension of the deadline to make the censorship rule changes... Toronto Star 04/16/05
Posted: 04/17/2005 4:21 am

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