Thursday, August 01, 2019

Our Arts Patronage Problem – The Scandals And Those Who Fund

The 2019 Audubon Photography Awards: Winners – “Get ready to be amazed by this year’s selection of eye-popping images.”

The world’s top tourism spots want you to stay home next holiday season Scroll

“You can always edit a bad page. You can’t edit a blank page.”
― Jodi Picoult


Breakout Hit: Lil Nas X Breaks 23-Year-Old Record For Most Weeks At The Top Of The Billboard Pop Charts

The breakthrough rapper smashed the record this week when the track spent its 17th week on top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart – the only song to do so since Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men’s duet One Sweet Day set the record in 1996. – The Guardian


Leo Tolstoy on Kindness and the Measure of Love


“Nothing can make our life, or the lives of other people, more beautiful than perpetual kindness.”


“Practice kindness all day to everybody and you will realize you’re already in heaven now,” Jack Kerouac wrote in abeautiful letter to his first wife and lifelong friend. Somehow, despite our sincerest intentions, we repeatedly fall short of this earthly divinity, so readily available yet so easily elusive. And yet in our culture, it has been aptly observed,“we are never as kind as we want to be, but nothing outrages us more than people being unkind to us.” In his stirring Syracuse commencement address, George Saunders confessed with unsentimental ruefulness: “What I regret most in my life are failures of kindness.” I doubt any decent person, upon candid reflection, would rank any other species of regret higher. To be human is to leap toward our highest moral potentialities, only to trip over the foibled actualities of our reflexive patterns. To be a good human is to keep leaping anyway.












Four Members Of All-Female Afghan Orchestra Disappear During European Tour



Zohra, a 35-member orchestra, performed at a concert on July 13 at the Pohoda Festival in the [Slovakian] town of Trencin … Four members went missing from their hotel on July 14, police said.” – Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty


“It’s a beautiful thing, the destruction of words.”






A Fierce (And Weird) Battle Over Who Gets To Be New Hampshire’s Poet Laureate

Research: How You Watch TV Shapes How You Think

The harm seems to come not so much from the content itself but from the fact that it replaces more enlightening ways of spending time. – The New York Times

“At issue is a controversial nominee for state laureate, private negotiations with a governor who says he’s ‘not a poetry expert,’ and a bit of verse that an elected official described to me as ‘a misogynistic poem about sex with Condoleezza Rice on Air Force One.'” – Slate

Does The Shed Suggest New York Is Looking For Something Different In Its Arts?


“It seems there is a divergence in our artistic landscape, where we value trend and zeitgeist as highly as artistic growth and creative development. The Shed serves as a manifestation of this tension between art and spectacle, highbrow and lowbrow. My suggestion is that we view the construction of the Shed as a call for change on an artistic level—a sign that audiences and funders are ready and searching for new ideas and, more importantly, a new approach to exacting those ideas.” – Howlround

Our Arts Patronage Problem – The Scandals And Those Who Fund


Keeping track of all the scandals around museum patronage in the United States in the last few years is no easy feat. There are scandals overreal estate moneyprison moneyoil moneyfunding by climate change deniersfunding by supporters of far-right causes in generalKoch Brothers funding, and more. And as they multiply, the scandals begin, more and more, to become less about individuals and more about the system. Sometimes voiced out loud but mainly behind the scenes, the question for museums is: Where will the money come from? – Momus


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