Issues: March 2001

Friday March 30

THANKLESS JOBS: Who wants to head up an arts organization these day? Really. Do it poorly and the world dissects your mistakes. Do it well and it can be even worse. ArtsJournal.com 03/30/01

ONLINE CULTURE: The British government wants to get the country’s cultural institutions online and is expected to spend £150 million to fund Culture Online, a project to bring art to the people. The government conceded that with the downturn in the commercial dot.coms sector, that “venture capitalists are unlikely to fund major new internet start-ups aimed at culture and learning in the near future, and that it is up to government to take the initiative.” The Art Newspaper 03/30/01

Wednesday March 28

GOVERNMENT AND THE ARTS: The British government’s massive new arts funding program inserts the government into the business of culture to an unprecedented degree. “In four years, Tony Blair has gone from hosting Cool Britannia parties to investing an extra £100 million in the traditional arts.” But shouldn’t artists be protesting? The Telegraph (London) 03/28/01

MORE SCOTTISH OPERA: The Edinburgh Festival announces its new season – and it contains more opera productions – 10-12 – than in recent memory. Why? Festival surveys show that opera audiences make special trips for opera, and not so much for the popular music that has marked recent festivals. Glasgow Herald 03/18/01

Tuesday March 27

VILAR STRIKES AGAIN: Alberto Vilar has “pledged $20 million to New York University for an arts scholarship program that will draw students from around the world to New York City. The initiative, which is to be formally announced later this week, is to be modeled on the Rhodes scholarship program.” The New York Times 03/27/01 (one-time registration required for access)

WHAT DOES POP CULTURE OWE THE ARTS? The NYTimes’ Frank Rich delivers this year’s Nancy Hanks address: Entertainment is stealing our best artistic directors and creative artists. “There’s nothing wrong with this per se, but you’d think some of these companies doing the raiding might want to give back—not just in terms of what they may hand out in the way of donations to cultural institutions, but in terms of how they respect, acknowledge and further America’s arts in the many cultural spaces they rule.” ArtsUSA.org (PDF) 03/19/01

GOING GREEK: Nearly everything these days seems to be based on Greek myth. Highbrow culture, lowbrow music videos, and even many of those new-fangled corporate names are nothing more than adaptations of some of the oldest stories on record. Why the interest, and what does it say about our society? Hartford Courant 03/27/01

Monday March 26

AUSTRALIA’S ARTS AWARDS: The Helpmann Awards – the Australian performing arts answer to the Tony Awards in New York and the Oliviers in London – are presented. The Olympic Games’ opening ceremony won the Best Special Event/Performance prize. Sydney Morning Herald 03/26/01

Sunday March 25

RECONCILING THE PAST: Ever since the horrors of the Third Reich led to Germany’s decimation and subsequent isolation nearly 60 years ago, German artists have found themselves in a delicate position. Prior to the rise of National Socialism (Naziism), Germans had claimed a certain cultural superiority, and, in fields like music, it was hard to debate them. But can a country that spent more than a decade destroying, stealing, and desecrating art of all kinds ever again claim to be an artistic paradise? Frankfurter Allgemaine Zeitung 03/23/01

Thursday March 22

BIG BRITISH BUDGET BOOST: The Arts Council of England has announced huge increases in funding for several of the nation’s top arts organizations, including the Royal National Theatre, the English National Ballet, and the Royal Shakespeare Company, which will see a whopping £3 million increase in its budget. “Peter Hewitt, chief executive of the Arts Council of England, told BBC News Online: ‘This is the best budget for the arts for a very long time. We hope the funding will energise and re-invigorate the arts.'” BBC 03/22/01

FOOT-AND-MOUTH AND THE ARTS: Arts organizations are being affected by Britain’s outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease. Several rural museums have closed down while the disease is not contained, and the prominent Hay Festival is considering canceling this year’s edition. BBC 03/22/01

Wednesday March 21

FILTERING FREE SPEECH? A controversial new law requires public libraries to use internet filtering software (to screen for porn) or lose federal funding. The ACLU and the American Library Association is suing to overturn the law. “The law is unconstitutional because it’s requiring public libraries to use blocking software that will result in constitutionally protected material being blocked.” Wired 03/21/01

NEW APPROACH TO CULTURE: The British government ambitious new plan for cultural funding means to make over the country’s cultural landscape. “As well as new funds to back exceptional talent, the plan includes giving every primary school pupil the chance to learn to play a musical instrument.” BBC 03/20/01

  • MAKING PLANS: Plan guarantees funding for six years to selected arts groups. That way, theatres, opera companies and the like will be able to plan ahead. The Independent (London) 03/21/01
  • ALL IN FAVOR… “We’re now looking five to seven years ahead so working with the government on the same timescale could give us enormous freedom – the chance to develop effective partnerships with education, business and other artists.” The Guardian (London) 03/21/01
  • Previously: HERO FOR THE ARTS: Britain’s Labour Party has delivered for arts and culture. “General funding for the arts – that 60 per cent increase over five years – is said to be set to increase yet further. The recent £25 million extra for more than 190 regional theatres is worth dwelling on. Not only have these theatres received a life-changing subsidy, but the money has been deployed shrewdly.” The Observer (London) 03/18/01

NO CUT IN NEA FUNDS… YET: The White House budget for 2002 includes $120 million for the National Endowment for the Arts, the same as last year. “Still, no one at the NEA is gloating. Some Washington observers say that while Bush hasn’t proposed immediate cuts to the NEA, it’s likely that such cuts will be made down the road, particularly considering the president’s tax plan.” Washington Post 03/21/01

$12 MILLION FOR ARTS ED: Annenberg Foundation gives $12 million to New York schools for arts education. So far Annenberg money has helped form partnerships between 80 public schools and 135 cultural institutions. Christian Science Monitor 03/20/01

Monday March 19

AXING THE A&E SECTION: The Minnesota Daily, which boasts of being the largest college newspaper in America, recently axed its A&E coverage, which managers said was “little read” and not attracting advertisers. Yet the section had many fans and “has often rivaled the Twin Cities’ newspapers as the voice of the city’s arts scene. It had continued that tradition recently by being, in an increasingly conventional campus paper, a sort of all-arts Village Voice Literary Supplement.” Chronicle of Higher Education 03/19/01

ENGLISH THE CONQUEROR: “If you put to any European the simple proposition that everyone should speak English, you probably would not be surprised to learn that 70 per cent of Britons and 82 per cent of Dutch people concur. You might raise an eyebrow at the 76 per cent of Italians who share this point of view. But you would be gobsmacked – dare I say bouleversé ? – to discover that in France, home of that supremely civilising international force la langue Française, an astounding 66 per cent of those questioned in a Eurobarometer poll, said it would be a good idea if the people of Europe spoke English.” The Observer (London) 03/18/01

HERO FOR THE ARTS: Britain’s Labour Party has delivered for arts and culture. “General funding for the arts – that 60 per cent increase over five years – is said to be set to increase yet further. The recent £25 million extra for more than 190 regional theatres is worth dwelling on. Not only have these theatres received a life-changing subsidy, but the money has been deployed shrewdly.” The Observer (London) 03/18/01

Sunday March 18

AND IT’S MORE APPETIZING THAN BROCCOLI: New research has demonstrated what most of the world has always assumed to be true – exposure to art is good for you. Several recent studies have shown that children for whom art was a regular part of life developed greater cognitive skill and generally became more well-rounded individuals. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 03/18/01

A LEGACY TAKEN FOR GRANTED? Ninette de Valois’s death last week was strangely under-reported, even though she had been a major figure in Britain’s cultural life. Maybe, at the age of 102, she had simply outlived her fame. But “it is de Valois’s misfortune to die at a time when our culture has shifted so profoundly that we are in danger of taking that legacy for granted. Access has replaced excellence as a buzzword; celebrity for its own sake is more important than fame for achievement; ‘popular’ is a value judgement rather than a description.” The Telegraph (London) 03/17/01

BEANTOWN EXPANSION: Boston is the aristocrat of American cities, and the sheer age and history of the place have been enough to guarantee the continued existence of countless venerable arts organizations. But Boston lags far behind most other cities in the amount of space available to artists – no new theatres have been built in nearly 100 years, for instance. Now, an ambitious plan attempts to make up for lost time and space. Boston Herald 03/18/01

Friday March 16

BACK AT TOOTHLESS CRITICS: Why the thumbs up/down review has damaged critics’ power to set agendas. ArtsJournal.com 3/14/01

TAKING THE BBC TO TASK: Writers AS Byatt and Alan Plater have launched a public attack against the BBC for failing to respect artists’ rights and using inequitable contracts which force artists to waive all rights to their work in perpetuity. “They can’t decide whether they’re a public service or market-driven organisation — they’re public service when they’re buying and market-driven when they’re selling.” The Independent (London) 3/16/01

Thursday March 15

SCIENCE OVER ART: Is it true that  “the arts and humanities have always reflected the society they are part of, but over the last one hundred years, they have spoken with less and less confidence?” Author Peter Watson contends that the intellectual history of the 20th Century is that of coming to terms with the ideas of science rather than the arts… Christian Science Monitor 03/15/01

COMMON CENS(OR): “The conventional wisdom has it that American censors have always been right-wing, at least in the days before political correctness. But Conservatives and progressives have made common cause in many of the moral crusades and moral panics of the last century – and in its broad outlines, one can see the not-quite-unusual alliance taking shape even earlier.” Reason 03/01

THE VALUE OF ART? Britain’s creative sector, including music, design and advertising, generates more than £100 billion a year and employs more than one million people, according to an audit published by the secretary of state for culture.” The Guardian (London) 03/14/01

NOT ALL EXPLANATIONS ARE CREATED EQUAL: After the Quebec minister of culture said that “there’s really no such thing as an Ontario culture,” people in Ontario took umbrage. The Premier of Quebec explained that what his culture minister meant was that Ontario, unlike Quebec, does not have a “national” culture, because it is not a nation. CBC 03/14/01

HOW THE MIGHTY… King David is the latest hero to fall victim to historians and archaeologists. “If David existed at all, he was little more than a tribal chieftain…. David was hardly the flawed-but-noble hero depicted in the Scriptures. He was more likely a ruthless, homicidal scoundrel whose legend was later embellished and sanitized to give a demoralized people a much needed folk hero.” US News 03/19/01

AWARDING ATTENTION: Canada inaugurates a set of national arts awards with the hope of getting artists some notoriety. “What’s afoot is an effort to undermine that very provincial thing that happens here – that we don’t accept our own until they’ve been recognized elsewhere. I do think that tendency for validation is one that we should challenge.” National Post (Canada) 03/15/01

Wednesday March 14

CALIFORNIA – LAND OF THE ARTS? At a time when other governments are reducing their financial support for the arts, California is making huge gains. Last year, the California Arts Council got an amazing 60 percent ($12 million) boost to its $20-million budget. In January, the stat’s governmor proposed an additional $27.3 million for the coming year. “If approved, California’s $59.3-million arts budget could emerge as the highest in the country, exceeding New York’s current $56.7 million.” Los Angeles Times 03/14/01

CRITICAL DISCONNECT: Is political correctness ruining the art of criticism? “The conventions of free speech are being narrowed in real life to the point where it is becoming impossible to describe what you see and hear with any degree of verisimilitude. What earthly point is there in attempting to describe or criticise art in any terms except nice and not-nice?” Culturekiosque 03/13/01

PORTRAIT OF POWER: A recent survey of Australian arts organizations’ boards of trustees shows that they are overwhelmingly comprised of bankers, lawyers, and advertising execs. “This web forms the power base of the arts in Australia.” And the artists themselves? “More in the back circle than the front stalls.” Sydney Morning Herald 3/14/01

Tuesday March 13

BALLET LAWSUIT DISMISSED: A Massachusetts judge has thrown out a lawsuit brought against the Boston Ballet by the mother of a former company dancer who died of anorexia. The suit claimed that ballet officials told the young dancer she had to lose weight to join the troupe: Heidi Guenther was 5’3″, and weighed 93 pounds when she died in 1997. Nando Times (AP) 03/13/01

ARTISTS THAT PAY FOR THEMSELVES: The British government’s cultural policy in the past five years expects that artists “play more functional roles in society: assisting in the improvement of public health, race relations, urban living, special education, welfare-to-work programs, and of course, economic development. Above all, the new policies require funded arts activities to show a good return on investment (ROI, as the MBAs put it). Naturally, most artists saw these functions as more appropriate to entrepreneurial social workers. The Establishment toffs, colloquially known as ‘luvvies’ (as in ‘We just love the arts’), lost no time in vilifying Blair’s cultural nepmen as ruthless philistines.” ArtForum 03/12/01

WILL VACATE FOR MONEY… Performances in the Sydney Opera House will be suspended for four days later this month to permit an insurance company to rent out the building. “The move, whereby the insurance company has effectively paid the two theatre organisations not to perform, is believed to be unprecedented at the Opera House.” It’s part of the funding realities for Australian arts groups these days. Sydney Morning Herald 03/13/01

A JEWISH ARTIST IN BERLIN: Conductor Daniel Barenboim has been at the center of a power struggle over who will control Berlin’s major opera houses. From the outside, it seems a distinctly German debate. “It is only natural to find excursions into different cultures valuable, but of course German culture is something extraordinary, and there should be no false modesty about it.” New York Review of Books 03/29/01

LANGUAGE-BOUND: The de facto international language of science and ideas has become English. But “the development of entire subjects is in jeopardy because results from scientific research are being excluded from publication in international English-language journals. It would be wrong to ascribe this to incompetence on the part of the scientists who publish their results in other languages.” Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 03/12/01

Monday March 12

BUSH PROPOSES KEEPING NEA BUDGET SAME: Says National Endowment for the Arts chairman Bill Ivey: “Given the President’s desire to reduce the growth of federal spending, we are pleased with his funding request for the arts endowment.” Backstage 03/12/01

ART TRUMPS LIFE: A year ago a British artist took a grant and invested it in stock – equal shares of ART and LIFE. So now the experiment has ended. Which won? “Judged on purely commercial terms, art won. In January, a holding company called Artist Acquisitions bought her shares in ART for almost double what she paid for them. (She made a small profit on LIFE as well.) “I think it’s the first art project that’s ever been ended by a corporate takeover.” Time 03/12/01

Sunday March 11

DOINGS AT THE NEW NEA: With a new administration in the White House, where’s the National Endowment for the Arts these days. Quietly doing its thing. “Flying under the radar has helped in the evasion of enemy artillery fire. ‘It looks like the White House will work with the Senate-confirmed heads of small agencies for some time,’ says NEA chairman William Ivey.” St. Louis Post 03/11/01

Friday March 9

BIDDING RING BUSTED: Three men were charged Thursday with conspiring to drive up prices in art auctions on eBay, including last summer’s debacle involving a fake Richard Diebenkorn painting for which they made a $135,000 sale. This is the first prosecution of so-called “shill bidding” in the online world. The indictment said the three men also drove up bids on fake works by Giacometti and Clyfford Still. “[They] allegedly came up with fake user names to make it seem as if the painters’ family members were bidding.” San Francisco Chronicle (AP) 3/08/01

AIDING ARTISTS: Artists won at least a partial victory Thursday when the UK government announced it would not scrap entirely its tax code that allows artists to spread their profits over seven years to reduce their tax burden. (Artists often suffer come tax time because of their traditionally erratic earnings patterns – a sold manuscript one year, nothing the next.) “But the Chancellor has now put ‘creative artists’ in the same category as farmers so that they can average profits over two years.” The Times (London) 3/09/01

Thursday March 8

TOTALITARIAN LEARNING: A look at children’s education in the former East Germany reveals similarities with indoctrination efforts in Hitler’s Germany. “In both states, ideological messages penetrated subjects that were specifically geared toward indoctrination, as well as those that were more generically educational.” Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 03/08/01

TV AND ALZHEIMER’S: Researchers have discovered that those who spend a lot of time in passive activities – like watching TV – in their middle years are more likely to develop Alzheimer’s later in life. Exercising your brain by reading, on the other hand, helps delay onset of the disease. The Age (Melbourne) 03/07/01

Tuesday March 6

SCIENCE VS PHILOSOPHY: The Greek philosphers may have been the first to wonder at the nature of the world and humankind’s place in it. But certainly in recent times philosophers have given way to scientists when it comes to explaining how the world works. Is there a way to tackle such questions from both ends of the intellectual map? Chronicle of Higher Education 03/05/01

LOST IN THE MIX: Britain’s Culture Minister Chris Smith has publicly refuted rampant rumors that the government plans to dismantle the Culture Ministry after the upcoming election: Welcome news to the arts world, yet some critics still warn that the arts will continue to suffer as long as they’re relegated to the department that also oversees tourism, heritage, the lottery, and sport. BBC 3/05/01

Monday March 5

REPLACING PAPER: Paper has been the medium of communication for centuries. But now scientists are trying to improve the readability of computers so they’ll replace paper. “There is more at stake, however, than just the physical substitution of one medium for another; it will require a huge cultural shift as society struggles to give up its addiction to paper and embrace the ethereal nature of electronics. It also has far-reaching implications for books, magazines and newspapers, not to mention libraries and museums. Ours, after all, is a well paper-trained world.” Globe & Mail (Canada) 03/05/01

REBUILDING CAMBODIA: Cambodia’s culture was devastated during the Pol Pot regime. “There was no wholesale burning of manuscripts, and monuments such as Angkor – the extraordinary temple complex built under the Khmer empire between the ninth and 15th centuries – were neglected rather than smashed. But Pol Pot’s destruction of Cambodian culture was as complete as if he had indeed razed Angkor to the ground.” Now the country’s artists try to rebuild. New Statesman 03/05/01

ARCHER TO DIRECT MELBOURNE: Robyn Archer, one of Australia’s most experienced festival directors, has signed on to run the Melbourne Festival. “She emerged as favorite for the Melbourne post in early January, following her acclaim for the internationally renowned Adelaide Festivals she directed in 1998 and 2000.” The Age (Melbourne) 03/05/01

Sunday March 4

THE NEW COPORATE/ARTIST MIX: A new real estate development in Orange County attempts to mix for-profit with non-profit, corporate and individual artists to pay for that which does not pay for itself. Called Seven Degrees, the building complex “comprises four Internet-wired live-work residences for artists, two exhibition galleries, a commercial kitchen, and a reception hall and terrace for corporate gatherings and events.” Orange County Register 03/04/01

Thursday March 1

SOUNDS LIKE HEAVY-DUTY NUDGING: While running for Vice-President, Joseph Lieberman told Hollywood movie-makers: “We will nudge you, but we will never become censors.” He lost that election, but still is a Senator. Now he wants to have the Federal Trade Commission regulate movie marketing. Movie industry spokesman Jack Valenti replies, “Congress doesn’t have the power to give the FTC the authority to attack a First Amendment free speech enterprise.” Inside.com 02/28/01

CREATIVITY IN A TIME OF HARDSHIP: Despite its rocky political history of the past 60 years, Prague still boasts a vibrant intellectual/creative life. “The extraordinary richness of the performing arts in the city depends on skilled artists, appreciative audiences and generous funding from the public purse or from private sponsors. The sophisticated citizens of Prague are the successors of men (and their wives) who built up the city and made it flourish.” Central Europe Review 02/26/01

AUCTIONEER WARY ABOUT COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT: E-Bay, the on-line auctioneer, is removing items from its site to prevent copyright infringement. Software makers and other intellectual property interests had asked for the action; E-Bay initially opposed, and was upheld in a couple of important court tests. Now, perhaps with Napster in mind, the company is policing its listings and removing about a dozen a day. San Francisco Chronicle (AP) 28/02/01

Visual: March 2001

Friday March 30

AUCTION ENVY: There was heavy security at Sotheby’s in London this week for the display of one of the greatest private collections of 20th century art to ever hit the auction block. American millionaire Stanley Seeger’s collection will be sold in New York in May, is valued at up to £45 million, and includes works by Picasso, Braques, Francis Bacon, Miro, Egon Schiele, Jasper Johns, and a 1938 self-portrait by Max Beckmann hailed as “the most important German painting to come up for auction in living memory.” The Guardian (London) 3/30/01

Thursday March 29

A NEW LOUVRE DIRECTOR: The French Cabinet has named Musée d’Orsay director and Degas expert Henri Loyrette as the new president of the Louvre. Loyrette will replace Pierre Rosenberg, who after 39 years at the helm of the world’s largest museum is retiring to manage the Palazzo Grassi in Venice. “The task now facing Loyrette is by no means an easy one. With its staff of 2,000, the Louvre is not only a giant culture machine, its very size makes it vulnerable.” Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 3/29/01

A GERMAN BACKWATER? Nineteenth Century Germany gave us Beethoven, Schubert and Brahms – their music that has dominated our concert halls ever since. But visual art? “Our own most influential modern artists, critics and museum curators have tended in the 20th century to look upon 19th-century Germany as a backwater as far as the visual arts are concerned.” New York Observer 03/28/01

TITIAN ON TOP: The history of Western art is usually traced back to Vasari or Giotto, or even, as some would argue, to 13th-century Rome or Serbia. “But here’s another proposal: the grand tradition of oil painting, as is develops through Velazquez and Rembrandt down to our own day, springs not from Florence, Rome or Kosovo, but from Venice. And Titian, more than anyone else, is the patriarch at the head of that family tree.” Herewith a take on a newly published book of his complete paintings… The Telegraph (London) 3/29/01

REBUILDING THE BUDDHA: Buddhists in Sri Lanka are trying to raise money to build a replica of the Bamiyan Buddhas demolished by Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban militia. “We have had a very good response so far, not only from Buddhists. Many Muslims have said they are keen to help us because this is not just a religious matter. It’s a part of our world heritage.” The Times of India 03/28/01

DRAWING A MUSEUM LINE: “What is the distinction… between a natural history museum and an art museum? We tend to think of these two institutions as vastly different, but increasingly nowadays they are looking remarkably alike, displaying man-made objects in similar ways and telling similar stories about human culture.” First item. Discover 04/01

THE PHYSICS OF WINSLOW HOMER: “In Homer’s day, thermodynamics was not merely a branch of physics. It was also an instructive social theory central to the works of a wide array of prominent novelists, historians, and philosophers. Perhaps the most explicitly thermo-dynamic of Homer’s pictures is The Gulf Stream, in which power is ubiquitous and man is reduced to an appliance in the naturalist machine.” American Art Spring 2001

DISSING JEFFERSON DAVIS: Graffitti from 140 years ago, uncovered on the wall of an old Virginia courthouse. “May he be put in the northwest corner [of Hell] with a southeast wind blowing ashes in his eyes for all eternity.” CNN (AP) 03/28/01

Wednesday March 28

THE END OF DIGITAL ART? Digital art has hit the big time in terms of recognition now that major museums are showcasing it. But “just as dot.com was always a fatuous category, lumping together media, corporate services, and infrastructure companies into one ‘industry,’ digital art is a category of convenience that should be retired.” Feed 03/27/01

GIOTTO INTERRUPTED: After 12 years of restoration, a Giotto crucifix damaged in the 1966 floods that swept Florence was “due to be returned to its original centre spot in the Florentine church of Santa Maria Novella on April 7.” But a new Italian law has interfered with the plans. Financial Times 03/27/01

RING OF UNCERTAINTY: Korea had planned to build a massive “gate” 200 metres in circumference to mark the turn of the millennium. But now the government has reduced the amount it is willing to spend on the project, and a slow economy is making private fund-raising difficult. Korea Times 03/28/01

WE PREFER SHAKESPEARE’S DESCRIPTION: Of Cleopatra, that is. He wrote, “Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale her infinite variety.” According to a new exhibition at the British Museum, she was short, fat, and unattractive. Discovery 03/26/01

Tuesday March 27

“010101” PAYS OFF IN SAN FRAN: “The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art has received a $500,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, making it the only U.S. art museum to receive an NEH Challenge Grant for 2001.” San Francisco Chronicle 03/27/01

GOING BRIT: British artists have become a force in the current New York art scene. “These people are important and the pictures will become gold later on. It will be like looking back on the Warhol crowd.” The Times (London) 03/27/01

Monday March 26

MORE PICASSOS FOUND IN TURKEY: Officials in Turkey have arrested several men who attempted to fence stolen works of Pablo Picasso. Eight Picasso paintings have now surfaced in Turkey in the last year, although some experts have questioned their authenticity. BBC 03/26/01

FIGHTING THE BLOCKBUSTER CULTURE: Art experts are concerned that museums are being forced to become slaves to their own visitor numbers. Where once a museum’s success was judged by the quality of its collection, it is now considered a failure unless it can pack the maximum number of people into its halls. BBC 03/26/01

  • WALK RIGHT IN: “I went to a museum the other day. I can’t think what came over me. One minute I’m on a crowded street, fully engaged with the great issues of the day: What was Julia going to wear and who would Russell have on his arm now that Meg is no longer in the picture? The next thing I know, I’m alone in a darkened, silent room populated with 14 ancient, carved, Chinese figures, none of whom have just got out of limousines.” The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/26/01

FAR TOO SERIOUS: “There is no world so humourless as the world of art. No one so brain-meltingly self-regarding and serious as the artist. Think, if you can bear to, of Tracey Emin. I can scarcely conceive of a human being endowed with less humour. Yet all the while, art and comedy have become virtually indistinguishable.” The Observer (London) 03/25/01

MARBLES STAYING PUT: British Prime Minister Tony Blair on prospects for returning the Elgin marbles to Greece: ” ‘The marbles belong to the British Museum . . . which does not intend to return any part of the collection to its country of origin,” Blair said in an interview published Sunday in the Athens daily To Vima.” Toronto Star (AP) 03/25/01

A NATIONAL STORY: The National Museum of Australia has opened after 25 years of planning and debate. “This is a museum which very explicitly tells a number of stories, the most uncomfortable and most durable of which being the expropriation of land by the whites and the marginalisation of the Aboriginals.” The Art Newspaper 03/24/01

PROTECTING INDIA: India is finally taking steps to help protect and conserve its architecture from the 18th and 19th centuries. “Britain has half a million listed buildings. In India, a country with 14 times the land mass, the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) protects (theoretically) about 5,000 monuments and the different State archaeological departments together protect perhaps another 2,000. The overwhelming bulk of historic buildings in India are unprotected.” The Art Newspaper 03/23/01

OUT OF O’KEEFFE’S SHADOW: Alfred Stieglitz is perhaps best known in the wider culture for having been married to the great American painter Georgia O’Keefe, but his career as a photographer, and a great artist in his own right, has recently started to get the attention it deserves. A new exhibit on display in the unlikely town of Doylestown, Pennsylvania does much to flesh out the Stieglitz legacy. Philadelphia Inquirer 03/25/01

CANADA ONLINE: Canada’s Minister of Culture launches a new Virtual Museum of Canada. “It contains an art gallery with more than 200,000 images, including paintings from the Group of Seven, Inuit sculpture and photographs.” CBC 03/25/01

AFRICAN CULTURAL QUANDRY: British explorer David Livingstone left a collection of letters, sketches, books, Journals and maps when he died in Zambia in 1873. Now “the museum that houses Livingstone’s legacy is crumbling, fast becoming a case study of the struggles faced by Africa’s cultural institutions.” The New York Times 03/26/01 (one-time registration required)

Sunday March 25

THE CELEBRITY MUSEUM: Cities across America are building flashy new museums. “That avant-garde architecture is playing such a leading role in marketing these projects—both to potential benefactors and to the public at large—is a sea change in the culture.” Newsweek 03/23/01

PHOTOGRAPHY IS KING: “For better or worse, photography is the New New Thing in the art market. Over the last two years, with fortunes being won and lost on bets about our digital future, the most searching visual invention of the 19th century has been charting upward like a 1999 Internet stock.” The New York Times 03/25/01 (one-time registration required for access)

TAKING THE PLUNGE: The Meadows Museum in Dallas has always been content to be nothing more than what it has been: a small university museum with a top-notch collection of mostly Spanish art, well-known to art experts the world over, but largely ignored in its own city. But today, Meadows will inaugurate its new, much-larger building, and hopes to use the greater visibility to get Dallasites as interested in its collection as outsiders have always been. Dallas Morning News 03/25/01

ALTERING THE LANDSCAPE: Claude Cormier creates landscapes. More than that, he creates altered realities. His vision of a perfect expanse of open land is as likely to include plastic pink flamingoes as not. “In 1996-97, for example, Cormier dyed parts of the lawns at Montreal’s Canadian Centre for Architecture vibrant blue as part of its The American Lawn exhibition because, he says, ‘the North American obsession with perfect grass deserved celebration.'” The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/25/01

REARVIEW MIRROR: Magdalena Abakanowicz has always been fascinated with the human form – specifically, the back of it. Her massive sculpture projects, which often consist of huge numbers of backward-facing figures that can fill a gallery or hillside, are often even more powerful for their lack of the traditional focal points of human sculpture. Los Angeles Times 03/25/01

Friday March 23

RECKLESS RETRIBUTION: The prevailing explanation for Afghanistan’s destruction of its Buddhist art has been that it was necessary to prevent idol worship. But the Taliban’s 24-year-old ambassador tells another story – one of retribution to UNESCO for using all its aid to save monuments, and not children. “I know it is not rational and logical to blow the statues for retaliation of economic sanctions, but this is how it is.” Salon 3/22/01

OUT TO PROVE IT: Afghanistan’s Taliban leaders briefly reopened Kabul’s National Museum (which has been closed to the public since August 1999) on Thursday, in order to prove that they had followed through on their promise to destroy all the pre-Islamic relics in the collection. “We will let you see inside the museum to show that we have destroyed all the statues that were there.” Prior to their takeover, the museum had housed a priceless collection of artifacts spanning Afghanistan’s 50,000-year history. International Herald Tribune 3/23/01

MOVING TO MIDTOWN: Christie’s East, the “bargain basement” franchise of the famous Christie’s auction house in New York, is selling the building it has called home since 1979. The company is moving the “Christie’s East” sales to its main headquarters in Rockefeller Center, where a good deal of space was apparently going unused. Art-loving New Yorkers are in a tizzy over the move, (which will also include a name change,) as only New Yorkers can be. New York Times 3/23/01 (one-time registration required for access)

SLASH AND DASH: The 19th-century French painting “Pool in a Harem” by Jean-Leon Jerome was sliced out of its frame and stolen from St. Petersburg’s Hermitage Museum. “The painting was not a masterpiece, but a well-known work that would be impossible to sell.” St. Petersburg Times 3/23/01

Thursday March 22

PRESERVING THE NEW ART: As digital and technological art becomes more and more prevalent, the thoughts of collectors and museums are turning to the issue of how to preserve the works once the technology becomes obsolete, which will happen quickly. “The Guggenheim’s Variable Media Initiative is an unusual proactive program that asks new media artists to devise guidelines for translating their artworks via alternate media, once their current formats expire or disappear from the market.” Wired 03/22/01

PLAYING TO THE CROWD: You’ve got to say this for Bostonians – they can turn anything into a sporting event. This weekend, four architectural firms will compete to become the designer of the city’s new waterfront Institute of Contemporary Art. And, in a sharp divergence from the closed door way in which these things are usually done, the public is invited to the finals, and will have a chance to voice its opinion. Boston Herald 03/22/01

SCULPTURE AWARD: Australian sculptor Karen Ward has won the $105,000 Helen Lempriere Award for sculptors. The prize is intended to raise the visibility of sculptors. The Age (Melbourne) 03/22/01

Wednesday March 21

THE THUNDERING HERD: The fiberglass art animals are taking over. From a humble exhibit on the streets of Zurich in 1999, the artist-decorated Animals-on-Parade concept has swept the US. Why? Some say it’s because the public has fallen in love with them. Others contend it’s for the money (Chicago raised a reported $3 million selling its cows) But maybe someone should take a hard look at the so-called neutral Swiss. They may appear harmless, but… ArtsJournal.com 03/21/01

ARCHITECTURAL FREE-THINKER: Shigeru Ban is making a name for himself in architecture by doing the unexpected. “He has proved, for instance, that wood is an effective fire retardant. He has designed a floor that curves half-way up a wall… and has shown that recycled paper tubes make impressive structural frames that grow stronger over time.” Globe and Mail (Canada) 03/21/01

SACKLER/FREER DIRECTOR LEAVING: The director of Washington DC’s Sackler and Freer galleries is leaving the job. “Milo Beach has left his mark. The adjacent collections of mostly Asian art form a single institution. More than anyone else, it was Beach who made them a cohesive whole. Beach is the second Smithsonian art museum director to announce his retirement this year.” Washington Post 03/20/01

Tuesday March 20

LOOMING CRISIS FOR UK MUSEUMS? Has lottery cash ruined museums? “The huge expansion, bringing science, environment and art-based attractions and extensions to museums, left the sector with an extra £29m a year bill for increased costs in a static or declining market.” It’s a recipe for disaster, says a new report. The Guardian (London) 03/19/01

  • Previously: TOO MANY MUSEUMS? A new study says that the UK has too many museums, and too many are doing poorly. The solution? Some of them must merge or close. “A coherent national museums’ policy is now essential, for without one it will be impossible to test what should be saved and what should go.” BBC 03/19/01

FREE DEBATE: Free admission to British museums is coming, but not without a fight. Some museums are resisting. They feel that “unless the public is made to pay for admission to museums they won’t fully appreciate what they are being allowed to see. The confrontation is as much ideological as financial, with many of the charging museums wedded to Thatcherite dogmas of maximising revenue and marketing, while the opposing camp, led by the Tate and National galleries, stress the importance of public service, access and education.” The Guardian (London) 0320/01

IMAGINE THAT: At a museum in Birmingham, visitors enter a blank gallery and asked to imagine the art based on short descriptions. “There is a history of producing artworks that are purely descriptive – it’s a questioning of what art is all about.” BBC 03/20/01

DESIGN IS ART/ART IS DESIGN? “Shopping is no longer just a pleasurable activity, but a quest for aesthetic images and brands that extend beyond clothing labels and logos to bricks, mortar, paint and lighting, and to the brand name of the architect as well.” New Statesman 03/19/01

DIGITAL GOES MAINSTREAM: It wasn’t many months ago that art critics were turning up their noses at digital art. Some suggested there really wasn’t yet such a thing. Now digital art is hot. “Digital artists are about to break down another boundary: the one between them and the art world’s upper echelons. The Whitney’s ‘BitStreams’ exhibition, which opens March 22, is the first show devoted to such work at a major New York museum.” New York Magazine 03/19/01

LONDON W/O THE THAMES: What if the Thames didn’t run through London? It would be more than just the lack of water – the culture of the place would be different. “The images are claustrophobic, the city reduced to a futile parade of buildings. It’s like coitus interruptus, a joke without a punchline. There’s a tremendously strong sense of liquid being disastrously absent from a place where it is sorely needed: think of a pub without any drinks.” Evening Standard (London) 03/20/01

Monday March 19

EXPLAINING THE DESTRUCTION: Taliban leaders decided to destroy artwork after a delegation visited and offered money to help protect the giant Buddhas. “They said, `If you are destroying our future with economic sanctions, you can’t care about our heritage.’ And so they decided that these statues must be destroyed. The Taliban’s Supreme Court confirmed the edict. The New York Times 03/19/01 (one-time registration required for access)

SOTHEBY’S DOWN/CHRISTIE’S UP: After a year when both auction houses were embroiled in price-fixing settlements, Sotheby’s sales are down 14 percent. Christie’s is up 12 percent. The Art Newspaper 03/16/01

TOKYO MUSEUM CRISIS: Last year Tokyo’s Museum of Contemporary Art hung up a “deficit of ¥1.6 billion (then worth $15.2 million) during the financial year ending in March 2000.” Attendance also plummeted. Now the museum is considering some radical moves, including selling off some of its art. The Art Newspaper 03/16/01

A CRISIS OF FAKES: A former curator at the Getty Museum contends some of the museum’s drawings attributed to Renaissance masters are fakes. The Getty denies the claims, but refuses to produce evidence it says it has that they are not. Museums “The implications of this controversy are far from trivial. Each year, tens of millions of museumgoers walk through the entrance of the Getty, or the Metropolitan or the Prado or the Hermitage, and never consider the possibility of having to arbitrate for themselves the authenticity of what they have come to see.” The New York Times Magazine 03/18/01 (one-time registration required for access)

TOO MANY MUSEUMS? A new study says that the UK has too many museums, and too many are doing poorly. The solution? Some of them must merge or close. “A coherent national museums’ policy is now essential, for without one it will be impossible to test what should be saved and what should go.” BBC 03/19/01

  • OVER-EXPANSION: “Museums need an additional £29 million each year to pay the increased running costs of lottery-funded new buildings and extensions. Part of the problem was the increased competition from other attractions and static visitor numbers.” The Times (London) 03/19/01

LONDON TOWERS: London has never been dominated by tall buildings. And those skyscrapers it has had have not been particularly inspiring. But now, a new generation of tall spires is about to rise in the English capital. Will they be bland and ugly, or create a picturesque cityscape? The Guardian (London) 03/19/01

EYE-WITNESS PROOF: Taliban leaders say they may let journalists see the destroyed remains of the giant Buddhas they destroyed as early as Wednesday. The New York Times 03/18/01 (one-time registration required for access)

  • UNDERSTANDING THE TALIBAN: Difficult as it is for the rest of the world to understand why the Taliban would destroy artifacts so old and precious, a question arises: “In the deepest, broadest sense, did the Taliban really have any idea what they were doing? The movement’s leaders are mostly young sons of illiterate peasants, raised on mine-strewn battlefields and stark refugee camps, and educated in rote sectarian blinders. Do they understand that this act, more than anything else, will be how the world remembers them?” The New York Times 03/18/01 (one-time registration required for access)

Sunday March 18

THE POLITICS OF LENDING: A rare exhibition of 92 drawings by the Renaissance master Sandro Botticelli illustrating Dante’s “Divine Comedy” which opened in London last week, refused a stop at New York’s Metropolitan Museum because of fears by the Vatican (which owns some of the drawings) about a California court case. New York Times 03/17/01 (one-time registration required for access)

COMING SOON – CELL PHONE ART! The explosion of new technologies over the last decade has meant an ever-increasing range of options for artists looking to explore new mediums. The “digital age” is starting to crystallize into a definable movement, but there is still plenty of room for expansion. New York Times 03/18/01 (one-time registration required for access)

FROM THE MOUTHS OF BABES: A unique collaboration is unfolding in a gallery in Evanston, Illinois, and the organizers aim to educate visitors about the growth of Native American stereotyping in the U.S. This is nothing new, of course, but the method may be: the Chicago Public School System is one of the collaborators, and the children’s impressions of mass media portrayals of minorities is a large part of the exhibit. Chicago Tribune 03/18/01

A GALLERY THAT MATTERS: London’s Whitechapel gallery is 100 years old. “Before Tate Modern was a glint in Nicholas Serota’s eye, the Whitechapel put on shows that made other British galleries look tame. Almost all the most influential modern art exhibitions in post-war Britain happened here.” The Guardian 03/17/01

WRIGHT AGAIN: Architect Frank Lloyd Wright was nothing if not self-serving, and a reenactment of one of his famously rambling speeches underscores the point in humorous fashion. But “The Art & Craft of the Machine” also reveals a shockingly accurate set of predictions about the technologies that were yet to come, including computers and the internet. Chicago Tribune 03/18/01

MONET IN MINNESOTA: A flower show in the Twin Cities has taken on the challenge of recreating Claude Monet’s famous gardens in an auditorium of a downtown Minneapolis department store. The intricately detailed (if somewhat downsized) summer gardens are quite a feat, considering that the Upper Midwest is still in the clutches of winter. Minneapolis Star Tribune 03/17/01

ROSS BOUNCES BACK: Remember David A. Ross? The top man at the Whitney Museum in New York who for nearly a decade never saw his name in print without the words “embattled director” before it was practically run out of Gotham on a rail in 1998. But Ross has found new life as the director of San Francisco’s Museum of Modern Art, and the gallery’s newest exhibit is his proudest accomplishment. Los Angeles Times 03/18/01

PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS AN OLD MAN: In the world of French Canadian abstractionists, few artists can approach the legacy of Charles Gagnon. A soft-spoken man with a thirst for knowledge and new experience, he has produced some of the last century’s greatest abstract paintings. Now, as he reflects on his life and his career, the sharp twists and turns of his evolving style become less mysterious. The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/17/01

IT’S ALL ABOUT THE PROCESS: Seven German artists are bringing the spectacle of creating art to the public with a seven-day marathon Internet broadcast. “Art lovers around the world can go to www.live-art.tv and watch one participant a day paint, develop or sculpt an original work to be completed within seven hours in a studio at the Museum of Fine Arts in the western German city of Celle.” Nando Times 03/18/01

Friday March 16

THE MOST DANGEROUS RELIGION (HINT: IT’S NOT ISLAM): The world has watched in horror as Afghani fundamentalists willfully destroyed cultural treasures. But destruction of art is only a piece of a larger cultural battle going on here. Is international cultural conflict replacing political Cold War conflict? ArtsJournal.com 3/16/01

PROVOKING THE BULLIES: Most of the world has been outraged over the Taliban’s destruction of the giant Buddhas. Now Pakistan’s foreign minister urges other nations not to shun the Taliban, fearing the regime will use international hostility as an excuse to make life even more difficult for the Afghan people. Pakistan is one of three countries that offically acknowledges the Taliban regime. The Times of India (AFP) 3/15/01

DUTY TO PROTECT: Destruction of Afghani art certainly didn’t begin with the Taliban’s assault on the giant Buddhas. The Society for the Preservation of Afghanistan’s Cultural Heritage (SPACH) has been fighting to save artwork in Afghanistan since 1994 (without much luck). “Monuments were being neglected, if not badly damaged by the war, historic sites had been and were still being illegally excavated and, most importantly, the Kabul Museum, which houses an important collection, was being damaged and plundered.” Purabudaya 2000

PRESERVATION AT ALL COSTS? In an effort to protect the deteriorating Giotto frescoes in Padua’s Scrovegni Chapel, visitors are now only allowed into the chapel for scheduled 15-minute visits, and must view the work from glass enclosures. It alters the experience. “Maybe we should at least consider the radical notion that masterpieces – like so much else in this mutable world – have a life-span, and ask ourselves if preserving them is worth making it so unpleasant to experience them.” The Atlantic Monthly 04/01

THE PROSECUTION RESTS: Indecency charges against London’s Saatchi Gallery, raised over a current exhibition of child photos by Tierney Gearon and Nan Goldin, were dropped Thursday after the Crown Prosecution Service concluded a conviction in the case was highly unlikely. BBC 3/15/01

FINDERS, KEEPERS? An urgent appeal to raise £7.5 million has been launched by the National Galleries of Scotland to prevent a drawing by Michelangelo from being sold on the open market. The 500-year-old drawing – considered the most important Michelangelo discovery in living memory – was found last October in a scrapbook in a castle in North Yorkshire. If the money is collected, the work will go on permanent display in Edinburgh. The Telegraph (London) 3/16/01

MAKING A POINT: Italian architect Renzo Piano has released his initial drawings of the 1,000-foot glass tower to be built above London Bridge, which would make it the largest building in Europe. “The tower would bring the city’s stumpy, lumpy skyline to a refined point. I can’t see why it shouldn’t be built, except fear, and a city cannot live on fear.” London Evening Standard 3/16/01

DRIPPER’S LEGACY: Ed Harris’s riveting portrayal of one of the 20th century’s most fascinating artists has earned “Pollock” an Oscar nod and critical raves. But art historians have been irked by Harris’s decision to make it seem as if Jackson Pollock’s innovations were nothing more than an outgrowth of his descent into madness. “Pollock’s epiphany likely didn’t arise out of locking himself in a Greenwich Village walkup for three weeks, as the film suggests. Abstract Expressionism built on European modernist painting.” The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/16/01

Thursday March 15

UK JOINS EFFORT AGAINST ART THEFT: After years of campaigning by museums and archaeologists, the British government has agreed to join a worldwide convention allowing cultural treasures to be recovered if they turn up in member countries. The Times (London) 03/15/01

THE FINE LINE OF ART AND… Tierney Gearon’s photographs of naked children displayed at Charles Saatchi’s gallery brought out Scotland Yard last week. Do the pictures qualify as child pornography, as the police charged? Where is the line between art and exploitation? The Scotsman 03/13/01

ART WITHOUT LABELS: There’s a charity “blind auction” of art in Edinburgh – all of the art sells for £200. But the identity of the artist is hidden. You might be bidding on a valuable work or it could be an amateur photo – you takes your chances. “There is endless potential for art snobs to be wrongfooted – picture the art ‘expert’ who, convinced he has cleverly spotted a rare abstract work by a world famous artist, ends up going home with a child’s finger painting. The Scotsman 03/15/01

A NEW BRAND OF RUSSIAN ART… AND ARTIST: Mikhail Chemiakin once was hounded by the KGB; now he’s buddies with Russian President and former KGB officer Vladimir Putin. He’s a litany of contradictions. “Critics are disdainful, but he is adored by art buyers in Middle America and among Russia’s new rich. His fans describe his work as mystical, supernatural and exotic. ‘Chemiakin’s work is the kind of stuff you don’t need a fancy art education to appreciate,’ one British critic sniffed.” The Globe and Mail (Toronto) 03/15/01

Wednesday March 14

GALLERY GETS A REPRIEVE: The threat of an immediate police seizure of controversial photos from Charles Saatchi’s London gallery has been lifted after Scotland Yard announced that a legal decision on the matter was unlikely before the gallery reopens for business Thursday. The police had earlier said they would prosecute the gallery under the 1978 Protection of Children Act, which made “indecent photographs of children” a crime – yet says nothing to clarify what ‘indecent’ should be taken to mean. “The law has never been used against art exhibitions in its 22 year history.” The Guardian (London) 3/14/01

WASHINGTON STAYS IN WASHINGTON: Gilbert Stuart’s portrait of George Washington will stay at the Smithsonian. The painting, on loan from a British collector, was to have been sold at auction if the Smithsonian couldn’t come up with $20 million. Now a Las Vegas foundation has donated money to keep the portrait where it is. Washington Post 03/14/01

ATTENTION GETTER: The world is still trying to figure out why the Taliban destroyed their art. Was it just to get attention for a country the rest of the world has been ignoring? “For Mullah Omar, who had spared the statues in the hope of improving relations with the West, the increased pressure indicated he had nothing left to lose. His response to the rest of the world: If you want the monuments to survive, then recognize us as we are.” Newsweek (MSNBC) 03/13/01

DUMPING CHARGES: Ontario’s McMichael Gallery is set to dump as many as 2000 works of art from its collection now that the government has ruled the gallery can return to its Group of Seven roots. But the province’s art community is “worried that such an unprecedented disposal could flood an ‘extremely fragile’ market, devalue certain artists and send a discouraging message to scores of donors. There’s even talk of possible lawsuits against the province from those affected by the changes.” Ottawa Citizen 03/14/01

Tuesday March 13

ART OR PEOPLE? Who can explain the Taliban’s destruction of art? “For example, why are they doing so? Was the destruction of statues a stupid act, or was it a shrewdly calculated move to attain international attention? Then, who created the Taliban? And who is pushing them against the wall now? After the world’s reaction over the statue issue, many in Afghanistan might ask whether the stone statues were more important than millions of starving human beings.” Middle East Times 03/12/01

GUGGENHEIM ON THE STRIP: Another new Guggenheim Museum is on the way, in, of all places, Las Vegas. The (naturally) outsized new gallery is sure to draw plenty of interest, but it is drawing plenty of unfriendly fire as well, from critics and artists who wonder, “When you’ve already got Manhattan in your palm, why should you stoop to playing Vegas?” The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/13/01

NEW WINDS OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN: “Of all the notions that have gained currency in the last two decades, this has been perhaps the most damaging: the suggestion that clarity is the enemy. It left us with critical writing and built projects that were oppressive and leaden—worse yet, that wore their drudgery as a badge of honor—and a slew of schemes that sought to reflect rather than transcend the unsteady nature of what became known as ‘decentered’, ‘postindustrial’ life.” But now a new notion of design. Metropolis 03/01

THE VANISHING: Leonardo’s “Last Supper” is damaged almost to the point of obscurity. Nonetheless, restorers have spent the past 20 years trying to lighten and brighten the images. Now the controversial results are revealed – here are comparisons between pre-restoration and after. University of Chicago Press 03/12/01

Monday March 12

HOW THEY KILLED THE BUDDHAS: “After failing to destroy the 1,700-year-old sandstone statues of Buddha with anti-aircraft and tank fire, the Taliban brought a lorryload of dynamite from Kabul. A Western observer said: ‘They drilled holes into the torsos of the two statues and then placed dynamite charges inside the holes to blow them up’.” The Telegraph (London) 03/12/01

  • SMUGGLED OUT OF HARM’S WAY: A wave of art has been smuggled out of Afghanistan and is being sold on the black market in London. It’s a trade that has been active for some time, but the Taliban destruction has upped the stakes. The Observer 03/11/01

DISAPPROVAL FROM THE TOP: Britain’s Culture Minister gets into the issue over the police raid of Charles Saatchi’s London gallery. “We must be very careful in this country before we start censoring things that are happening, either in newspapers or in art galleries.” The Independent (London) 03/12/01

  • GALLERY RESISTING: “Despite the police warnings that the pictures must be removed by Thursday, the gallery said it had no plans to take down the photographs. ‘We have received legal advice from barrister Geoffrey Robertson and been told that the police have used the wrong definition of what is indecent’.” The Observer (London) 03/11/01
  • Previously: SAATCHI GALLERY RAIDED BY POLICE: Scotland Yard has raided Charles Saatchi’s London gallery and said that it would seize images from the show if they were not removed before the gallery reopened. Police say they will do so under anti child-pornography legislation. “The exhibition features the work of a group of artists and photographers selected by Charles Saatchi himself and taken from his personal collection of photographs and paintings.” The Guardian (London) 03/10/01

COPIES THAT SAVE: Spain’s Altamira caves contain some of the best examples of prehistoric paintings. But “throughout the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s, throngs of tourists flocked to the cave to seek a connection with early humans” and the 14,000-year-old paintings were threatened. So next door in another set of caves, high technology is being used to make exact copies of the paintings for visitors. Wired 03/11/01

NEW VERMEER? A rediscovered Vermeer has been certified as a 36th surviving work by the master. “Vermeer’s surviving works are so rare, with only 35 fully accepted paintings, that any new addition to his oeuvre will generate great excitement.” The Art Newspaper 03/10/01

MAASTRICHT’S OLD MASTERS SHRINKING: The number of Old Master paintings for sale has been dwindling. As a consequence, “although it is known mainly as an Old Masters fair, Maastricht has expanded its other categories in recent times and this year includes some stunning Impressionist and 20th-century pictures.” The Telegraph (London) 03/12/01

SEVERED HAND MISSING: A marble hand from an ancient Greek statue has been stolen from the British Museum. Nando Times (AP) 03/12/01

LIFE SHREDDING: Artist Michael Landy has finished shredding and granulating everything he owns. People found the “artwork” appalling, and gave Landy’s cat presents since Landy maintained he couldn’t own anything at the end. “The thousands of visitors to the event seemed more traumatised than Landy himself. Many I spoke to were suspicious of his motives – the term ‘self- indulgent’ cropped up several times – but all expressed a kind of appalled envy.” Sunday Times (London) 03/11/01

OF MYTH AND POLLOCK: The new bio-pic of Jackson Pollock has a lot to cram into it. But, beautiful as it is, it’s not possible to fully put into perspective the artist’s life, legend and myth. Herewith an attempt at clarification. The Idler 03/12/01

Sunday March 11

MUSEUM VISITS DOWN: The American economy isn’t the only thing slowing – since October museum attendance across the country has been down – Boston’s MFA, for example had 22 percent fewer visitors compared to the same period last year. Minneapolis Star-Tribune (WSJ) 03/11/01

SAATCHI GALLERY RAIDED BY POLICE: Scotland Yard has raided Charles Saatchi’s London gallery and said that it would seize images from the show if they were not removed before the gallery reopened. Police say they will do so under anti child-pornography legislation. “The exhibition features the work of a group of artists and photographers selected by Charles Saatchi himself and taken from his personal collection of photographs and paintings. It has been running for eight weeks and has been reviewed in most of the broadsheet papers and magazines from the Tatler to the Telegraph, without any public complaints to the gallery.” The Guardian (London) 03/10/01

BUDDHA WAS RIGHT: So now the giant Bamiyan buddhas have been destroyed. The Metropolitan Museum had offered to buy and transport the statues to New York in order to preserve them “It’s hard to imagine a more perfect or succinct misunderstanding of the issue. Absence is absence, no matter if the Buddhas become dust in Afghanistan or dusted objets d’arts in some far away museum. That this seemed, if briefly, a plausible solution indicates what is truly at stake here, and that it is not so simple as preserving ‘the world’s cultural heritage’.” Killing the Buddha 03/08/01

  • STAY-AT-HOME ART: “In recent years, the dispute over the right to antiquities has tended to favor those who argue that art treasures belong near their origins, rather than in collections continents away.” But the Taliban destruction has changed some thinking on the issue. “Museums [in the West] are saying, ‘We should have protected this material.’ ” Los Angeles Times 03/10/01
  • WRONG ON RELIGIOUS GROUNDS: Islamic intellectuals in Los Angeles have objected to the Taliban’s destruction of art. “In a unanimous statement, the eight intellectuals said the Taliban’s destruction of statues violated the Koranic requirement to tolerate those of other faiths. The Koran’s sixth chapter, for instance, tells Muslims: ‘We have not set you as a keeper over them, nor are you responsible for them. . . . Abuse not those whom they worship besides Allah, lest they out of spite abuse Allah in their ignorance’.” Los Angeles Times 03/09/01

SPOTTING THE FAKES: It’s not such an easy matter – how about knockoff art created 1000 years ago, or mass-produced copies? The art of finding the fakes. Toronto Star 03/11/01

  • THE ENDURING FAKE: What becomes of fake art once its exposed as fraudulent? Some wind up in classrooms where they are studied. “A few become ‘famous fakes’: Museums sometimes organize shows displaying them. And some deceived collectors even decide to keep their fakes – for sentimental reasons or because the works have become valuable in their own right as clever copies.” Christian Science Monitor 03/09/01

A FIASCO AT THE MALL: Why is the issue of memorials on Washington DC’s National Mall so charged? The latest proposal – for a $100 million World War II memorial is being pounced on by critics. “As presently envisioned, it is an aesthetic disaster, a prime example of bureaucratic high kitsch style not implausibly described as watered-down Albert Speer by a few critics.” The New York Times 03/04/01 (one-time registration required for access)

THE ART OF SCIENCE: Recently artists have been vigorously taking up science as fodder for their art. Why? “Ever since art uncoupled from its traditional concerns it has been in search of a subject. What better subject than science, to help us address our place in the universe? My hope is that science-art collaborations will become so accepted that people will stop regarding them as unusual.” The Telegraph (London) 03/10/01

ANIMALS ON PARADE (ANGELIC VERSION): Los Angeles had planned to populate its downtown streets with 6’4″-tall angels, decorated by artists. “But due to rain, red tape, tardy artists, cash-flow problems and the logistics of carting the 500-pound artworks (a 100-pound angel on a 400-pound base), Community of Angels is taking flight more slowly than project organizers had hoped. Los Angeles Times 03/10/01

WHITNEY CLOSES STAMFORD: The Whitney Museum closes its outpost in Stamford Connecticut. The museum says it can’t afford to stay at the Stamford gallery it has occupied for almost 20 years.” Stamford Advocate 03/10/01

Friday March 9

ALTARPIECE MYSTERY SOLVED? An Antwerp policeman claims to have solved one of the most enduring mysteries in all of art history: the missing panel of van Eyck’s 15th-century Adoration of the Lamb altarpiece, which was stolen in 1934. “The 12-panel polyptych is considered to be one of the most important works in Western painting; over the centuries it has also earned itself the reputation of being the world’s most stolen masterpiece.” The motives for the theft have never been established, but theories are rampant… The Telegraph (London) 3/09/01

GOODBYE, MONET: For the first time in six years, no Impressionist exhibition featured among the top 20 shows in the world last year, according to the Art Newspaper’s latest survey. Surprisingly, a London exhibit on the image of Christ was the most popular in all of Britain and came in fourth in popularity worldwide. Sydney Morning Herald 3/09/01

THERE GO THE RELIGIOUS GROUNDS: Rudy Giuliani’s attack on artist Renee Cox’s “Yo Mama’s Last Supper” proves he knows less about the religious issues he claims to defend than does Cox. But “falling back on free speech to defend one’s art from political attack is tantamount to saying that art transcends politics. A lovely sentiment, but not very likely. The only thing high art transcends is the debate the rest of us who express ideas accept as part of public discussion.” Killing the Buddha 03/03/01

PRICE OF THE IRISH… Everything Irish is hot these days – after years of weakness, the Irish economy is one of the hottest in all Europe. Paintings too. Irish art is the fastest-rising sector of the art market. “Fifteen years ago the top Irish price was $30,000; currently the most expensive Irish painting, Lavery’s ‘The Bridge at Grez’ of 1883, sold for $2.4 million.” Forbes 03/19/01

MACHU PICCHU THREATENED BY LANDSLIDE: Earth beneath the ruins of Machu Picchu is shifting rapidly; geologists warn that the lost city of the Incas could be split in two by a landslide at any time. Hidden on a spur a mile and a half high in the Andes, Machu Picchu was the last refuge of the Incan empire; it was discovered in 1911 by a US archaeologist. UNESCO lists the city as a World Heritage Site. The New Scientist 03/07/01

MAYBE THEY COULD FOCUS IT ON CRITICS: It seemed like a great idea – a dazzling sculpture to attract attention at a playhouse in the British city of Nottingham. The giant concave steel mirror, set up in front of the playhouse, will reflect the sky. Unfortunately, for about four months of the year, it will also reflect sunlight. Focus it sharply, in fact. So sharply that it could instantly barbecue birds flying overhead. ABC 03/07/01

MCCAUGHEY LEAVES YALE MUSEUM: Patrick McCaughey, Director of the Yale Center for British Art, is leaving that post to “do research and writing and seek other opportunities in the arts.” McCaughey, formerly director of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, increased attendance at the Yale Center, and oversaw extensive renovations to the building. His departure comes as a surprise to most observers. The Hartford Courant 03/09/01

Thursday March 8

D.O.T. GIVES KENNEDY PLAN A BOOST: The U.S. Department of Transportation has issued a report recommending a massive $269 million expansion of Washington, D.C.’s Kennedy Center. The purpose of the expansion would be to alleviate the center’s physical isolation from the rest of the district by building an 11-acre plaza over several nearby highways. Director Michael Kaiser is, naturally, thrilled with the report. Washington Post 03/08/01

COMPUTING ANGLES: Computers have been part of the architect’s studio for a full generation now, but “until the last few years they were mainly tools that helped make conventional architecture easier to produce.” Now, “software that is affecting the creation of new designs. Computers produce shapes of extraordinary complexity, with swoops and bends and twists so baroque that no structural engineer could ever have figured out how to build them.” The New Yorker 03/05/01

WHY OH WHY? So what is the religious justification for the Taliban’s destruction of the giant Buddhas? “The deed is being perpetrated in the name of Islam, in which there is no basis for such vandalism. Indeed, the Islamic world has admired the two sculptures almost from the day Islam became entrenched in the area around the ninth century.” International Herald Tribune 03/07/01

EARLY DESTRUCTION OF ART: Egyptologists are debating whether to restore a toppled 3,200-year-old 50-foot-high statue of Ramses II or leave it on the ground in pieces where early Christian monks felled and dismembered it to discourage idolatry. “The face was attacked, as the early Christians often did, and traces of hammering can be found all over the place, clearly showing that the destruction was willed.” Middle East Times (Egypt) 03/07/01

MUSIC GETS A NEW LOOK: The University of Illinois has unveiled an exhibit that focuses on the visual side of the music world. “Between Sound and Vision” is no high-tech, cutting-edge, multimedia effort – what the creators of the exhibit have done is take the truly “inside baseball” parts of the contemporary music world (scores by John Cage, unconventional in the extreme, make up the lion’s share of the exhibit) and displayed them as artworks that stand on their own. The idea is to explore the ever-expanding definition of music. Chicago Tribune 03/08/01

BEHIND THE SCENES: Audio artist Janet Cardiff has been awarded Canada’s $50,000 “Millenium Prize,” one of the largest arts awards in the history of the country. Cardiff’s latest piece, “Forty Part Motet,” consists of a massive array of 40 speakers, and very little else. “Each of the speakers emits the sound of a distinct voice singing one part from . . .a 12-minute choral work written by the British composer Thomas Tallis in 1575. During the performers’ intermission, we hear the singers chatting, working out difficulties in the score, or discussing their various jobs and interests before the performance resumes again.” The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/08/01

Wednesday March 7

PHILLIPS REMAKING AUCTION MARKET: Now even Sotheby’s board members are selling their art at No. 3 auction house Phillips. Observers say that Phillips is “guaranteeing collectors so much money that neither Sotheby’s nor Christie’s can come near the offers. As a consequence, the high-end auction world — a cozy gentleman’s club until the federal investigation into price-fixing and collusion shattered its decorum — is becoming an ever more free-wheeling, up-for-grabs marketplace, which makes officials at both houses worry that tight profit margins could evaporate completely.” The New York Times 03/07/01

SMITHSONIAN HITS THE JACKPOT AGAIN: The Smithsonian American Art Museum will receive a $10 million gift to go towards the $180 million renovation of its main museum building. The donation is the Smithsonian’s second $10 million windfall in a month. Washington Post 03/07/01

A VENEER OF VERMEER: What makes a 17th-century painter into a bona fide 21st century superstar? Well, it can’t hurt when a couple of high-profile (some might say blockbuster) exhibits inspire four novels, a book of poetry, and an opera. But in the case of Jan Vermeer, to whose legacy all these things have recently been added, scholars are concerned that most of the hype is just that, and that little of the artist’s actual life story remains intact in the face of all the tribute. Chicago Tribune 03/07/01

MONEY TRUMPS ENVIRONMENT: Japan’s World Expo 2005 was meant to be an environmentally friendy effort. “We wanted to change this country through this Expo. People are so used to destroying nature and installing rows of houses. So through this masterplan we wanted to change this process, and the relationship between this Expo and future town planning in Japan.” Unfortunately the whole master plan is unraveling fast. The Independent (London) 03/05/01

GIULIANI WOULD JUST HATE THIS: One of Paris’s hottest art destinations is, quite literally, illegal. “Squat du 59, rue de Rivoli” is a commune of artists squatting in a downtown building, and producing volumes of experimental art that have caught the Parisian public’s attention. But come spring, when city authorities begin evicting squatters, the commune faces extinction, unless a donor can be found to buy their building. The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/07/01

DREAM GARDEN NIGHTMARE: The City of Philadelphia goes to court today to try and save the historic “Dream Garden” mural that hangs in the lobby of one of downtown’s oldest buildings. The mural, which is thought to be worth between $5 million and $20 million, is in danger of being moved or demolished by its owners, the estate of deceased art patron John Merriam. Philadelphia Inquirer 03/07/01

CITIES OF TOMORROW: What will cities be like in the future? “Are we in for a Bladerunner future, where an increasingly glamorous aristo-class reclines atop a vast prole-tariat whose members slug it out in the dirty and disenfranchised bilge waters of life below decks? One of the many metaphors for cities proffered by the international experts gathered in Adelaide evoked just such a Titanic image, complete with distracted pilot and impending iceberg.” Sydney Morning Herald 03/07/01

THE BRITISH MUSEUM’S NEW AFRICAN GALLERIES: The British Museum’s new galleries of African art are gathering fans. “Purists will worry – purists always do worry – that such objects are being shown outside the religious, ritual or domestic contexts for which they were made. But 20th-century artists, from Picasso and Modigliani, taught us to aestheticise these things, and, once something has been seen as art, it is very difficult not to see it that way.” The Telegraph (London) 03/07/01

  • FINALLY SOME PROMINENCE: Amounting to more than 200,000 objects, the collection ranks among the most comprehensive surveys of its subject anywhere in the world. The Times (London) 03/07/01

Tuesday March 6

PROUD DESTROYER : Despite condemnation from around the globe – even from their few allies in Pakistan and the UAE – the Taliban’s leader broadcast a message throughout Afghanistan Monday telling his countrymen to be proud of his decision to destroy all the country’s pre-Islamic art and Buddhist sculpture. “The Taliban maintains its action would help create the world’s purest Islamic state saying their mission to destroy ‘false idols’ will continue.” CNN 3/05/01

INTO THE INNER CITY: Facing low visitor turnout and the ongoing difficulties of drawing arts patrons outside the city, the Barnes Foundation is contemplating a move from its historic suburban home to a site in Philadelphia’s center. “Underlying the pressures to transform is the view that wealthy donors and foundations are reluctant to open their wallets and portfolios to an institution whose access is so limited. Given its secluded location and burdensome 60-day advance reservation requirements, the collection draws only 85 percent of its visitor quota.” New York Times 3/06/01 (one-time registration required for access)

THE ART OF TOMB ROBBING: “When I first started out in this business, many of the objects I handled crumbled to pieces. They were too fragile. Now, I have a more scientific approach…The first rule of tomb-robbing is never take anything home and never put anything in your car. If the police find you in possession of anything, you’re in trouble… I love history. If I had studied, I’d be a great archaeologist…I’ve taken my son out with me three or four times, but he’s not really interested in tomb-robbing. There’s no passion.” The Art Newspaper 03/06/01

YO MAMA, YO PATHETIC: The Cardinal of New York slammed the Brooklyn Museum of Art as being publicity hungry and artist Renee Cox – who posed as a nude Christ figure in a 1996 photograph – a “pathetic individual.” The museum is currently showing Cox’s work “Yo Mama’s Last Supper” and New York mayor Rudy Giuliani has also criticized the work. New York Daily News 03/05/01

IT ISN’T JUST FOR SUBWAY CARS ANY MORE: Graffitti-inspired commercial art is “in” right now, and the originators aren’t happy. At least, their scholars aren’t: “The downside occurs when an artist takes his work out of its underground context and begins to produce commercial work. Then the elements that made his work unique can conspire to make it over-familiar, and in danger of crossing the line from tag to logo.” spark-online 03/01

MONEY TALKS: Engravings on old Confederate bills reveal a great deal about slavery. “We hear a lot these days about how the Confederacy was really about states’ rights and not slavery. But the currency itself tells the truth. It shows how they saw us, and how they wanted to keep seeing us.” The New York Times 03/06/01 (one-time registration required for access)

TOO MANY PICASSOS: The State Painting and Sculpture Museum in Ankara is delighted with its trove of Picassos. But are they real? “Even an ordinary person would understand that these are not the real pictures but very bad copies that look like they were made from postcards. Even the signature of Picasso on the back [of one] is a copy of a signature from another period.” Washington Post 03/05/01

Monday March 5

TOP ART THEFTS: What were the top art thefts of the 20th Century? Theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre in 1911 ranks high. Here’s a list of the top ten… Forbes.com 03/05/01

FALLOUT FOR SOTHEBY’S/CHRISTIE’S: Fallout from Sotheby’s and Christie’s auction house legal woes is mounting. Sotheby’s website has been a money sinkhole, there’re those big settlements to pay, and it looks like customers are turning to other sellers. And look, there’s No. 3 auction house Phillips in the passing lane… The Economist 03/03/01

DEAD BODIES AS ART? “In a show that pushes the boundaries of the controversial, a German doctor is displaying real cadavers. Skinned and dissected, the preserved bodies, which were donated by fully informed volunteers, are recomposed in abstract and representational forms for aesthetic effect. ‘I don’t show pure anatomy, it’s more something like anatomy-entertainment’.” Washington Post 03/05/01

FOUNDER BEGINS DISMANTLING ART COLLECTION: Last year the Canadian provincial government of Ontario wrested control of the McMichael Collection, a public art collection, away from its board and gave it back to its founder, Robert McMichael. Now “the founder has described 3,000 of the works out of the gallery’s collection of 6,000 as ‘unsuitable’, but that he, nevertheless, might focus his initial energy on 12 pieces ‘that he really dislikes’.” These he will dispose of. The Art Newspaper 03/03/01

ARTS PATRON: Chicago is getting an architectural makeover, led by mayor Richard Daley. “So firm is Daley’s grip on power that he has conflated the traditionally separate roles of patron and planner into a single autocratic whole. He reviews every single major project built in his city (bad news for Modernists, because the mayor is no fan of steel and glass). He also is a public-works fanatic who scribbles notes to his aides as he rides around the city in his chauffeur-driven limousine—fill this pothole, fix that streetlight, trim that tree. Plenty of architects can’t stand him; but the vast majority of voters love him.” Metropolis 03/01

ARCHITECTURAL SHOOT-OUT: Two high profile building projects are in the planning stages in New York. An interesting competition between the two is possible. “Let’s see who can build not only taller or faster but who can build best. An architectural free-for-all on the East River: that’s my idea of fireworks on the Fourth of July.” The New York Times 03/05/01 (one-time registration required for access)

CUBAN FAKES: “Rapidly escalating prices for paintings by Cuban masters have led to a notorious parallel market for fakes. Damaging the artists’ legacies, the fakes have turned up in the United States, Spain and Latin America. Many forgers are aided by Cuba’s political isolation and the scarcity of resources and experts on Cuban art who can certify a work’s authenticity.” Miami Herald 03/05/01

WESTERN MUSEUMS TO MERGE? Los Angeles’ Southwest Museum and the Autry Museum of Western Heritage are considering merging and creating a new National Center for Western Heritage, which would function as an umbrella for the two museums. Los Angeles Times 03/05/01

Sunday March 4

AFGHAN ART DESTROYED: “Taliban Information Minister Quadratullah Jamal announced that, in apparent defiance of international condemnation and pleas to preserve the world’s tallest standing Buddha statue and other ancient artifacts, two-thirds of the country’s statues had been smashed. ‘They were easy to break apart and did not take much time,’ he said.” Washington Post 03/04/01

SHAKEN, NOT STIRRED: Seattle is a hotbed of glass art, with dozens of internationally known glass artists working there. They didn’t fare so well in last week’s 6.8 earthquake. Galleries lost hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of glass art, and several large installations by Dale Chihuly were destroyed. Who pays for damage? Mostly the artists – most galleries didn’t have quake insurance. Seattle Post-Intelligencer 03/02/01

THEY’RE CALLING IT LONDON’S EIFFEL TOWER: Of all of London’s projects marking the turn of the millennium, perhaps the most popular is the Eye – a giant ferris wheel in the middle of the city that began turning about a year ago. Whereas the Millennium Dome was richly funded and bombed with the public, the Eye was financed on a shoestring and has come to help define the city’s skyline. The Telegraph (London) 03/03/01

INFLATED NOTORIETY: Let’s take a step back from knee-jerk reactions over controversial work like that in the current Brooklyn Museum/Giuliani flap. Celebrity conveyed by such disputes is unreasonable and unwarranted. “With so many things competing for the public’s overburdened, shortened attention span, any sort of distinction is positive for an artwork. Remember the salesman’s motto: ‘If you can’t make a good impression, make an impression’.” Chicago Tribune 03/04/01

MUSEUM AUDIENCE GROWS WHILE MUSEUM CLOSED: In the month before it closed for a five-year renovation, the Smithsonian Museum of American Art attracted 54,000 visitors. A year later – in the same month – the museum received almost 60,000 visitors online to see its artwork. “Online visitors can see a lot more than what used to hang on the walls. For example, the museum could display fewer than 1,000 photos, paintings, sculptures and other artifacts. During the renovation, online visitors can download 16 virtual exhibits and 4,000 objects at any time.” New Jersey Online 03/04/01

Friday March 2

WRITING A WRONG: What do most authors do when they get a bad review? Well, absolutely nothing, other than maybe complaining to friends and moping. “But there’s still an enduring category of author who feels that a bad review is no mere difference of opinion, however ill-informed and wrongheaded the reviewer’s take may be. It’s an injustice that must be remedied.” But, calling critics at home? Offering bounties? Threatening legal recourse? Come on… Salon 3/02/01

WORTH A REFUND: As part of the massive settlement of Christie’s and Sotheby’s price-fixing scandal, the auction houses have agreed to refund foreign art dealers and collectors the fees charged on their transactions over the last six years. The Age (Melbourne) 3/02/01

NEW APPROACHES IN AN OLD GENRE: Landscape painting has been around forever, it seems. Early cave drawings were, in a sense, landscape art. But landscapes have changed greatly in the recent past. Environmental destruction. Pollution. Industrialization. Black-top. A new breed of landscape painters is producing art that notices. ArtNews 03/01

STARBUCK’S ON THE NILE? The Egyptian Railway Authority plans to convert Cairo’s historic train station into a shopping mall, “to increase the revenue of the station and thus allow us to upgrade the whole system.” No, argue preservationists. Its “a historical catastrophe… a national disgrace… doing away with history in return for a few bucks.” Al-Ahram (Egypt) 02/28/01

VAN GOGH’S ASTRONOMY: It’s not unusual to know the year a famous painting was done, but the exact hour? Van Gogh’s “White House at Night” has been pinned down quite precisely: 7 PM on the 16th of June, 1890. The information comes, not from Van Gogh, but from astronomers who studied the position of Venus in his nighttime sky. New Scientist 02/28/01

RETHINKING THE MUSEUM: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Director David Ross is largely responsible for SFMOMA’s new computer generated-art show, “010101: Art in Technological Times.” He’s also a vocal proponent of incorporating new technologies into museums. “The contemporary museum’s role today is no longer purely as a vehicle for showcasing art, but also as a space to discuss the contrast of values and ideas.” Wired 3/01/01

Thursday March 1

DESTROYING ART IN AFGHANISTAN: Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban run an oppressive regime. Now the country’s Ministry of Vice and Virtue has announced plans to destroy every statue in the country, including the world’s tallest Buddha, almost 2,000 years old. Why? “Worshippers might be tempted to pay homage to the idols, the Taliban’s youthful leaders have decided, even though Afghanistan is devoid of Buddhists.” The Globe & Mail (Canada) 03/01/01

THE DOME. NOW LEEDS. WHERE HAVE THE TOURISTS GONE? Leeds museum was the the first attempt to run a British National museum as a business. A private contractor was brought in, along with displays from the Tower of London. Initial estimates were for a million visitors a year, more or less. Less is what they got. Last year, 180,000. Consequently, the Royal Armouries “took over responsibility for running the museum…. leaving the private company to retain some services: catering, car parking and corporate hospitality.” The Art Newspaper 03/01/01

Publishing: March 2001

Friday March 30

THE FAKE POETRY BENEFACTOR? A year ago reputed dot-com whiz Ravi Desai lit up the poetry world with his pledge to give $2 million to the University of Washington to support the study of poetry. But now, after a number of discrepancies in Desai’s story, it’s looking increasingly unlikely that the university will ever see the money. Seattle Post-Intelligencer 03/24/01

POETS-IN-TRAINING: Ride a train in Sicily this month and you’ll be greeted with poetry. “Around 50 Italian poets – from famous names to up-and-coming authors – are climbing aboard to chat to unsuspecting passengers and read their works to what is in effect a captive audience in southern Italy.” BBC 03/30/01

LOVE IT TO DEATH: Is National Poetry Month a bad idea? “National Poetry Month is about making poetry safe for readers by promoting examples of the art form at its most bland and its most morally ‘positive.’ The message is: Poetry is good for you. But, unfortunately, promoting poetry as if it were an ‘easy listening’ station just reinforces the idea that poetry is culturally irrelevant and has done a disservice not only to poetry deemed too controversial or difficult to promote but also to the poetry it puts forward in this way.” University of Chicago Press 04/01

PROTO-HOLMES: A ghost story written 125 years ago by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle when he was an 18 years old will be published for the first time today. Scholars believe the story’s characters are precursors of Doyle’s most famous creations, Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. The Telegraph (London) 3/30/01

Thursday March 29

FOR POETRY, APRIL IS THE COOLEST MONTH: In spite of Eliot’s line about the cruelest month – or perhaps because of it – April has been named National Poetry Month. It’s not a bad idea, and might even generate some interest in what seems to be a deteriorating art form: more and more people writing it, fewer and fewer reading it. Publishers Weekly 03/26/01

DON’T MESS WITH HARRY: The author claiming JK Rowling ripped off key ideas for the popular Harry Potter books has quickly annoyed Rowling and her publisher with her claims – there is that expensive movie coming out, after all. So this week Rowling’s publisher and movie producer filed a preemptive suit against Nancy Stouffer. But don’t expect Stouffer to stage a quick retreat any time soon. Washington Post 03/28/01

THE WAR OF THE WINDS: A book titled The Wind Done Gone is ready for publication; it’s a version of Gone With the Wind, told from the perspective of an ex-slave. The new book’s publisher calls it fair comment “on a book that has taken on mythic status in American culture.” The estate of Margaret Mitchell calls it copyright infringement, and is suing to block its publication. CNN (AP) 03/28/01

LOOKS SELL BOOKS: It’s old news that beauty sells – but it’s a hard truth to swallow for those in the book business, where what’s between the covers is supposed to matter more than whose face is on them. But to the chagrin of many, “whether a new author is seen as gorgeous or not – has become a key criterion in deciding whether a book gets the kind of marketing push that will give it a chance of selling.” The Guardian (London) 3/38/01

SHAKESPEARE’S PROBLEM? WORDS: For half a century, Frank Kermode resisted the temptation to write a book about Shakespeare. But he finally gave in. “[M]ine would have to be an old-fashioned book, in that it would be as far as possible about the words; and further, I would not spend a lot of time talking about plays I thought ‘not done in the best fashion’ except to say, if I could, why I thought that to be the case; and even to say why I think that Shakespeare as he went on to his finest plays, increasingly and even exultantly skilful, cruel and powerful, was all the more likely to fall over his own feet, to obscure his meaning with his words.” London Review 12/09/99

HOW TO MAKE A PROFIT PUBLISHING: British publisher Bloomsbury doubled its pre-tax profits last year. What helped was that Bloomsbury published Margaret Atwood’s Booker-prize-winning novel The Blind Assassin. What really helped is that Bloomsbury publishes Harry Potter. The Guardian (London) 03/29/01

Wednesday March 28

LEARNING ABOUT BOOKS: Australia’s book industry has mostly run its business by the seat of its pants. It’s difficult to know who reads what and why. “However, under economic and technological pressure to perform better, that has begun to change. This year government- and industry-funded programs have begun to gather information on who reads books, who doesn’t and why, and what sort of books we like best.” Sydney Morning Herald 03/28/01

WE MADE A MISTAKE? Why would a publisher go to the expense of printing a book, sending it to critics, then ask for it back? Dennis Loy Johnson went looking for the answer… The Idler 03/27/01

EARLY THIS MORNING, IT WAS NUMBER 46: What do the Amazon book-sales figures mean? There’s a big difference between number 16 and number 42,000, but maybe not quite as big as you’d think. Slate 03/26/01

WHY THE BOOK AND THE MOVIE ARE DIFFERENT: It’s said that no decent person would want to see what goes into the making of sausage, or of laws. That may also be true of turning a book into a movie. “The business of selling books to Hollywood is straightforward in appearance only. Simmering below the surface is a reality far more byzantine, rife with moles and secret deals and clandestine alliances. Quite often, the book itself is secondary to the events surrounding it.” Publishers Weekly 03/26/01

HIS AND HERS JURIES: The richest literary award in England – the £30,000 Orange Prize – is open to women only. Until this year, the judges also were women only. Now a second jury – all men – has been asked to rate the contenders as well. Are the women giving in? “It hadn’t occurred to me at all that we are giving in to men. It doesn’t matter what they come up with. It’s the old story: we don’t have to listen to them.” Guardian (London) 03/27/01

THE ORIGINAL WOLFE: Thomas Wolfe’s “Look Homeward Angel” began as a huge manuscript, which editor Maxwell Perkins helped trim into a novel. A new un-edited version finally shows what was cut. “Wolfe was a Mahler, who believed that ‘a symphony must be like the world. It must embrace everything.’ Perkins sought to transpose him into a Bruckner, homely, sublime, and unfailing in the magisterial flow of his logic.” Boston Globe 03/27/01

Tuesday March 27

BAD TIME FOR BOOKS: Australian booksellers are in despair. “Many bookshops reported their worst year of trade ever last year, with sales commonly down 20 per cent after the introduction of the GST and the Olympics. Their problems are compounded by the economic slump, the continuing fall in the dollar and rise in paper costs. Now a new threat looms. Sydney Morning Herald 03/27/01

BOOK SAVIOUR? “All too often, a university-press book is published, sells through its printing in several years, and then goes out of stock, often indefinitely, despite the fact that some demand for it still exists.” Enter print-on-demand. “Making use of the latest printing technology, numerous university presses — Cambridge, Johns Hopkins, N.Y.U., Oxford, and Princeton, to name but a few — are currently engaged in major initiatives to breathe new life into hundreds of books that have gone out of print or are in danger of going out of stock.” Chronicle of Higher Education 03/20/01

  • SAVIOUR OF WHAT? “For many authors, the technology is a godsend, making their out-of-print books available for libraries and future generations of scholars and students. For others, however, the technology raises ethical and legal issues, some of which are so potentially serious that they can impede a professor’s productivity.” Chronicle of Higher Education 03/30/01

BEGGING FOR COMPETENCE: Canada’s authors are on a roll, scooping up literature prize nominations all over. But “our authors are so fine, why can’t our publishers and booksellers get it together?” National Post (Canada) 03/27/01

AUTHOR ANXIETY: “Writers may face anxiety at any stage of creation, as they move from feeling to thought, thought to page, page to publisher, but women ‘freeze up earlier in the process.’ Women are more likely to be anxious about the value of their ideas in the first place, while for men, the issue is how to deal with the competition.” The New York Times 03/27/01 (one-time registration required for access)

OVERWHELMED IN LEIPZIG: Attendees at the Leipzig Book Fair are overwhelmed. “As the number of books increases to bewildering proportions, the spectrum of publishing houses is becoming increasingly streamlined. Even previously small market segments, such as audio books, have expanded to an extent which even specialists find overwhelming.”  Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 03/26/01

Monday March 26

THE BORROWERS: “It is high time creative writers reclaimed their right to borrow from others, without shame. If we go back to pre-romantic times, the heinous crime known as plagiarism simply did not exist. There were many sins a writer could commit – bombast, bathos and prolixity – but borrowing was not one of them. Everyone picked and stole from everyone else and English literature was a patchwork quilt of cross-reference, allusion and misquotation, in short, exuberant word-play.” The Observer (London) 03/25/01

THE RELUCTANT BIGWIG: “Who is Ann Godoff? At 30, the president of Random House was an aimless temp. At 40, she was quietly editing for the two biggest party boys in publishing. By 50, she’d beaten all comers to lead the most important imprint in the book business. How’d she do it? Well, she doesn’t want to talk about it.” New York Magazine 03/26/01

Sunday March 25

THE DEATH OF LIT CRIT: What, wonders Martin Amis, has happened to literary criticism? Answer: it democratized and died. “You can become famous without having any talent (by abasing yourself on some TV nerd-othon: a clear improvement on the older method of simply killing a celebrity and inheriting the aura). But you cannot become talented without having any talent. Therefore, talent must go.” The Guardian (London) 03/24/01

Thursday March 22

GETTING PAID: This week, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear a case that could have huge implications for publications that reproduce their print editions online. The plaintiffs contend that newspapers and magazines have no right to reproduce the work of freelancers online without compensating the authors. The defendants include The New York Times, Lexis/Nexis, and a host of other publishing giants. Wired 03/22/01

SELLING IT: As the publishing world continues to look to new technologies to boost sagging sales and reinvigorate the book-buying public, one company is relying on what has always made it a success: marketing, marketing, and more marketing. “Between 1995 and 1999, [Sourcebooks] notched a 542 percent increase in sales and was ranked last year 494th on Inc. magazine’s list of the 500 fastest-growing companies in the nation.” Chicago Tribune 03/22/01

KEEPING THE HOMEFIRES BURNING: Chapters, Canada’s answer to Barnes & Noble, has fallen on hard times recently, and the sales slump has panicked Canadian publishing houses. Now, the country’s largest publisher is insisting that reports that it plans to slash the number of “homegrown” titles it puts out are false, despite recent reports to the contrary. National Post (Canada) 03/22/01

BEAT BLEAT ON THE BLOCK: Jack Kerouac composed his paean to American life, “On the Road,” in a caffeine-and-drug-induced three-week typing binge, single-spaced on a 120-foot long scroll of hand-cut paper. He was fond of unrolling it to its full incredible length, so that friends could view the manuscript itself as a road to be travelled. The original scroll will be auctioned off this spring at Christie’s in New York, an irony that will not escape any fan of the author’s work. The New York Times 03/22/01 (one-time registration required for access)

A GERMAN BOOK OSCAR: “The German publishing world wanted a big-time spectacle, and so it invented a ‘German Book Prize,’ an award without prize money. Instead, this honor is intended to eclipse all the other 750 literature awards in Germany.” Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 03/22/01

Wednesday March 21

EMERGENCY AID: The Canadian government is giving $1.3 million to 22 publishers to help them out after financially-strapped bookseller Chapters returned a huge number of unsold books rather than pay for them. “Industry insiders estimate that Chapters has returned as many as 50 per cent of its books instead of paying publishers for the merchandise.” The Globe & Mail (Canada) 03/20/01

LESSING WINS BRITAIN’S RICHEST BOOK PRIZE: At 81, Doris Lessing has been awarded the £30,000 David Cohen prize for a lifetime of excellence, “52 years after she arrived in Britain from Rhodesia, to be confronted by a media article announcing that the novel was dead as a literary form. But in her suitcase was a manuscript [The Grass Is Singing] which helped restore the novel to blazing life when it reached bookshops the following year, 1950.” The Guardian (London) 03/21/01

CHECK-OUT COUNTER READING GETS DULL: Those breathy – or breathless – erotic tease lines are disappearing from the covers of women’s magazines. The change is prompted more by demographics than by morality. “I think that beyond the ‘ick’ factor, there is a boredom factor. Once you’ve found out how to supersize your sex life four different ways, the fifth is not all that interesting.” Inside 03/20/01

Tuesday March 20

THE FUTURE IS “E”: “In five years, the consumer e-book market (according to figures from Accenture) could be roughly 10% of the $22 billion consumer book market – not counting print-on-demand, which could double the total. Major publishers, are casting their P&Ls aside… to invest in the e-book market, there is more than $100 million in investment by the major publishers into e-books and the digital infrastructure required to store and retrieve them.” Publishers Weekly 03/19/01

ARE YOU READY TO DIE FOR NORMAN MAILER? “One does, in the course of a writing life, create a lot of hostility. I think I’d almost rather have it that way than have people say, ‘Oh, what a nice guy.’ I think a healthy person should be able to die for a few ideas — and can feel well loved if a few are ready to go all the way for him or her.” Poets & Writers 03/01

THE SUBTLE POLITICS OF SPELL-CHECK: “Suppose you type in Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, and Mao. Word 97 knows them all. Try Ghandi, however, and you get a red squiggle underneath. Good guys have no place in the modern cultural consciousness. Your computer knows baddies Lenin and Trotsky, but not peace lovers Lennon, McCartney, and Starr. It remembers Auschwitz but not Woodstock.” Exquisite Corpse Issue #8

NAPSTER WAS JUST THE BEGINING: Many writers are asking to be paid extra when their published work goes into an electronic archive. “The case turns on the question of ownership. Changes that Congress made in the copyright laws …made it clear that these writers still own their articles after publication, but that publishers could still include them in ‘revised’ versions of the newspaper. Now, do electronic archives qualify as a ‘revision’?” The New York Times 03/19/01 (one-time registration required for access)

Monday March 19

SLUSH-BUSTER: Vanity press books haven’t exactly improved just because digital technology makes them more viable. “Print-on-demand houses solicit clients online, then use the latest technology to crank out only enough books to meet existing orders—a run so small the book would sink in the mass market. An examination of randomly chosen Xlibris fiction titles reveals a catalog full of clichéd plots and terrible-to-middling writing, not to mention downright bizarre notions of the world.” Village Voice 03/13/01

Friday March 16

COINCIDENCE OR PLAGIARISM? JK Rowling, the superstar author of the “Harry Potter” series, is under fire from a writer in Pennsylvania, who claims that her 1984 book was the inspiration for the blockbuster children’s series. “Rah and the Muggles” does bear a striking similarity to Rowling’s work in several ways, and even features a character called “Larry Potter.” BBC 03/16/01

WHY DIDN’T WE THINK OF THIS BEFORE? Canada’s Ruth Schwarz Children’s Book Award is one of the country’s most prestigious prizes for a category of literature that too often consists of trite teen romances and cheesy Nancy Drew knock-offs. Why is the award so coveted by authors and publishers? Well, for one thing, the judges are children themselves, and they know what they like. Ottawa Citizen 03/16/01

Thursday March 15

THE DILEMMA OF SCHOLARLY PUBLISHING: The prices of scholarly journals are rising exponentially, but payments to authors and referees are not. “When scholars and scientists realize how commercial interests have benefited from their labor, and how little say they have about the matter, they can’t help but ask, ‘Isn’t there a better way?'” One possibility: do it yourself. Wired 03/15/01

RESCUING POETRY AND CALLIGRAPHY TOGETHER: Poetry books usually do not sell many copies anyway; the poetry of an obscure seventeenth-century Asian concubine, written in a nearly-indecipherable text, must have seemed like a particularly bad bet. But it’s going into a third printing. “Ho’s work really ‘jumped from woodcut to digitization, skipping the whole Gutenberg process,’ said John Balaban, the North Carolina poet who translated her folk poems and helped oversee their presentation in the strikingly designed book.” The New York Times 03/15/01 (one-time registration required for access)

MAGAZINE AWARD NOMINEES: The New Yorker is the “Gladiator” of magazines this year, having been nominated for eleven National Magazine awards. Esquire is second with eight. A dozen others received multiple nominations, including Rolling Stone and Martha Stewart Living. Inside 03/14/01

COMPETING WITH HARRY: A new Potter book is coming out, complete with Muggles and… The author who is suing JK Rowling claiming Rowling stole her Harry Potter ideas, is reissuing her own Potter books, written in the 1980s. Nando Times (AP) 03/14/01

Wednesday March 14

WHEN LITERAL ISN’T SO LITERAL: A new translation of “Anna Karenina” is out. But how can the reader be sure that it’s a “literal” translation? The answer – you can’t. There’s no such thing, and which version you like depends on your personal taste in prose. Or, you can take Dennis Loy Johnson’s  “Lady With A Pet Dog In The Attic” test. The Idler

CELEBRATING JAMES MERRILL: Six years after his death, on what would have been his 75th birthday, James Merrill is being feted with the publication of an 885-page edition of his “Collected Poems” and celebratory conferences around the country. “He does with words what Mozart did with notes.”New York Times 3/14/01 (one-time registration required for access)

DEBUNKING A HOLOCAUST MEMOIR: Five years ago, Binjamin Wilkomirski was celebrated as a Holocaust survivor who had written a moving account of his life under the Nazis. Today he is denounced as a fraud, whose only visit to Auschwitz was as a tourist. How could he have fooled so many people? Brill’s Content 03/12/01

Tuesday March 13

NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARDS are announced. The New York Times 03/13/01 (one-time registration required for access)

ROTH’S AMERICA: “Philip Roth’s writing is to the wallpaper of media talk what a Cezanne is to an editorial cartoon. You come to late Roth to clear your mind of shallowness and cliché, to cauterize your facile formulations, to bone your verities. This hurts. Roth can wound. Now that Roth has completed his American trilogy, you can step back from the individual plots, the varied characters and situations, and you can see the vision rising through them. It is a prospect of paradise lost.” The Atlantic 03/12/01

MORE TROUBLES AT AMAZON: The Authors’ Guild is planning to file a protest against Amazon.com for the online retailer’s continuing practice of selling cheap, used books alongside the more expensive new copies. The Guild claims that Amazon “entices” buyers to favor the used titles. Wired 03/13/01

LUDLUM DIES: Spy novelist Robert Ludlum has died, the victim of an apparent heart attack. Ludlum’s novels sold millions, and even high-minded critics admitted a secret penchant for his work. From the Washington Post, for instance: “It’s a lousy book. So I stayed up until 3 a.m. to finish it.” Nando Times 03/13/01

Monday March 12

BULLISH ON TECH: Technology doesn’t spell the end of book publishing, Indeed, “far from being finished, some insisted, the book trade faces a future in which it is likely to flourish as never before.” The Economist 03/08/01

Sunday March 11

BOOM IN BLACK LIT: Black American literature is thriving. “The boom in black fiction has led to the establishment or revival of seven black publishing imprints in the last year alone. And these have come from the biggest houses in the industry – including Strivers Row at Random House and Walk Worthy Press at Warner Books.” Dallas Morning News 03/10/01

Friday March 9

WANTED: A BOOK REVIEW THAT MATTERS:  Statistically Los Angeles is the largest book market in the United States. When Steve Wasserman took over editing the LA Times Book Review he promised big things. But “the fact that no statistic or proportions can explain is this: The LA Times Book Review is boring. Wasserman clearly has good intentions, and sees himself working on the side of the angels. But the Review never happens, it never bites, it never sings, it never laughs.” LA New Times 03/08/01

PEN AWARDS FOR FICTION AND POETRY: The 2001 PEN awards go to a 29-year-old investment banker and a 66-year-old jazz musician and teacher – the stipend is small, but the prestige is considerable. Akhil Sharma is the banker; his novel “An Obedient Father” won the $7500 Hemingway Foundation/PEN award for first fiction. Jay Wright is the teacher; his “Transfigurations: Collected Poems” won the $3000 Winship/PEN New England Award. The Boston Globe 03/08/01

NOTHING FICTITIOUS ABOUT RANDOM HOUSE E-BOOKS: Random House believes in e-books; it just doesn’t believe in e-novels. The publisher has ten new e-books due out this Fall, all non-fiction. “All the hype is for trade books because people are fascinated by the idea of the paper novel going out of existence. But nobody thinks that way about a textbook. The e-book is going to be big in education.” Meanwhile, Simon & Schuster and HarperCollins are going ahead with e-novels. Salon (AP) 03/08/01

  • THE SLO-MOTION REVOLUTION: For some time now e-publishing has been the hype and hope of the publishing industry. But lately the revolution has seemed to sputter. Is it because the technology isn’t there yet or is it the way publishing’s power structure is set up? ArtsJournal.com 03/09/01

THE FIRST PUBLISHED POET WAS A WOMAN: Who is the earliest known author? It was Enheduanna, whose poems were scripted on clay tablets four thousand years ago. A new edition of her work is now available – this one on paper. “Enheduanna was the first theologian in the world. Her writings present a multi-faceted model of women as powerful, assertive, sexual and priestly. Many of [the goddess] Inanna’s qualities foreshadow the powers of the Hebrew god Yahweh in the Old Testament.” Discovery 03/05/01

LECARRE BANNED: John LeCarre’s latest novel, the bestseller “The Constant Gardener,” is set entirely in modern-day Kenya, yet it can’t be found anywhere in the country. Kenyan booksellers are refusing to stock it out of fear of being punished by the authorities for promoting an entirely unfavorable portrayal of the Kenyan government. “In Kenya, the truth is always stranger than fiction.” NPR 3/08/01 [Real audio file]

Thursday March 8

BATTLE OVER E-PUBLISHING RIGHTS: Some e-publishers (and authors) say publishing books in e-form is a new enterprise. Publishers object, claiming they hold rights to the books. Now Random House has sued e-publisher Rosetta over the matter. “The basic premise of Random’s suit is that its contracts with authors gives it the exclusive right to publish the works in book form, which Random says includes e-book formats. Random House contends that e-books are just another way to deliver an author’s words in a different format.” Publishers Weekly 03/05/01

Tuesday March 6

SHORT LIST, BIG PURSE: Six fiction writers have been shortlisted for Ireland’s Impac Literary Award, notable for its wide range of foreign authors (it’s open to books of any language) and for being one of the world’s richest literary prizes. (The winner gets £100,000.) The Guardian (London) 3/06/01

SILVER LINING: A report issued yesterday showed that 10% of Britain’s small independent bookshops have folded in the last five years. Sad news indeed, but “the amazing fact is not that 10% have closed, but that 90% have stayed open. The resilience of the British book industry is quite astonishing: 110,155 books published last year, more than in the US, China or anywhere; of those 110,155, a reasonably assiduous reader might get round to reading 0.02% of them.” The Guardian (London) 3/06/01

THE EDITOR AS INTRUDER: Surely the first rule of editing ought to be not getting between the reader and the book. Yet too often with editions of classic books, the editor often introduces the edition by disclosing the plot, parading his or her “potted historical knowledge and biographical take on the author,” and prescribing “whatever appraisal of the novel he or she espouses.” And it gets worse. “Editors have increasingly insisted on appearing intermittently at our elbow as we read the novel, through the device of the footnote or endnote.” Chronicle of Higher Education 03/09/01

Monday March 5

REPLACING PAPER: Paper has been the medium of communication for centuries. But now scientists are trying to improve the readability of computers so they’ll replace paper. “There is more at stake, however, than just the physical substitution of one medium for another; it will require a huge cultural shift as society struggles to give up its addiction to paper and embrace the ethereal nature of electronics. It also has far-reaching implications for books, magazines and newspapers, not to mention libraries and museums. Ours, after all, is a well paper-trained world.” Globe & Mail (Canada) 03/05/01

Sunday March 4

THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN WRITERS: The modern male novelist prizes formal ingenuity, tricksiness, exuberance; flights of fancy and fireworks, that’s what his genius specialises in. No doubt as he goes along he hopes to tell us something, whether obliquely or in your face, about the Modern Predicament or the Hell that is America. The female novelist, by contrast, believes that the novel at its best creates a sort of moral poetry, in that the questions of human choice and of how life is to be lived are intrinsic to it.” The Guardian 02/28/01

Friday March 2

WRITING A WRONG: What do most authors do when they get a bad review? Well, absolutely nothing, other than maybe complaining to friends and moping. “But there’s still an enduring category of author who feels that a bad review is no mere difference of opinion, however ill-informed and wrongheaded the reviewer’s take may be. It’s an injustice that must be remedied.” But, calling critics at home? Offering bounties? Threatening legal recourse? Come on… Salon 3/02/01

A LAWSUIT OVER E-BOOKS – IT WON’T BE THE LAST: Did you think the Napster legal fracas was nasty and confusing? Wait until the book publishers get into it. And they’re about to. RosettaBooks is publishing e-versions of novels by Kurt Vonnegut and William Styron. Random House says it didn’t give permission. RosettaBooks says Vonnegut and Styron gave permission. Random House is suing. CBC 03/01/01

WHO READS THE MOST? THE SCOTS: A survey in Britain shows Scots read one and a half times as much as other residents of the UK. The English and Welsh average four hours a week or less, the Scottish nearly six. “Backing up the survey’s findings, organisers said that libraries in the Scottish Highlands lent more books per head of population than the rest of the United Kingdom.” ABC (Reuters) 03/01/01

THE ORIGINAL SWINGING SUPERHERO: Few people read Edgar Rice Burroughs today, but his books about Tarzan of the Apes once were staples of American popular culture. “In the first half of the 20th century, the most widely read American author was Burroughs, whose… 74 novels have sold more than 100 million copies.” Not bad for a man who took up writing in his late thirties because he couldn’t make a living as a pencil sharpener salesman. Smithsonian 03/01

Thursday March 1

MAGAZINES GOING POSTAL OVER MAIL COSTS: Last year, magazine publishers endured a ten-percent hike in postage rates. This year, the rate increase could be thirty-percent, and the publishers aren’t going to take it any more. They’re demanding the postal service make itself more efficient and cost-effective. “They ought to implement an immediate hiring freeze and somehow they need to come to grips with the fact that their clerical workers are paid twice what their counterparts in the private sector are paid.” Inside.com 02/28/01

MIGHTY AS THE AMAZON? Stock in Amazon.com dropped Wednesday, amid rumors that the giant on-line bookseller was going to file for bankruptcy. The effect of the rumors, of course, was to push the stock down further still. Asked about the rumor, one Amazon spokesman said “I can tell you absolutely, positively that there is no truth whatsoever.” Another said, “We’ve got piles of moolah. People just don’t pay attention.” Salon (AP) 02/28/01

TOLSTOY AND THE CHURCH, STILL AT ODDS: Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy rejected the authority of the Russian Orthodox church, for which he was excommunicated. Now, a century later, his great-great-grandson Vladimir has asked the Church to forgive the novelist. The director of the Tolstoy Museum thinks it’s a bad idea: “Tolstoy never repented, nor would he have approved of his descendant’s drive to reunite him with the church.” The Church so far has made no definitive reply. Vancouver Sun 02/28/01

People: March 2001

Friday March 30

GORE VIDAL ON CENSORSHIP: In a Prague Writers’ Festival Interview, Gore Vidal spoke out against a host of American ills, not the least of which in his mind is the silencing of its freest thinkers. “For instance, throughout the 50s into the 80s, I was a fixture on national television. Now I am no longer a guest on anything where I might say something that they would find embarrassing, which would be practically anything I would say about how the country is run. So I am the perfect example of censorship in the United States.” The Guardian (London) 3/30/01

Thursday March 29

REHABILITATING JEFF: For years Jeff Koons was an example to many of the kitsch shallowness of the art world. A self-promoter with a tangled personal life, he made an impact on the art world by being controversial. But more recently Koons has had a makeover, and even his harshest critics are singing praises. Los Angeles Times 03/28/01

MUNRO HONORED: Canadian author Alice Munro has won the Rea Award for lifetime achievement, a $30,000 prize honoring the art of the short story. Times of India (AP) 3/29/01

Monday March 26

AN ARTIST AND AN INTELLECT: One of Canada’s great poets died last week, and is being remembered as an innovator who never gave up on restoring intellectualism to poetry, after what he saw as its degradation in the free-wheeling 1960s. Louis Dudek was also a great teacher, who inspired a generation of students to pursue the modernist form. The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/26/01

ACCOUNTING FOR A LIFE: Richard Stern has written 19 books in his long career, and he claims that literary success comes from the constant introspection that all good writers go through. “I can’t remember who said something like ‘Happiness is white and doesn’t stain the page,’ but of course almost all stories are about such forms of unhappiness as disturbance, derangement and disorder. These may be comic, may be imaginary, but they initiate storytelling.” The New York Times 03/26/01 (one-time registration required)

THE RELUCTANT BIGWIG: “Who is Ann Godoff? At 30, the president of Random House was an aimless temp. At 40, she was quietly editing for the two biggest party boys in publishing. By 50, she’d beaten all comers to lead the most important imprint in the book business. How’d she do it? Well, she doesn’t want to talk about it.” New York Magazine 03/26/01

Sunday Marh 25

RETIREMENT IS OVERRATED: Nearly forty years after Merce Cunningham burst onto the scene and changed dance forever, the 81-year-old choreographer is still one of the most innovative figures in modern dance. “The work is not and has never been trendy or appealing to popular taste. When making a dance, Merce has never considered what might be commercially viable.” Yet somehow, Cunningham has been embraced by the public like few other choreographers before or since. The New York Times 03/25/01 (one-time registration required for access)

ALTERING THE LANDSCAPE: Claude Cormier creates landscapes. More than that, he creates altered realities. His vision of a perfect expanse of open land is as likely to include plastic pink flamingoes as not. “In 1996-97, for example, Cormier dyed parts of the lawns at Montreal’s Canadian Centre for Architecture vibrant blue as part of its The American Lawn exhibition because, he says, ‘the North American obsession with perfect grass deserved celebration.'” The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/25/01

REARVIEW MIRROR: Magdalena Abakanowicz has always been fascinated with the human form – specifically, the back of it. Her massive sculpture projects, which often consist of huge numbers of backward-facing figures that can fill a gallery or hillside, are often even more powerful for their lack of the traditional focal points of human sculpture. Los Angeles Times 03/25/01

Friday March 23

CARTOONIST WILLIAM HANNA DIED Thursday at age 90. Hanna created the Flintstones, the Jetsons, Tom and Jerry, and Yogi Bear, among others, and cofounded Hanna-Barbera in 1937. Together with Joesph Barbera, they created the first weekly original cartoon show, the first primetime cartoon sitcom, and earned seven Academy Awards. ABC 3/22/01

THE NONEXISTENCE OF SHAKESPEARE: Okay, so there appears to be some potential validity to the recently popularized arguments that Shakespeare may actually have been some guy named Marlowe, or possibly a bunch of different people. But conspiracy theories like this have a way of getting out of hand, and spawning even more ludicrous ideas. “The Bard wrote ‘Hello God, It’s Me, Margaret.’ As today, girls in the 16th century struggled with the mysteries of budding womanhood. Shakespeare wished to be of help.” Also, “Sherlock Holmes was a badger.” San Francisco Chronicle 03/23/01

HOW TO WRITE A HIT: Composer Joan Tower is quite well-known within the walls of the music world for her forays into multiple styles of composition, and her enthusiasm for the profession. But audiences might never have heard of her, had it not been for the title of a 1987 work. Tower confesses that she doesn’t think it’s a very good piece, but like it or not, “Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman” has become a phenomenon, and a huge hit for most orchestras that perform it. The Plain Dealer (Cleveland) 03/23/01

THE REAL CROSSOVER ARTIST: When Hong Kong was preparing to be reunited with China, officials wanted a Grand Musical Event for the occasion. They turned to Chinese composer Tan Dun, who has showed a unique flair for the interweaving of musical styles, and an enthusiasm for large-scale works. Next Monday night, Tan could walk off with three Oscars for a recent film score, and “[he] couldn’t be more delighted.” Boston Herald 03/23/01

Thursday March 22

BELAFONTE IN CUBA: Harry Belafonte says he is “supporting the Cuban people,” in making multiple trips and speeches at communist rallies in Cuba. But his appearances “are very much resented by those opposed to Castro inside the island, who consider him nothing less than a collaborator of the regime.” The Idler 03/22/01

Wednesday March 21

LOOKING A GIFT MILLION IN THE MOUTH: Alberto Vilar is probably the greatest opera patron in history. He doesn’t even keep track of his small gifts, those in the $25,000 to $50,000 category. So why do people mistrust him? Maybe it’s his rationale. “I think there are two real purposes to a gift: one is to accomplish a specific goal–set up a co-production, pay for this evening’s gala. The second is to leverage the gift.” Los Angeles Times 03/21/01

LESSING WINS BRITAIN’S RICHEST BOOK PRIZE: At 81, Doris Lessing has been awarded the £30,000 David Cohen prize for a lifetime of excellence, “52 years after she arrived in Britain from Rhodesia, to be confronted by a media article announcing that the novel was dead as a literary form. But in her suitcase was a manuscript [The Grass Is Singing] which helped restore the novel to blazing life when it reached bookshops the following year, 1950.” The Guardian (London) 03/21/01

Tuesday March 20

ARE YOU READY TO DIE FOR NORMAN MAILER? “One does, in the course of a writing life, create a lot of hostility. I think I’d almost rather have it that way than have people say, ‘Oh, what a nice guy.’ I think a healthy person should be able to die for a few ideas — and can feel well loved if a few are ready to go all the way for him or her.” Poets & Writers 03/01

THE PLAYWRIGHT AS PUBLIC MAN: Harold Pinter is almost as well known for political activity as for writing plays. “You can’t make those determinations – about truth and lies – in what we loosely call a work of art…. Whereas, in the actual, practical, concrete world in which we live, it’s very easy, from my point of view, to see a distinction between what is true and what is false. Most of what we’re told is false.” The Progressive 03/01

Monday March 19

ARDOIN DEAD: John Ardoin, for 32 years music critic for the Dallas Morning News, and an expert on the life of Maria Callas, has died at the age of 66. Dallas Morning News 03/19/01

Sunday March 18

ROSS BOUNCES BACK: Remember David A. Ross? The top man at the Whitney Museum in New York who for nearly a decade never saw his name in print without the words “embattled director” before it was practically run out of Gotham on a rail in 1998. But Ross has found new life as the director of San Francisco’s Museum of Modern Art, and the gallery’s newest exhibit is his proudest accomplishment. Los Angeles Times 03/18/01

PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS AN OLD MAN: In the world of French Canadian abstractionists, few artists can approach the legacy of Charles Gagnon. A soft-spoken man with a thirst for knowledge and new experience, he has produced some of the last century’s greatest abstract paintings. Now, as he reflects on his life and his career, the sharp twists and turns of his evolving style become less mysterious. The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/17/01

ATTENTION PAID: Mildred Bailey is hardly a household name, even among jazz aficionados. But throughout the 1930s and ’40s, Bailey was as big as stars got in the world of the big band. A stunning singer and legendary diva, she later developed a terrible overeating disorder, and died in obscurity in 1951. Now, a small New England-based record company has re-released her complete recordings for Columbia. Hartford Courant 03/18/01

Friday March 16

DRIPPER’S LEGACY: Ed Harris’s riveting portrayal of one of the 20th century’s most fascinating artists has earned “Pollock” an Oscar nod and critical raves. But art historians have been irked by Harris’s decision to make it seem as if Jackson Pollock’s innovations were nothing more than an outgrowth of his descent into madness. “Pollock’s epiphany likely didn’t arise out of locking himself in a Greenwich Village walkup for three weeks, as the film suggests. Abstract Expressionism built on European modernist painting.” The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/16/01

Thursday March 15

AN INTELLECTUAL YOU CAN MOVE TO: Rap performer Underbelly is not widely known, and has released only one CD. (He’s working on his second.) But he doesn’t need money from record sales; he has other things to fall back on. Like a Ph.D. in Romance Languages, and a job as assistant dean at Washington University. St. Louis Post-Dispatch 03/14/01

Monday March 12

OF MYTH AND POLLOCK: The new bio-pic of Jackson Pollock has a lot to cram into it. But, beautiful as it is, it’s not possible to fully put into perspective the artist’s life, legend and myth. Herewith an attempt at clarification. The Idler 03/12/01

Sunday March 11

SALONEN STAYING: When big prestigious music directorships come open Esa-Pekka Salonen is often mentioned as a candidate. But he’s staying put in LA. “In his time in Los Angeles, Salonen has observed the orchestra’s audiences becoming younger and more racially diverse. He has witnessed a major personnel changeover (almost 30 players) in the orchestra, and he finds the playing level at auditions ‘absolutely stunning’.” San Francisco Chronicle 03/11/01

Friday March 9

BALLET LEGEND NINETTE DE VALOIS DIED on Thursday at age 102. A dancer with the Ballet Russe and then founder of the Royal Ballet, Valois established ballet in Britain when the country had no classical dance tradition and became a revered choreographer, teacher, and director. “Her influence on the development of ballet in this country cannot be overstated.” BBC 3/08/01

TRIBUTES TO VALOIS from the UK dance community. Sir Anthony Dowell, director of the Royal Ballet described her as “one of the 20th century’s greatest and most influential figures in the world of the arts.” BBC 3/08/01

THE TIMES’ DANCE CRITIC REMEMBERS VALOIS: “People regularly spoke of Madam in hushed tones: what would she think of this ballet and that? Who would she like? Who wouldn’t she like? I heard tales of her fearsome authority and her strong opinions, always freely expressed.” The Times (London) 3/09/01

RUSSIANS DELAY RETURN OF PAVLOVA’S REMAINS: An apparent dispute between St. Petersburg and Moscow has interrupted the return of Anna Pavlova’s remains to Russia. Her ashes, in London since the ballerina’s death seventy years ago, were to have been sent back to her native country at the request of the mayor of Moscow; now the Russian Embassy has canceled the request. BBC 03/08/01

MCCAUGHEY LEAVES YALE MUSEUM: Patrick McCaughey, Director of the Yale Center for British Art, is leaving that post to “do research and writing and seek other opportunities in the arts.” McCaughey, formerly director of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, increased attendance at the Yale Center, and oversaw extensive renovations to the building. His departure comes as a surprise to most observers. The Hartford Courant 03/09/01

Thursday March 8

ABBADO ILL: Conductor Claudio Abbado recently had his entire stomach removed because of cancer. “Those who saw photographs of the conductor over the past few months were shocked at how emaciated and miserable he looked. This naturally gave rise to a great deal of speculation. This was even more of a strain upon Abbado than the illness itself, which was indeed serious, so much so that he took the step – which must certainly have been difficult for him – of countering all the speculation.” Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 03/08/01

Wednesday March 7

AN ODD SORT OF REBEL: Gao Xingjiian, the first Chinese writer to win the Nobel Prize for literature, is on an American tour, and many American scholars are taking a close look at his work for the first time. Gao is nothing if not eclectic: his work is banned in China, yet he refuses to criticize Beijing. He writes epic tales in a distinctly Chinese style, yet abhors the words “we” and “us,” which he says have overwhelmed “I” and “you” in China. Boston Globe 03/07/01

Tuesday March 6

THE NOVELIST AS TRUTH-TELLER: Isabel Allende’s novels get different reactions. Some are masterpieces; some are bodice rippers. But all come out of her own life. “Allende identifies by name those who’ve inspired characters in her novels, and even hints at one friend she’s saving for a future tale. I find myself wondering if the people who know her best don’t demand immunity from fictionalization.” Salon 03/05/01

Monday March 5

TED AND RICHARD II: Ted Turner and the Ivy Leaguers of Time Warner weren’t getting along. They thought he was a hick. Until he rose to give a toast – an extended speech from “Richard III.” “They never treated us like hicks again.” The Idler 03/05/01

Sunday March 4

THE MEZZO WHO WOULDN’T QUIT: Frederica von Stade is 55 and said to be winding down her career. But some new operas have got her attention – she’s commited to some revivals of Jake Heggie’s “Dead Man Walking” and anxious to participate in a new Richard Danielpour effort. That takes her to age 60. And then… Boston Globe 03/04/01

Friday March 2

HARRY POTTER IN BUCKINGHAM PALACE: JK Rowling, who created Harry Potter, will receive the Order of the British Empire today at Buckingham Palace. It will be presented by the Prince of Wales, in recognition of her services to children’s literature. She was to have received it last year, but had to cancel. Her daughter was sick. BBC 03/02/01

RETHINKING THE MUSEUM: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Director David Ross is largely responsible for SFMOMA’s new computer generated-art show, “010101: Art in Technological Times.” He’s also a vocal proponent of incorporating new technologies into museums. “The contemporary museum’s role today is no longer purely as a vehicle for showcasing art, but also as a space to discuss the contrast of values and ideas.” Wired 3/01/01

Thursday March 1

TOLSTOY AND THE CHURCH, STILL AT ODDS: Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy rejected the authority of the Russian Orthodox church, for which he was excommunicated. Now, a century later, his great-great-grandson Vladimir has asked the Church to forgive the novelist. The director of the Tolstoy Museum thinks it’s a bad idea: “Tolstoy never repented, nor would he have approved of his descendant’s drive to reunite him with the church.” The Church so far has made no definitive reply. Vancouver Sun 02/28/01

HOW DID LORENZ HART DIE?: The show-biz legend is that the famous lyricist arrived drunk at a Broadway opening, was thrown out of the theater, collapsed in a snowbank, was taken to a hospital, and died of pneumonia. But his nephew Larry Hart says it just ain’t so. There was no snow in the city that night; Hart went home to relatives; he was taken to the hospital from his own apartment. New York Post 02/28/01

A MID-SUMMER NIGHT’S PIPE DREAM?: Traces of cannabis have been found in pipes which Shakespeare may have used. The pipes were dug up from the garden of his home in Stratford-upon-Avon; South African scientists speculate that the Bard used the drug as a source of inspiration. “But the conclusions of the scientists have been dismissed by Shakespeare experts who feel suggestions he used drugs as an aid to writing undermine the bard’s accepted genius.” BBC 03/01/01

Theatre: March 2001

Friday March 30

BROADWAY’S RECORD YEAR: Broadway is having a record season, and could take in $700 million by the time the season closes. “That’s an impressive milestone when you consider that the take for the 1998-99 season was a measly $588 million, then a record. As of Sunday, the League of American Theaters and Producers was reporting the current season’s total to be $533.6 million, up 14.4 percent from the running total a year ago. Attendance is also up, with an additional 640,000 theatergoers compared with the same period in 1999-2000.” New York Times (AP) 3/29/01 (one-time registration required for access)

THE SHAPE OF THEATERS TO COME: Is the redesign of Stratford’s Royal Shakespeare Theatre a model for the future of theatre in Britain? The proscenium has been raised and extended into the auditorium, to abolish the distance between the audience and the performers – and thereby make theater more accessible and immediate. “It is the most dramatic symptom so far of a growing recognition that Britain’s traditional theatres may no longer meet the demands of today’s drama or attract new, young audiences.” The Telegraph (London) 3/30/01

Wednesday March 28

CLASSIC SELL-OUT: The fastest-selling show in the history of London’s West End? Not Les Miz or Phantom – it’s Cameron Mackintosh’s new production of “My Fair Lady” which has sold £4.7m for its forthcoming run at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. Why? “Instead of being dated and being a show about language, it has become a show about making it on your own terms, which is why it has struck such a nerve.” The Independent (London) 03/28/01

  • PROFITING FROM THE LADY: The show was first staged at the National Theatre and is being transferred to the West End. Some have been critical that the National’s Trevor Nunn will profit from the commercial run. The Guardian (London) 03/18/01

THE SHAKESPEARE’S NEW HOME?The Royal Shakespeare Company plans a new theatre in Stratford-On-Avon. “With its productions enjoying critical acclaim, and the Arts Council promising £50 million of lottery money for redevelopment in Stratford, it is in bullish mood, and desperate to replace the main theatre, which it considers to be outdated and unsuited to modern audiences.” The Independent (London) 03/28/01

Monday March 26

PUT IT WHERE IT’LL DO SOME GOOD: When England’s Arts Council announced the coming year’s annual subsidies for the arts last week, the numbers were eye-popping, particularly in the theatre department. But there is concern that Britain’s best theatres have developed a habit of putting far too large a percentage of their funding into “concepts” and “paradigms,” and not nearly enough into what actually goes on on stage. New Statesman (UK) 03/26/01

Sunday March 25

SAVING THE SHUBERT FROM ITSELF: “Backstage dramas in New Haven are more interesting these days than the action on stage. And much of the real-life drama is happening at city hall, where the worlds of the arts, economics and politics are colliding. The future of the Shubert Performing Arts Center is being shaped, not in the administrative corners of the theater but in the office of Henry Fernandez, the city’s economic development administrator.” Hartford Courant 03/25/01

WHERE’S THE RISK? London’s National Theatre director Trevor Nunn is being criticized for staging such a safe commercial hit as “My Fair Lady.” The National is subsidized by the government because it is thought not to be commercially viable, but when the play transfers to the commercial West End it promises to earn Nunn and the theatre substantial profits. The Observer (London) 03/25/01

Friday March 23

POP GOES THE MUSICAL: The West End is losing its audience for traditional musicals – so pop stars are stepping in to reinvigorate the format. In the works are new shows by or about Boy George, Freddy Mercury, and the Pet Shop Boys – not exactly a list of current hitmakers. “Stars who no longer trouble the chart compilers may hope that their beloved rock opera will become an excellent pension scheme as a West End hit. But audiences should beware. Rock opera is for the prawn sandwich and chablis brigade who want to ‘keep in touch’ with their music without getting sweaty at a concert. The same people went to see the Three Tenors thinking that was opera.” The Times (London) 3/23/01

Wednesday March 21

THE TV MUSICALS: Broadway (and the movies) aren’t making old time musical theatre these days. So TV is stepping in with revivals set to play in prime time. “The fact that studios have abandoned this genre — and Broadway is offering extravaganzas, for the most part, rather than traditional musicals — means there’s an opening for us.” The New York Times 03/22/01 (one-time registration required for access)

Tuesday March 20

THE PLAYWRIGHT AS PUBLIC MAN: Harold Pinter is almost as well known for political activity as for writing plays. “You can’t make those determinations – about truth and lies – in what we loosely call a work of art…. Whereas, in the actual, practical, concrete world in which we live, it’s very easy, from my point of view, to see a distinction between what is true and what is false. Most of what we’re told is false.” The Progressive 03/01

Monday March 19

WHY WE DON’T LIKE THEATRE: A new survey of patrons of London theatre reveals widespread unhappiness. Among the complaints: paying for programmes, which are about £3. Also, paying premium prices for a show with a big star, only to find that the star is replaced by an understudy for that performance. The Independent (London) 03/19/01

THE BLAME FOR THEATRE: There has been a lot of criticism of Australian theatre. But is it the theatre to blame? “The saddest judgment I can make is that our audiences don’t care a lot about theatre. The reasons are complex, but boil down to the fact that theatre, as culturally constructed in this country, is only an entertainment.” Sydney Morning Herald 03/19/01

Sunday March 18

TV TURNS TO THE STAGE: The next few weeks will see an astonishing number of stage plays make their debut on the small screen. And while the struggling world of theatre is certainly in need of the boost TV can provide, there is always the risk that the dumbed-down, sound-bitten world of the tube can suck the life out of a great stage piece. San Jose Mercury News 03/18/01

Monday March 13

BERKLEY’S SECOND STAGE: A new $20 million 600-seat second-stage theatre for Berkley Repertory Theatre is anchoring the renewal of a whole neighborhood. The New York Times 03/13/01 (one-time registration required for access)

IT’S A BLUE WORLD: Blue Man Group has risen over the years from an off-Broadway curiosity to a full-blown industry, complete with multiple franchises around the country. In fact, they have become the official inspiration for offbeat and unusual performance artists who dream of making it in the too-often homogenous world of American theatre. Their success is one possible answer to the eternal “alternative art” question: “How do you achieve global commercial domination and not lose your soul?” Chicago Tribune 03/13/01

Sunday March 11

DEFENDING THEATRE: After a week when English theatre has been bashed, battered and bemoaned, a critic, two theatre directors and an agent take up the defense. “In an age of increasing mechanical reproduction, theatre is holding its own, and that’s terrific.” The Telegraph(London) 03/10/01

HUMANA’S NEW TURN: Louisville’s Humana Festival has been America’s foremost showcase for new plays. But in the past year the festival’s longtime leadership has left, and now questions about what direction Humana will take. New York Times 03/11/01 (one-time registration required for access)

Friday March 9

OUT FROM THE SHADOWS: The film “Shakespeare in Love” was most people’s first exposure to Christopher Marlowe, whose plays (“Doctor Faustus,” “Edward II,””Tamburlaine”) have always been overshadowed by his more famous contemporary, Shakespeare. But now the world’s waking up to his talents and recent months have seen more productions of Marlowe’s plays than ever before. “Written 400 years ago by a master playwright, [“Edward II”]’s as subversive and contemporary as anything being written now.” The Times (London) 3/09/01

Thursday March 8

“SAVING” ENGLISH THEATRE: The British Arts Council announces massive new funding for theatre. “There will be increases in funding for 270 theatres and companies. More than 170 of these will receive whopping rises of more than 25%. There is an extra £12 million going into regional theatre in England in 2002 and some £25 million more the following year. The intention is to “save” theatre. If it is a shot in the arm, the arts council also intends it as a kick up the backside. Results are expected and in some moribund organisations heads will roll.” The Herald (Glasgow) 03/08/01

WILL PLAY FOR MONEY: London’s Royal Shakespeare Company was looking for funding to mount the Henry VI cycle. No money was forthcoming at home, so when the University of Michigan made an offer it was accepted. In return for money, the RSC has pledged to go to Michigan three times in the next five years for residencies. “The deal follows partnerships with producers in Japan who bankrolled the acclaimed version of Macbeth starring Sir Antony Sher in return for the show going to Tokyo last year.” The Independent (London) 03/08/01

Wednesday March 7

MARLOWE WAS SHAKESPEARE? Christopher Marlowe is hot right now in England and his work is playing again. Not much is known about him, other than he was a writer and a spy. “The problem with any campaign to raise Marlowe’s profile is the so-called Marlovians. Not only do they believe the playwright was as great as Shakespeare; they insist he was Shakespeare, writing under a pseudonym after faking his death in 1593.” The Guardian (London) 03/07/01

Monday March 5

  • SECOND HAND (RATE) THEATRE: There is a rash of new plays in Canada being adapted from novels. “It’s the essential pointlessness of most of these endeavours that confounds – particularly when there is so much good and original Canadian drama out there, drama that is crying out to be produced.” National Post (Canada) 03/05/01
  • RIGHT DIRECTOR, RIGHT PLACE: She had the good fortune to direct the hit ABBA musical. Now Phyllida Lloyd is rich and can afford to direct all those plays she always wanted to do (like the new Mamet) without worrying where the next Peugeot is coming from. The Times (London) 03/05/01

Sunday March 4

  • THEATRE NEEDS TO CHANGE: A London conference on the state of theatre heard a lot of bad news last week. The consensus: theatre is an artform in trouble. “Theatre thinks ‘we’re very worthy, we earn about no money, so sit on bad seats because we’re poverty-stricken and we will tip you out into the cold night without a drink at the end.’ The cinema learnt its lessons. Theatre hasn’t adjusted itself to the lifestyles of the people it wants to come in.” The Independent (London) 03/03/01
  • STATE OF THE ART(OF WRITING ABOUT IT): America’s theatre critics gather in New York to talk about the state of their art: Too many critics write snap judgments, critics shouldn’t be writing plays or acting in communities in which they write, and the jury’s still out on theatre coverage on the internet. Philadelphia Inquirer 03/04/01

Friday March 2

  • ONE WAY TO CUT LOSSES: Sending immediate shockwaves through Britain’s theatre world, acclaimed director Richard Eyre told a conference investigating why UK theatre audiences were falling that the nation’ subsidized theatres (including the Royal Shakespeare Company and National Theatre) should be disbanded, rather than continue churning out stale work. “We have to acknowledge that theatre companies have a finite life span and that few manage to sustain artistic ardour beyond seven years.” The Telegraph (London) 3/02/01

Thursday March 1

  • PUTTING PEOPLE OFF: Theater-ticket sales are declining in London’s West End, amid cries of an impending “crisis point” due to traffic congestion, poor public transportation, and escalating street crime. BBC 2/28/01
  • GIVING IT YOUR ALL: Why are so many actors rushing to take their clothes off onstage? And what, if anything, does nudity contribute to an otherwise traditional production? “Playwrights will talk about the need for ‘realism’, actors will talk about performing naked so long as it’s ‘not gratuitous’, directors will argue that nudity is valid. But so contrived, so commonplace, has nudity become that it no longer surprises, confronts, informs, challenges. It distracts. It embarrasses.” Sydney Morning Herald 3/01/01
  • BOSTON THEATER BOOM: Boston was long seen as a one-theater town, with American Repertory Theater’s shows the only ones worth seeing. But now the reinvigorated Huntington Theater is making a splash of its own. A new artistic director, city funds to build two new South End theaters, and the audiences are pouring in… New York Times 3/01/01 (one-time registration required for access)
  • HOW DID LORENZ HART DIE?: The show-biz legend is that the famous lyricist arrived drunk at a Broadway opening, was thrown out of the theater, collapsed in a snowbank, was taken to a hospital, and died of pneumonia. But his nephew Larry Hart says it just ain’t so. There was no snow in the city that night; Hart went home to relatives; he was taken to the hospital from his own apartment. New York Post 02/28/01
  • A MID-SUMMER NIGHT’S PIPE DREAM?: Traces of cannabis have been found in pipes which Shakespeare may have used. The pipes were dug up from the garden of his home in Stratford-upon-Avon; South African scientists speculate that the Bard used the drug as a source of inspiration. “But the conclusions of the scientists have been dismissed by Shakespeare experts who feel suggestions he used drugs as an aid to writing undermine the bard’s accepted genius.” BBC 03/01/01

Music: March 2001

Friday March 30

JAILED FOR LA FENICE ARSON: Two electricians have been convicted of setting Venice’s La Fenice opera house on fire in 1996. “Enrico Carella and his cousin, Massimiliano Marchetti, are believed to have set the building ablaze because their company was facing heavy fines over delays in repair work.” BBC 03/30/01

PAYING THE ARTISTS: Music stars are banding together to fight the music industry. In the wake of debates about Napster and who gets paid for what they’ve suddenly realized what a bad deal they’re getting from the recording companies. “Should these artists prevail, their collective bargaining efforts would radically rewrite the economics of the music business in the same way that unionizing actors and baseball players revolutionized the film and sports industries.” Los Angeles Times 03/29/01

WAGNER V WAGNER: Board members of the famed Richard Wagner Festival in Bayreuth have intervened in a rancorous dispute among members of the Wagner family and ordered the festival’s 81-year-old director, Wolfgang Wagner, to cede the post to his estranged daughter and the composer’s great-granddaughter, Eva Wagner-Pasquier. Mr. Wagner has insisted for many months that his only fit successor is his wife, and has already pledged to disregard his termination. New York Times (AP) 3/29/01 (one-time registration required for access)

APPEARANCES COUNT: The Fort Worth Star-Telegram evidently didn’t like the negative review of a Boston concert by Van Cliburn written by a freelancer the paper had hired. So a few days later the paper printed another review – a positive one – by Boston Globe critic Richard Dyer. Isn’t that the same Dyer who’s a judge at this May’s Cliburn Competition? Boston Globe 03/29/01

LADY SOUL GOES CLASSICAL: Two years after stepping in for an ill Pavarotti to give an unrehearsed performance of Nessun Dorma at the Grammy awards, Aretha Franklin has announced plans to record her first classical album later this year. “I hope to record Nessun Dorma. I just love Puccini.” BBC 3/29/01

SUMMER FESTS ON HOLD: With one festival already on hold, many of the rest of England’s popular summer festivals are in jeopardy of being canceled, due to fears of spreading the foot-and-mouth disease outbreak. “Million pound losses through cancellations and possible bankruptcy ride on the Government’s ability to tackle the epidemic.” The Times (London) 3/30/01

Thursday March 29

THINK OF IT AS CLASSICAL KARAOKE: A jacket wired to a computer is helping music students learn to conduct. Sensors in the jacket read the student’s movements and transmit that information to the computer, which correspondingly controls a synthesizer output. “[J]ust like the real thing, the cyber-orchestra only plays well if it’s conducted properly, with the conductor’s right arm signalling volume and the left arm beating time.” New Scientist 03/28/01

BOSTON REBUILDS: Okay, so maybe on the face of it, it’s just an appointment of a new oboe player. But the Boston Symphony’s choice of John Ferrillo as its new principal oboe signifies to some observers a desire by the orchestra to rebuild its ranks and reputation as a first-class ensemble. Ferrillo, comes from the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra where he has held the principal’s job since 1986. Boston Globe 03/28/01

FOOT-AND-MOUTH THREATENS FESTIVALS: England’s foot-and-mouth disease outbreak is threatening a number of this summer’s largest music and dance festivals. One has already been postponed, and the fates of several more are currently up in the air. BBC 3/28/01

HOW DO YOU GET TO CARNEGIE HALL? After interviewing 100 candidates, Carnegie Hall has chosen Robert J. Harth, longtime chief executive of the Aspen Music Festival and School, to head Carnegie Hall. Carnegie’s current director is making an early retreat after a controversial tenure. New York Times 3/29/01 (one-time registration required for access)

Wednesday March 28

WILL SING FOR FOOD: Romania’s National Opera never downsized from its Communist-era bloat of the 80s. Now the company is in financial crisis – its director has resigned and the company is facing big money woes. The company’s 702 employees have been asked to return meal vouchers. Ottawa Citizen (AP) 03/28/01

LA SCALA STRIKE: Musicians strike at La Scala, shutting down a performance of Falstaff. Nando Times (AP) 03/28/01

LOOKING GLASS: This summer’s Lincoln Center Festival will focus on the music of Philip Glass. Nando Times (AP) 03/27/01

RECORDING INDUSTRY VS NAPSTER – ROUND 436: It’s beginning to feel like something from a Dickens novel – interminable legal wrangling which benefits no one but the lawyers. Latest move: Napster, claims the Recording Industry Association of America “is failing to fully comply with an injunction to screen copyright music from its song-swap network.” Nando Times (AP) 03/27/01

  • SOME DAY IT MAY ALL JUST FADE AWAY: A study by a web research company reports that Napster has lost a quarter of its users, now that it is [or is not, depending on whose story you believe] filtering access to copyrighted material. Maybe they can’t find what they’re looking for any more. Or maybe they’ve already copied it. ZDNet 03/27/01
  • THE MILLION GEEK MARCH? Demonstrations are a way of life in Washington. Still, something new may be in the offing. Napster is trying to mobilize its supporters to attend teach-ins and a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing. “First, however, Napster has to get past the U.S. Capitol Police, who lack any sense of humor about protests – geek or other. The police say that any gathering of 20 or more people that wants to walk from Union Station to Capitol Hill must take a number and stand in line.” Wired 03/28/01

Tuesday March 27

THE BOCELLI PHENOMENON: So what is it about Andrea Bocelli that can inspire such rock-star-like adulation in the public and such revulsion in critics? As the blind tenor kicks off his first U.S. tour, two critics try to understand it all: “It’s not that he’s a bad opera singer; he’s just a really good wedding singer. If you think about him in those terms, the appeal is obvious.” Philadelphia Inquirer 03/27/01

LOCKING IT UP: The recording industry is preparing to debut a new system of copyright protection which would make it impossible to “rip” tracks from a CD into digital MP3 files. However, the system would also make the discs unplayable on many CD players, which might not go over well with consumers. Inside.com 03/27/01

SHOCK OF THE NEW: Why are English opera companies so reluctant to stage new operas? The Times (London) 03/27/01

MAKING MUSIC THE HARD WAY: Some of the most original and well-received new music being written today is coming from Chinese composers who have mastered the technique of blending Eastern and Western musical traditions. One possible explanation for the public interest is that many Chinese composers have overcome tremendous obstacles to be allowed to practice their art, and their work reflects that struggle. New York Times 03/27/01 (one-time registration required for access)

BAIL-OUT ISN’T ENOUGH: Last week the Scottish government bailed out the financially troubled Scottish National Opera with a £5 million grant. But an internal government report says that an even bigger grant was needed to get the company solvent again. “We came to the general conclusion that Scottish Opera is underfunded and there was no getting around that fact. If one tries to put off addressing that, the same problems will occur again and again.”  Sunday Times 03/25/01

  • GOVERNMENT TO SCOTTISH OPERA – LIVE WITHIN YOUR MEANS: “We are happy to support publicly funded arts, from traditional Scottish arts and music to opera, but there has to be a balance. When it comes to Scottish Opera, if it cannot survive on the £6.5 million a year it receives from the taxpayer, we cannot afford it. That is the harsh reality.” The Observer 03/25/01

RETRACTION OF THE WEAK: The Vienna State Opera takes back some of the disparaging things it said last week about the Vienna Boys Choir. Gramophone 03/26/01

  • Previously: VIENNA DISCORD: Vienna State Opera on why it’s abandoning the famed Vienna Boys Choir: “We can no longer have a situation where we invite the choir to rehearse, train a boy for a certain part and then find on opening night he has been flown off to sing in Tokyo and another boy has taken his place.” The Scotsman 03/20/01

WHITHER JAZZ? As a new generation of jazz artists comes of age, and the last one begins to slip into the role of veterans, several of the best have begun to break out of the mold of “traditional” jazz. The future may be something like the fusion efforts of the 1970s, or possibly more new-wave, a la Bela Fleck, but it will definitely be different. The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/27/01

THE NEW CALYPSO: “While calypso has always been a means for Trinidadians to critique the political elite, some singers are crossing a longstanding boundary and using their songs to advocate for the political parties.” Christian Science Monitor 03/27/01

Monday March 26

DOUBLE ANNIVERSARY: Two of Great Britain’s finest concert halls are celebrating anniversaries this year. The Royal Festival Hall, which anchors the South Bank arts complex, turns 50 in 2001, and the Royal Albert Hall, which has played host to the world-famous BBC Proms since 1941, is 130. BBC 03/26/01

NO. 3 WITH A BULLET: A group of English nuns recorded a disk of Latin chants and it’s shot up the UK music charts. “The album reached number three in just a week, and is also in the top 100 in the pop charts. Under the slogan “Get the nuns to number one”, the canonnesses have a marketing budget equivalent to a Madonna campaign.” The Independent (London) 03/23/01

Sunday March 25

MAYBE THEY’RE AFRAID OF THE BURNING RIVER: Cleveland is exceedingly proud of its orchestra, and rightly so. The Cleveland Orchestra is arguably the finest orchestra in the U.S. at the moment, and has ranked among the world’s greatest for decades. But despite the enthusiasm the local ensemble generates, outside orchestras rarely make stops at Severance Hall, leaving the city’s primary critic wondering how Clevelanders know that their band is best? The Plain Dealer (Cleveland) 03/25/01

WHY JAZZ IS DYING? “Jazz in the jazz club is too often a plain bore. And an expensive one at that. The fact that the clubs are inhospitable to younger people may be one reason they’re having such a difficult time surviving.” Newsweek 03/15/01

MAKING OPERA MAKE SENSE: In this age of period performances and constant nostalgia movements, it is curious that a large percentage of critics and musicians continue to be virulently opposed to opera being performed in any language other than the original. The practice of translating opera lyrics into the local dialect is as old as the hills, and even with supertitles now an option, there is still a place for it. The New York Times 03/25/01 (one-time registration required for access)

NAPSTER HITS BACK: Napster has filed court documents claiming that the recording industry is intentionally making it difficult for them to filter copyrighted music. “While Napster engineers have added 200,000 musicians along with 1.2 million file names into its filter, the…industry has sent over incomplete lists of artists and songs that leave Napster to sort through hundreds of thousands of files.” Wired 03/23/01

Friday March 23

SILENCING THE GREAT VIOLINS: Violins aren’t just musical instruments, they’re also – unfortunately for musicians – art. Increasingly, only banks and investors can afford to own them. Are musicians just out of luck? Arts Journal 03/23/01

TRYING TO REBUILD A CLASSIC: In 1996, Venice’s famed La Fenice opera house burned, and despite promises that it would be swiftly rebuilt, five years have passed, and the company that occupied the theatre is still performing in a tent on the riverbank. Now the mayor has delayed the restoration yet again, amid questions over the bidding process and the cost. BBC 03/23/01

PARIS SUCKS. BY PIERRE BOULEZ: Paris is a great place for museums, for dance and opera and theatre. But music? “Paris has lousy venues for orchestral music. ‘Paris has a worldwide reputation for cultural excellence and money is poured into the opera, theatre and museums,’ says composer and conductor Pierre Boulez. “Classical music gets a raw deal. There isn’t much interest among government leaders for our musical heritage, never mind contemporary compositions’.” The Guardian (London) 03/23/01

THE WHINING CONTINUES: The recording industry plans to file a complaint in federal court next week that Napster is not adequately complying with the court’s order to filter copyrighted material. Napster says they’re doing their best, and that the lists of songs provided to them are “riddled with errors.” BBC 03/22/01

BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU: The recording industry has been threatening to attack online music piracy (Napster-style swapping) “at the source,” meaning the user doing the downloading, rather than the company facilitating it. A new report claims to have screen shots of an unobtrusive program that tracks the movements of individual users who are illegally transferring copyrighted material. The Register 03/22/01

MUSIC FOR REAL PEOPLE: Seeing a classical music performance has become ridiculously expensive in recent years, and more and more concertgoers are disenchanted with the remote sameness of most traditional classical concerts. But there is serious music to be had elsewhere, and churches have become adept at taking up the slack. Not only do many churches present professional-quality programs, but they are generally more likely to embrace the music of minority groups that are often priced out of the concert hall. New York Times 3/23/01 (one-time registration required for access)

HOW TO WRITE A HIT: Composer Joan Tower is quite well-known within the walls of the music world for her forays into multiple styles of composition, and her enthusiasm for the profession. But audiences might never have heard of her, had it not been for the title of a 1987 work. Tower confesses that she doesn’t think it’s a very good piece, but like it or not, “Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman” has become a phenomenon, and a huge hit for most orchestras that perform it. The Plain Dealer (Cleveland) 03/23/01

THE REAL CROSSOVER ARTIST: When Hong Kong was preparing to be reunited with China, officials wanted a Grand Musical Event for the occasion. They turned to Chinese composer Tan Dun, who has showed a unique flair for the interweaving of musical styles, and an enthusiasm for large-scale works. Next Monday night, Tan could walk off with three Oscars for a recent film score, and “[he] couldn’t be more delighted.” Boston Herald 03/23/01

ORPHEUS IN THE BOARD ROOM: The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra is one of the most respected ensembles of its kind, not only for the quality of performance they regularly achieve, but for their unmatched skill at “leaderless” communication. (Orpheus has no conductor.) That skill is of great interest to the business world, and a new book and series of seminars delve into the “Orpheus Model.” The Christian Science Monitor 03/23/01

TRYING TO KEEP UP: Ken Burns’s recent PBS documentary on the history of jazz sent record sales for the genre soaring. But most of the albums being sold are big-name, big-label recordings that “Jazz” drew heavily on, and smaller jazz labels worry that there doesn’t seem to be a lot of interest in exploring what else is out there.One Chicago company typifies the role of the small record label trying to get listeners interested in its stable of musicians. Los Angeles Times 03/23/01

Thursday March 22

THE WOMAN CONDUCTOR: Marin Alsop is arguably one of today’s most prominent women conductors. “Alsop claims to have reached this important stage in her career without ever noticing any bias against her because of her sex. ‘My success is probably due to the fact that I’ve never interpreted any rejection as gender-based’.” The Telegraph (London) 03/22/01

  • Previously: WHERE ARE ALL THE WOMEN? “Conducting is a competitive field, but some say that for women, it seems bitterly so. America’s best-known female conductors have little to show for decades of effort. None of the 27 American orchestras with the largest budgets has appointed a woman music director, and many insiders expect a woman president to be sworn in long before a female takes the helm of one of America’s top orchestras.” Minneapolis Star Tribune 03/17/01

A QUESTION OF MARKETING? Philadelphia’s new $265 million performing arts center is opening in December. The first season features a lineup of local and touring orchestras, theatre troupes, and other performers. But the Philadelphia Orchestra, the main tenant of the RPAC (and the reason for its construction) asked not to be included in the wave of promotional material released yesterday. Philadelphia Inquirer 03/22/01

LA BOCELLI TOURS: Andrea Bocelli, the blind Italian tenor has overcome the disdain (and sometimes outright hostility) of music critics to become an arena-size sensation. He’s starting his fifth U.S. tour, accompanied by the Hartford Symphony Orchestra. But although he speaks confidently of his abilities and shrugs off the criticisms, Bocelli will be skipping New York, just as he has avoided the world’s other operatic centers. Nando Times 03/22/01

THE WAGNER PROBLEM: “How can we enjoy the output of artists whose personal lives or private beliefs are reprehensible? To say that private behavior shouldn’t affect public estimation is noble but naive: It does affect it, no matter how much we might wish it didn’t. We can’t unlearn what we already know. ” Chicago Tribune 03/22/01

PACIFIC SYMPHONY GETS A BOOST: “The Santa Ana-based Pacific Symphony has been awarded a $1.3-million grant from the newly formed Hal and Jeanette Segerstrom Family Foundation, orchestra officials said Wednesday. The grant, the first to be made by the foundation, will be given over five years. Funds will underwrite the 20 classical subscription concerts presented yearly at the Orange County Performing Arts Center in Costa Mesa.” Los Angeles Times 03/22/01

FAMOUS LETTERS: London’ s Royal Philharmonic Society has a collection of composers’ scores and letters (including one by a dying Beethoven, promising a 10th symphony). Now the RPS is selling its collection to bring in money to commission new music and set up an education programme, and there are fears the collection will leave the country. The Independent (London) 03/22/01

BUT IT’S REALLLLLY HARD! Napster is complaining that complying with the court order to block all access to copyrighted material on its song-swapping service is turning out to be, well, every bit as difficult as everyone had expected it to be. The recording industry is, understandably, not terribly sympathetic. Wired 03/21/01

Wednesday March 21

CUTTING CONTEMPORARY: Berlin’s Music Biennale is where serious new music comes to be heard. This year “all 22 concerts were well attended. Many were sold out, and on three occasions there were dramatic scenes at the box office when customers were turned away. One performance began with a half-hour delay to allow more chairs to be brought in. Contemporary music performances are hardly the usual venue for such brouhaha.” So why are German cost-cutters canceling the festival? Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 03/21/01

NEW AGE FESTIVAL: The controversial Gerard Mortier is leaving the toney Salzburg Festival to start up a new enterprise in rural Germany. “A world apart from the elite refinement of Salzburg, the Ruhr Festival will reflect the proletarian ecology in dance, rock and sports-related events alongside opera and classical music. ‘I have to consider how to make the culture belong to the people.’ Although his plans for 2003 are still sketchy, it sounds like one of the brightest arts ideas for years, and one that will assuredly shed glamour on the grimy region.” The Telegraph (London) 03/21/01

Tuesday March 20

THE NEXT FREE MUSIC: It works like this: “There are thousands of streaming-audio radio stations online at any given moment. You tell the BitBop tuner what band or song you want to listen to and the software searches for stations that are either playing your song at that very moment or likely to do so soon. The BitBop Tuner will not only play the song for you immediately, but will also make a permanent copy of it on your hard drive.” Salon 03/20/01

BONDING: British composer Monty Norman was awarded £30,000 in libel damages for a Sunday Times story that said he did not write the theme for the James Bond films. Norman claimed the story trashed his career. The Guardian (London) 03/20/01

VIENNA DISCORD: Vienna State Opera on why it’s abandoning the famed Vienna Boys Choir: “We can no longer have a situation where we invite the choir to rehearse, train a boy for a certain part and then find on opening night he has been flown off to sing in Tokyo and another boy has taken his place.” The Scotsman 03/20/01

WATER MUSIC: Just as a rehearsal was to get underway, a water pipe bursts over the heads of the musicians of the Boise Philharmonic. “It was a downpour of black, filthy water. One of our musicians was wearing a white sweater, and she looked like a Dalmation after the downpour.” Idaho Stateman 03/19/01

THE NEW QUIET: Pop music is changing. “It feels like a sea change. The new quiet is music of serene melodies and smoldering seductions, of desolate scenes and less-is-more orchestrations. It rarely gets agitated, and it makes few Limp Bizkit-style “pay attention” demands on listeners. It buries its provocations beneath oceans of calm. It is the work of artists who, in rethinking much of the architecture of pop, have come to value sleekness over density, restraint over vented rage, single lines over thick layers, European cool over American heat.” Philadelphia Inquirer 03/20/01

BETWEEN THE GRAMMIES AND THE OSCARS, there’s induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. No cute name for the award yet. This year’s winners included Paul Simon, Michael Jackson, Queen, Aerosmith, RiTchie Valens, and Steely Dan. (Didn’t they just win something?) The Nando Times (AP) 03/19/01

Monday March 19

MET REJOINS LINCOLN CENTER EFFORT: Two months ago the Metropolitan Opera unexpectedly announced it was pulling out of plans for a $1.5 billion makeover of Lincoln Center. Now the Met is rejoining the project, but under an arrangement that gives it much greater say. The New York Times 03/19/01 (one-time registration required for access)

SACKING THE CHOIRBOYS: The Vienna Boys Choir has been beset by critics of late. Now it has lost its most important affiliation. “The Vienna State Opera said last week its agreement with the 500-year-old choir would not be renewed when it expires in 2004. The opera plans to establish a rival choir.” Sunday Times (London) 03/18/01

MUSIC + IMAGE = In some serious circles, describing a music score as “film music” is meant as derisive. But “there is a growing feeling that music in the context of film, performed as a live event, could be the most exciting new art form of the era. We have begun to notice that the combination of music and the filmed image can seduce us at the deepest level, with its ability to mimic the form of a dream.” Financial Times 03/19/01

ARDOIN DEAD: John Ardoin, for 32 years music critic for the Dallas Morning News, and an expert on the life of Maria Callas, has died at the age of 66. Dallas Morning News 03/19/01

Sunday March 18

WHERE ARE ALL THE WOMEN? “Conducting is a competitive field, but some say that for women, it seems bitterly so. America’s best-known female conductors have little to show for decades of effort. None of the 27 American orchestras with the largest budgets has appointed a woman music director, and many insiders expect a woman president to be sworn in long before a female takes the helm of one of America’s top orchestras.” Minneapolis Star Tribune 03/17/01

HERE’S ONE OF THE MEN: When the Cleveland Orchestra selected the relatively young and unknown Franz Welser-Möst as its next music director, eyebrows were raised all over the music world. But as the director-designate prepares to take the reins in 2002, critical perception is softening, and some are even whispering that Cleveland may have found their Bernstein. The Plain Dealer (Cleveland) 03/18/01

WORLDWIDE WEBCASTING: The big problem of streaming audio and video on the web is that such webcasts cross international boundaries, and require multiple sets of legal permissions. “To figure out what licensing agreements a business needs to launch a legal, digital music company is like searching for the beginning of an M.C. Escher painting –- everywhere you look, it seems like you’ve found the start of the maze, until you look somewhere else.” Wired 03/17/01

FORGETTING VERDI: This year marks the 100th anniversary of the death of the great Italian operatic composer Giuseppe Verdi, and the music world has cranked up for the occasion to deliver… well, next to nothing, actually. Why the hesitance to program some of the finest operas ever written? For one thing, Verdi’s stuff is just excruciatingly difficult to sing, and most of today’s stars are loath to take the chance. Philadelphia Inquirer 03/18/01

CAN’T GET NO RESPECT: This week, the Metropolitan Opera premieres a new production of Prokofiev’s rarely-heard and much-reviled “The Gambler.” That the Met is performing the work at all begs the question: just what went wrong with Russian opera in the twentieth century? The world’s leading expert on Russian music weighs in with the opinion that Prokofiev and his contemporaries were simply too disdainful of operatic convention, and too far ahead of their time. New York Times 03/17/01 (one-time registration required for access)

HOW I FOUND A MISSING MOZART: A previously unknown Mozart arrangement of Handel’s oratorio Judas Maccabaeus was found in Halifax, West Yorkshire last week. “The Halifax score is a beautiful piece of work – a fair copy, with scarcely any erasures or crossings out.” The Guardian (London) 03/17/01

THE CHANGING IRISH: For centuries Ireland has been a homogeneous country – a country people left to find a better life rather than a destination for others in search of their dreams. But Ireland’s newly prosperous economy has changed all that, and the face of Irish music is changing too. Christian Science Monitor 03/16/01

SMALLER IS BETTER? The classical music recording business continues to wilt. But while larger labels have a tough time, a number of smaller recording companies chalk up successes. Christian Science Monitor 03/16/01

ATTENTION PAID: Mildred Bailey is hardly a household name, even among jazz aficionados. But throughout the 1930s and ’40s, Bailey was as big as stars got in the world of the big band. A stunning singer and legendary diva, she later developed a terrible overeating disorder, and died in obscurity in 1951. Now, a small New England-based record company has re-released her complete recordings for Columbia. Hartford Courant 03/18/01

Friday March 16

SAVING THE BOLSHOI: “The Bolshoi was a facade of the Soviet empire; and sure enough, when the empire collapsed, the facade started to crumble. The chaos which engulfed the country after the collapse of the Soviet Union could not have left the Bolshoi untouched.” Now it is damaged and discredited. Now conductor Gennady Rozhdestvensky has stepped in to try and save the day. Financial Times 03/16/01

IF NOT NAPSTER… Digital song-swapping is down almost 60% since Napster introduced its filters Wednesday to block copyrighted material, with the number of downloads per individual user down from 172 files each to 71. But “anecdotal evidence already indicates that users were switching to other peer-to-peer song-swap systems. It is only going to be a matter of days before Napster users start migrating to those systems in large numbers.” Inside.com 3/15/01

  • HAVING YOUR CAKE AND EATING IT TOO: Having successfully crippled Napster (at least partially), record labels are turning to coopting the song-swapper’s mission, and preparing to launch their own streaming/downloading sites. Wired 03/16/01
  • IX-NAY ON THE EVER-CLAY ICKS-TRAY: The website “Aimster” has removed, at Napster’s request, a program that allowed users to translate song titles into Pig Latin to circumvent filtering software designed to stop illegal downloads. Nando Times (AP) 03/15/01

CROSSOVER ALBUM, HOLD THE CHEESE: Elvis Costello is no stranger to the world of classical crossover music, having recorded a full-length album of his vocals backed by the Brodsky Quartet nearly a decade ago. Now, the iconoclastic pop singer has teamed up with soprano Anne Sofie von Otter, and the result is an album that may actually give crossover albums a good name. National Post (Canada) [from the Daily Telegraph] 03/16/01

CROSSING BOUNDARIES: Think “jazz orchestra,” and you probably think of the classic Big Band, or perhaps a Dixieland ensemble. The New Black Music Repertory Ensemble thinks a jazz orchestra is these things and more, and their unique method of weaving the disparate sounds of early jazz, hard-edged bebop, and the avant-garde into a single evening is winning converts to serious African-American music of all kinds. Chicago Tribune 03/16/01

APATHY ALL AROUND: There’s still plenty to rail against in the world, so why isn’t anyone singing about it? “Never mind where have all the flowers gone; where have all the protest singers gone? The Falklands gave us Elvis Costello’s ‘Shipbuilding’ and Billy Bragg’s ‘Island of No Return.’ But the Kosovo conflict has produced nary a B-side.” The Times (London) 3/16/01

Thursday March 15

PLUGGING THE HENZE: With a major new Henze opera set to debut and dismal advance ticket sales, London’s Royal Opera House is taking to some old-fashioned PR to try and generate buzz. The company is comping TV celebs to the production, hoping to get them to plug the opera on their shows. The Independent (London) 03/15/01

A LITTLE THING LIKE FILTERS? As Napster attempts to filter copyrighted songs from its service, an army of free Pig-Latin encoder/decoder programs proliferates on the net. What are they? They translate music file names into Pig Latin so they escape the filters…Wired 03/14/01

PAY FOR PLAY (ISN’T THIS ILLEGAL?): “Listeners may not realize it, but radio today is largely bought by the record companies. Most rock and Top 40 stations get paid to play the songs they spin by the companies that manufacture the records. But it’s not payola — exactly. Here’s how it works.” Salon 03/14/01

PRICED OUT: Young string players are facing an instrument crisis. “In the past 10 years, prices of violins have more than doubled. My generation faces the prospect of never owning a violin without the help of a patron.” Philadelphia Inquirer 03/15/01

Wednesday March 14

A DELICATE BALANCE: Running the clubby Glyndebourne festival has always been seen as a plum opera job, but that may be changing. New director David Picker, whose appointment was announced this week will have to keep a delicate balance between “those who hanker after the days when opera at Glyndebourne was an entertainment for a large extended family, and those who want to see it more at the cutting edge of the art form.” The Guardian (London) 03/14/01

A NEW “GLORIA”: An unknown choral work by Handel (believed to have been written in 1708-9, when the 22-year-old composer was in Rome) was recently discovered in London’s Royal Academy and will receive its world premiere Thursday night. “It is worth emphasising that this is not a ‘new Messiah.’ But there will be a race to get the first recording out. It really is that good.” The Times (London) 3/14/01

NEW MOZART: A new work by Mozart – an adaptation of Handel’s oratorio “Judas Maccabaeus” dating from the 1780s – has been found in a Yorkshire council records office in England. BBC 03/14/01

TWICE DISPOSSESSED: A wave of talented Russian composers fled the former Soviet Union in the early 1990s for new lives in Britain and throughout Europe. But the thriving composing community they envisioned hasn’t reestablished itself, and for the most part their work – some of it very good – goes unplayed and thus unknown. “Shunned by compatriot conductors, undiscovered by westerners, Russia’s emigré composers are the unheard ghosts at Europe’s over-subsidised feast.” The Telegraph (London) 3/14/01

A BALANCING ACT: Following on the heels of Nicholas Snowman’s abrupt resignation last fall, Glyndebourne’s new director David Pickard (formerly of the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment) will have a tough act to follow. “Pickard’s role will be to keep the balance between those who hanker after the days when opera at Glyndebourne was an entertainment for a large extended family, and those who want to see it more at the cutting edge of the art form.” The Guardian (London) 3/14/01

SEATTLE SCORES: Seattle has become one of the busiest places outside L.A. for recording film scores – a sign of increasing “runaway production,” the practice of hiring movie talent outside Hollywood to cut down on costs. Last month alone, the Seattle Symphony Orchestra played 26 soundtrack jobs, a total of 100 soundtracks last year. Needless to say, L.A.’s musicians are not pleased to see their work moving north. NPR 3/13/01 [Real audio file]

DO YOU HAVE AN EAR FOR MUSIC? If you do, you almost certainly inherited it. Research shows that you can’t learn to judge musical pitch; it’s in your genes. If you’re not sure, there’s an MP3 file to download which will help you find out. The New Scientist 03/08/01

ELEVATOR MUSIC WITH A 20 SECOND REVERB: An enormous grain elevator in Montreal has been turned into a giant musical instrument. With the help of high-speed internet connections, the Silophone “transmits and receives sounds sent in from around the world, which are transformed, reverberated, and coloured by this historical hulk, leaving a cacophony of haunting echoes. Those echoes, in turn, are captured by microphones and rebroadcast on phone lines to Web and telephone users.” The Globe and Mail (Canada) 03/14/01

Tuesday March 13

EXTRAVAGANT CLAIM: “It is only a decade-and-a-half since the London Symphony Orchestra hit rock-bottom, and now it is unquestionably the leading British orchestra. On a good night others can match it, but no other British band is playing consistently at the LSO’s level, and only the LSO could claim to have knocked America’s biggest heavyweights off their pedestals. Indeed, the LSO has surely become the first British orchestra to be mentioned regularly in the same breath as the Berlin Philharmonic and Amsterdam’s Royal Concertgebouw.” The Times (London) 03/13/01

BACH IN BLACK? Classical music has always been influenced by popular tunes, although “serious composers” are often loath to admit it. Still, at a time when pundits are continually proclaiming the death of serious art music, it can be difficult for a composer who openly embraces the work of Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison to be accepted by his peers. Even when he’s a professor at Princeton. Boston Herald 03/13/01

NAPSTER TO GET LEGAL: The CEO of Bertelsmann says Napster will be relaunched in July and that “a re-launched Napster will likely charge $2.95 to $4.95 a month for a basic service and $5.95 to $9.95 for a premium service. Bertelsman, which owns the BMG label, has invested in Napster as part of a bid to convince music companies to drop their lawsuits and support a ‘legal’ version of the service.” Wired 03/12/01

  • GUILTY PLEASURES: So Napster As We Know It is dead. The new Napster is yet to come. By law, now, trading music files without paying royaties is officially wrong. So how did so many users decide that it wasn’t? And what has the experience done for the millions who participated? For some, it has meant a guilt-free way of exploring the music they’d be too embarrassed to buy at the store. Boston Globe 03/13/01
  • FREE FLOW: A group of programmers dedicated to keeping the flow of free internet music going is hard at work on son-of-Napster, which they say will circumvent the crackdown on Napster. “The Freenet programme is similar to the popular Napster file sharing software, but uses a different storage and retrieval system which maintains no central index and does not reveal where the files are stored.” BBC 03/13/01

Monday March 12

PAEAN TO ALBERT HALL: London’s Albert Hall may not be perfect acoustically. But inside it is magnificent. “We feel queasy about Victorian buildings, almost as we do about Victorian cooking. Nostalgia is a corrupt function of memory, but Albert and Fowke were not indulging in sentimental histrionics. They were mapping the known world with confidence and conviction. It is the resonance of this spiritual energy that makes us sometimes feel uncomfortable with Victorian buildings.” The Independent (London) 03/08/01

TECHNOLOGY CHANGES EVERYTHING: “The music industry is far too focused on the debate over MP3, Napster and music theft, and is missing out on the point that not only is their business model changing, but their current technological foundation – the CD – is just about obsolete for many people.” The Globe & Mail (Canada) 03/12/01

A NEW HANDEL: A work by Handel is newly rediscovered in London’s Royal Academy. “The seven movement work for soprano and strings is thought to have been composed in Rome in 1707, when the composer was about 21 years old.” BBC 03/12/01

Sunday March 11

TRYING TO BE NEW: The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette music critic takes the Pittsburgh Symphony to task for its conservative ways. So the orchestra invites him to a planning session, just to see the planning difficulties involved in programming new music. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 03/11/01

CLEVELAND CANCELS SOUTH AMERICA: The Cleveland Orchestra this week suddenly announced the cancelation of a major tour of South America. Why? “Presenters in South American didn’t schedule a sufficient number of performances for the tour, especially in Buenos Aires, to make the trip viable.” The Plain Dealer (Cleveland) 03/09/01

WHEN WOTAN RAN THE MOB: There’s something operatic about HBO’s “The Sopranos,” something Wagnerian, something Nibelungian. Boston Herald 03/09/01

SALONEN STAYING: When big prestigious music directorships come open Esa-Pekka Salonen is often mentioned as a candidate. But he’s staying put in LA. “In his time in Los Angeles, Salonen has observed the orchestra’s audiences becoming younger and more racially diverse. He has witnessed a major personnel changeover (almost 30 players) in the orchestra, and he finds the playing level at auditions ‘absolutely stunning’.” San Francisco Chronicle 03/11/01

Friday March 9

BUSONI? WASN’T THAT BACH’S LAST NAME?: “He could play louder and faster than anyone alive, and his Liszt interpretations had ‘chords like cast bronze.'” He heard Brahms play and hung around with Schoenberg. He scared people with his intellect, and sometimes with his music. That was Ferruccio Busoni, who is remembered, if at all, for Bach transcriptions and for an unfinished Doktor Faust. Maybe it’s time for a re-evaluation. The New Republic 03/12/01

RUMORS OF ITS DEATH ARE GREATLY EXAGGERATED: Napster has been shut down. No, it is being shut down. What we mean is, it’s in the process of being treated as if it might eventually be in a position which someone with minimal Internet skills might mistake for shut down. “So basically Napster is still a free-for-all for everyone — unless, that is, you are a fan of Roy Orbison… much to the chagrin of at least a couple Napster users, the service has started blocking people who have Roy songs in their libraries.” Wired 03/09/01

Thursday March 8

CLEVELAND BAILS ON TOUR: The Cleveland Orchestra has canceled its upcoming tour of South America, only two months before it was scheduled to kick off. Management did not immediately provide a reason for the cancellation, but the move calls into question the status of the orchestra’s planned 2001-02 European tour. The Plain Dealer (Cleveland) 03/08/01

CATALOGUING THE KIROV: It has long been suspected that the Kirov-Mariinsky Opera in St. Petersburg is sitting on one of the world’s greatest archives of musical material. Financial considerations had previously prevented the opera from any attempt at cataloguing its stash, but now, with the help of the U.S. Library of Congress, scholars may finally get a look at the countless scores that were previously a part of the Tsar’s personal archive. Washington Post 03/08/01

ABBADO ILL: Conductor Claudio Abbado recently had his entire stomach removed because of cancer. “Those who saw photographs of the conductor over the past few months were shocked at how emaciated and miserable he looked. This naturally gave rise to a great deal of speculation. This was even more of a strain upon Abbado than the illness itself, which was indeed serious, so much so that he took the step – which must certainly have been difficult for him – of countering all the speculation.” Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 03/08/01

END RUN THROUGH NAPSTER: The judge may have ordered Napster to start filtering out copyrighted songs, but Napster users are resourceful. They’re finding ways around the filters and traffic is still robust. Inside.com 03/07/01

BROTHER AGAINST BROTHER: Don’t think the other music retailers out there on the web aren’t cheering the looming demise of Napster. In particular, EMusic, which has joined the list of companies suing the embattled song-swapper, is hoping that Napster’s loss will be its gain. Wired 03/08/01

PAYING FOR IT: Next season, the Philadelphia Orchestra moves into its beautiful new hall in the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts. But new digs cost money, and apparently selling the hall’s naming rights to a phone company (really, now: “Verizon Hall”?) didn’t cover everything. Ticket prices will jump a mind-boggling 16% next season, and the ever-mysterious “ticket surcharge” will double. Philadelphia Inquirer 03/08/01

TIME TO SAY GOODBYE: Jung-Ho Pak, the conductor who has been largely credited with resurrecting the San Diego Symphony from the ashes of bankruptcy, has announced that he will step down as the orchestra’s artistic director and principal conductor after next season. (First item) Los Angeles Times 03/08/01

TAKING A STEP BACK: Minnesota-based University of St. Thomas is making budget cuts, and the 15-year-old Conservatory of Music is one of the casualties. Although it was certainly not a major musician training ground, the conservatory had gained respect for its dedication to community music, and was one of the more popular programs at the university. Minneapolis Star Tribune 03/08/01

BEHIND THE SCENES: Audio artist Janet Cardiff has been awarded Canada’s $50,000 “Millennium Prize,” one of the largest arts awards in the history of the country. Cardiff’s latest piece, “Forty Part Motet,” consists of a massive array of 40 speakers, and very little else. “Each of the speakers emits the sound of a distinct voice singing one part from . . .a 12-minute choral work written by the British composer Thomas Tallis in 1575. During the performers’ intermission, we hear the singers chatting, working out difficulties in the score, or discussing their various jobs and interests before the performance resumes again.” The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/08/01

WHAT ARE THE VILLAGE PEOPLE DOING HERE? The NEA and the recording industry have published a list of the “best” 365 songs of the 20th century. Why? Because everybody loves lists, that’s why. You love lists. Yes you do. Don’t argue with us. You want to argue, argue about whether “YMCA” (#86) ought to be ranked nearly 50 spots above Frank Sinatra (#144). Dallas Morning News 03/08/01

MUSIC GETS A NEW LOOK: The University of Illinois has unveiled an exhibit that focuses on the visual side of the music world. “Between Sound and Vision” is no high-tech, cutting-edge, multimedia effort – what the creators of the exhibit have done is take the truly “inside baseball” parts of the contemporary music world (scores by John Cage, unconventional in the extreme, make up the lion’s share of the exhibit) and displayed them as artworks that stand on their own. The idea is to explore the ever-expanding definition of music. Chicago Tribune 03/08/01

Wednesday March 7

NAPSTER BITES: As ordered by a judge, the file loader has three days to remove copyrighted songs from its trading lists. Or else. Wired 03/06/01

OPERA VS SPORT – AN UNFAIR MATCH: In the UK it now costs less to buy a ticket for Covent Garden opera than for a Premiere League soccer match. Does that mean Opera will become a mass entertainment? Not hardly. “Sport has the kind of mass appeal that art can never attain, by reason of its child-like simplicity. In Italy, crucible of opera, Venice and Bari have had their theatres burned down and citizens have not taken to the streets to demand restoration. If a Serie A soccer ground were to be shut down, there would be a bloody revolution.” The Telegraph (London) 03/07/01

THE BEST JAZZ ALBUM EVER? Miles Davis’ “Kind of Blue” has sold 5 million copies since it was released in 1959, making it the biggest-selling album in jazz history. But the recording has had a major influence on subsequent generations of jazz artists as well. The Independent (London) 03/05/01

ROLL OVER HEIFETZ: Violinists have always gloried in their ability to dazzle audiences with fingerboard pyrotechnics and needlessly speedy performances of blatant showpieces. But a new stage show takes showing off to a whole new level, using the wildly popular “Riverdance” model as a starting point. Needless to say, audiences love it, and critics are dubious. Los Angeles Times 03/07/01

THE HONEYMOON BEGINS: When the Cleveland Orchestra announced that the young Austrian conductor Franz Welser-Möst would be its next music director, many critics jumped on the organization for moving too quickly, and settling for less than it deserved. But as Christoph von Dohnanyi’s tenure in Cleveland draws to a close, the orchestra and its leader-to-be seem genuinely appreciative of one another. The Plain Dealer (Cleveland) 03/07/01

BRINGIN’ IT TO THE PEOPLE: Composer and San Francisco radio host Charles Amirkhanian is on a mission to unite the creators of new music with an increasingly skeptical public. His unique program on KPFK-FM makes few judgments, and refuses to cater to one particular style of composition. The resulting mish-mash of modern music has garnered an unlikely following for what Amirkhanian calls “outsider music.” San Francisco Bay Guardian 03/07/01

BUT HE DIED SO YOUNG… Fans of dead pop stars are fanatical in their devotion. “These fans are a gentler breed than the celebrity stalkers of the living. Although a few do skirt the edges of parody at times, they reveal more clearly than any conventional star biography why rock music can mean so much, and also how far from normality it can take you.” The Guardian (London) 03/07/01

Tuesday March 6

HOW MANY WAYS CAN YOU SPELL GUILTY? Napster started blocking access to copyright-protected music Monday by implementing new name-based filters. One problem: the slightest typo can go undetected by the filter, leaving songs in question still available to all. Example: “Metallica/Enter Sandman” is no longer available, but “Metellica — Enter Sanman” is. “It seems safe to assume that Napster’s professed hope for an amicable working relationship with the labels on screening will likely go unfulfilled. One reason is that the number of possible file names is so large.” Inside.com 3/05/01

WHO NEEDS WHOM? Free-music fans continue arguing that Napster doesn’t harm the music industry; it actually serves it well by letting consumers sample before they buy – and then buy even more. “The music industry wouldn’t last two weeks without Napster.” New York Times 3/06/01 (one-time registration required for access)

HOW GOOD WAS MENDELSSOHN? Audiences love him. Critics often don’t. Shaw criticized his “kid-glove gentility, his conventional sentimentality, and his despicable oratorio-mongering.” Other commentators routinely categorize him as a “minor master.” Is this any way to treat the composer of the E-Flat Octet for Strings, the Scottish Symphony, and the E-Minor Violin Concerto? Commentary 03/01

MORE THAN JUST MOVIES: Ennio Morricone is well known for his film scores, but few fans are aware he’s also been composing classical composition all these years. Are there differences between composing for movie audiences and chamber halls? “In writing a film score you are absolutely aware of the public, and of writing music the audience understands. I would never think of distracting a film audience with complicated music. The audience for movies does not usually have a high musical culture.” The Telegraph (London) 3/06/01

Monday March 5

MUSIC CONTINUES FLOWING: Napster had promised it was going to start filtering out copyrighted music this weekend. But “all the top 10 songs listed on the Billboard Hot 100 list were available on the company’s servers late yesterday, including the No 1 Stutter by Joe featuring Mystikal. Songs by longtime Napster foe Metallica also showed up in searches.” The Age (Melbourne) 03/05/01

OH YES, IT’LL BE GREAT: The English National Opera’s production of David Sawer’s opera “From Morning to Midnight” is new. How new? “With rehearsals due to start this month, its penultimate scene is still being faxed, page by page, to waiting singers desperate to familiarise themselves with the score.” The Independent (London) 03/05/01

BATTLING THE MUSIC BIZ: Courtney Love believes the music recording business is rotten to the core. So “she is suing her recording company, the Universal Music Group, to release her from her contract and what she sees as a form of coercive indenture that she never asked for and feels she never deserved. Unlike plaintiffs in previous suits, she is not merely in it for herself; she has every intention of bringing the whole edifice of the music business crashing down all around her.” The Independent (London) 03/05/01

EASY LISTENING: Michael Torke is one of a generation of composers coming into its own for whom listenability is a primary goal. “My generation is trying to bring back the relationship with the audience. We love the audience, we need the audience. The audience is made up of wonderful, intelligent, vital, vibrant people and I want my music to communicate.” The Scotsman 03/05/01

Sunday March 4

THE IDEAL SOPRANO: They say there are no more Verdi sopranos. “What Verdi required in nearly all his operas was a soprano with a dramatic color and weight of timbre and wide compass; stamina in the high range; both boldness and delicacy in coloratura; vigorous and flexible attack in the low, middle and high range; a voice capable of conveying tenderness, aggression and conflicting feelings; an artistic personality of imagination, temperament, passion, imperiousness, nobility and warmth. And since Verdi’s time, another requirement has been thrown into the mix: linguistic authority.” Now what could be difficult about all that? Opera News 03/01

GETTING AROUND A CRIPPLED NAPSTER: Millions of music fans jammed onto Napster’s servers this weekend to try and beat court-imposed filtering out of copyrighted songs. Alternative music file-trading services also had big surges of users as traders explored alternative means of getting music they wanted. Dallas Morning News (AP) 03/04/01

THE MEZZO WHO WOULDN’T QUIT: Frederica von Stade is 55 and said to be winding down her career. But some new operas have got her attention – she’s commited to some revivals of Jake Heggie’s “Dead Man Walking” and anxious to participate in a new Richard Danielpour effort. That takes her to age 60. And then… Boston Globe 03/04/01

Friday March 2

ATTACKING THE CRITIC (ARE YOU NUTS?): Are Leonard Slatkin and the National Symphony Orchestra trying to get Washington Post music critic Philip Kennicott fired? “The NSO attacked Kennicott in a stinging letter posted on its Web site, calling him “irresponsible” and insinuating that he had concocted a quote.” The Post, meanwhile, has nominated Kennicott for a Pulitzer. Washingtonian 03/01

WHO TO BLAME? Did Arnold Schoenberg bring on the end of music? Is he to blame for the current predicament of contemporary music? The evidence is rather thin. Maybe he merely represents the end of a way of thinking that art is a linear process in which “improvement” is the goal. The Independent (London) 03/02/01

THE ESSENTIAL NAPSTER: Wondering about the fuss over Napster? Check out ArtsJournal’s annotated primer on the subject. It should surprise no one that the issue is neither about the sacred principle of intellectual property rights nor about the need for fair compensation to artists. It’s about who gets to keep the profits of a lucrative worldwide multi-billion-dollar business. Arts Journal 03/02/01

Thursday March 1

WIN? WIN WHAT?  So the recording industry beats Napster. “The music industry (by which we mean the five companies that supply about 90 percent of the world’s popular music) is dying not because of Napster but because of an underlying economic truth. In the world of digital products that can be copied and moved at no cost, traditional distribution structures, which depend on the ownership of the content or of the right to distribute, are fatally inefficient.” The Nation 03/12/01

LOOKING FOR A FEW GOOD TENORS: The Three Tenors have been classical music’s hottest act (not to mention cash cow) since their debut in 1990 – but Pavarotti, Domingo, and Carreras are all “approaching their 60s and will soon need walking frames to reach those high Cs. So what happens when the fat lady finally sings? The world’s major record companies have embarked on a mad, expensive scramble to locate and groom the musicians that could succeed the Titanic Trio.” Time (Europe) 3/05/01

BOHEMIAN GROOVE: What is it about the music of the Bohemian composers (Dvorak, Janacek, et al) that listeners find so captivating? Maybe it’s the politics? “Unlike German musical nationalism, which was founded on the idea of the unification of disparate political states, Czech music has always been about freedom of speech and autonomous expression.” The Guardian (London) 3/01/01

PAUL TAYLOR, GOOD AS EVER

The Paul Taylor Dance Company has a two-week season in New York every year. This year’s looks pretty good, according to the critics. In fact, it looks great. How’s this for a rave: “Taylor is quite simply the most extraordinary choreographer alive…. it is theater burned into the stage, and, even more, burned on the audience’s imagination.” New York Post

Media: March 2001

Friday March 30

NO INSURANCE: Making movies is a huge financial risk. Nine out of ten Holywood movies lose money. So a few years ago someone came up with the idea of writing insurance policies against production costs. It worked great for producers, but was a disaster for insurers. The Economist 03/30/01

PAY TO READ? “A survey published by the Consumer Electronics Manufacturer’s Association last month found that 77 percent of consumers objected to paying for online news, driving directions, financial reports and other ‘commodity’ information.” Nonetheless, desperate to earn money, more and more content sites are beginning to charge subscriptions. Wired 03/30/01

THE COST OF A STRIKE: According to the Screen Actors Guild’s latest earnings report, SAG members lost more than $100 million in income during last year’s six-month strike against the advertising industry – and that doesn’t include the losses suffered by SAG’s sister union, the American Federation of Television & Radio Artists, whose commercial earnings losses are estimated at another $15 million. Backstage 3/29/01

Thursday March 29

TAKING TINSELTOWN TO TASK: Critics and serious moviegoers have always complained about the lackluster fare coming out of Hollywood. But lately the grumblings of the discontent have reached a fever pitch. “You could look at any of these trends as proof of a new brand of adventurousness sweeping the land, as evidence that moviegoers are more open to nonmainstream pictures than they’ve ever been. But there’s more than a whiff of sanctimoniousness in the anti-Hollywood sentiment that’s been going around.” Salon 3/29/01

Wednesday March 28

ALL IN THE NAME OF POLITICS: Last year during the American presidential campaign, Al Gore and Joe Lieberman attacked Hollywood for its violent ways. But new numbers show that “the number of R-rated wide releases from the studios had dropped 33 percent last year compared to 1999, to 58 from 87.” Inside.com 03/27/01

Tuesday March 27

WE KNEW THERE HAD TO BE A CATCH: 154,000 Americans are subscribed to the “TiVo” service, which allows the user, among other things, to pause live TV, skip commercials, and record hundreds of hours of programming digitally. But a new report charges that TiVo is using its equipment to spy on users, and sell information on their viewing habits to the highest bidder. New York Post 03/27/01

HOW TO MAKE AN AD COST $10 MILLION: With the continued blurring of the always-fuzzy line between entertainment and advertising, many of Hollywood’s biggest stars have begun to pop up in high-end ad campaigns. In past years, movie stars considered such shilling beneath them, but ads are apparently now considered “art”, and that makes it all better. New York Post 03/27/01

Monday March 26

OSCAR WRAPUP: Just in case you fell asleep before the end finally came, here’s the short list: Julia, Russell, Soderbergh, and “Gladiator.” (Here’s the complete list of winners.) “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” won several awards, but none of the big ones, and Bjork wore what appeared to be a dead swan wrapped around her neck. All part of the fun on Hollywood’s Biggest Night. Los Angeles Times 03/26/01

IS HOLLYWOOD FUNDAMENTALLY CONSERVATIVE? “Look into the very heart of American counter-culture and you will find films like Taxi Driver and Blue Velvet, films which penetrated the mainstream with a spirit of the avant-garde. Yet at the core of their innovative visions there is also a spirit of right-wing libertarianism and rage against modernity.” Prospect 04/01

Sunday March 25

OSCAR AND THE NATIONAL ZEITGEIST: Tonight is, of course, Oscar night, and the whole country will be watching. But the Academy Awards are part of a dying cultural tradition – the TV event that is “required viewing” for nearly everyone. In an age of ever-widening programming choice and the continued factionalizing of the populace in general, some experts are worried that Americans just don’t have enough common ground anymore. Dallas Morning News 03/25/01

  • IT’S TOO FLIPPIN’ LONG! How long is the average Oscar broadcast? Wagner’s “Ring” cycle is the picture of brevity by comparison. This year, the producer of the telecast has promised a free high-def TV to the winner who gives the shortest acceptance speech. Philadelphia Inquirer 03/25/01

THE FAILING FRENCH: In the 50s, 60s and 70s French cinema was a vibrant art that caught the world’s attention. No more. The industry is in the doldrums. “Last year, for the first time in history, the share of French films at the domestic box office dropped below 30 per cent – and at the same time, it’s getting harder to export French cinema.” The Telegraph (London) 03/24/01

THE ART OF MOVIES: Julian Schnabel was a celebrated artist before he started making movies. “Making a movie was similar to making art, Schnabel found. A movie was like a series of paintings. He tried to create those images in the moment, without much rehearsal. And he exercised a gruff authority.” New York Times Magazine 03/25/01 (one-time registration required)

Friday March 23

A SLICE OF THE PIE: Latest estimates of the global media/entertainment market peg its value at about $5 trillion. So how to get your slice? “With the average American now cramming 11 hours of leisure into seven hours a day by multi-tasking even rest and recreation (for instance, by watching TV while surfing the Net), the biggest problem, according to some of the panelists, lies in sorting things out.” Inside.com 03/23/01

GOING GLOBAL: It may be difficult to define, but globalization sure is easy to spot on screen. “A handful of recent films – from different corners of the world, divergent in style and scope – address globalization not as an idea, or even as a theme, but rather as a half-invisible context, a source of jokes, stories and serendipitous metaphors.” New York Times 3/23/01 (one-time registration required for access)

BETTER THAN OSCAR? It’s here – award weekend, when all of Hollywood gears up to collect miniature statues in exchange for movie excellence. Oh, and the Oscars are next week, too. But for true film connoisseurs, it just doesn’t get any better than the Independent Spirit Awards, which have risen from obscurity to become highly coveted commendations. New York Post 03/23/01

Thursday March 22

MOVIE MAN: In a little more than a year, Philip Anschutz — whose net worth is listed at $18 billion in Forbes (the country’s 6th-richest person) — has taken over three of the nation’s largest movie-theater chains, and now controls one-fifth of America’s movie screens. This when movie houses are losing money and declaring bankruptcy. What does he know that the rest of the industry doesn’t? Go digital. New York Observer 03/21/01

A FILM BY… Hollywood directors have rejected writers’ demands to end the practice of tagging a movie as “a film by” and crediting a director. Writers feel the proactice belittles the writers’ contributions. CNN 03/21/01

Wednesday March 21

A DISASTER AT ABC: The Australian public broadcaster ABC has had a rocky first year under chief John Shier. Now one of the broadcaster’s unions has written to the ABC board to urge that Shier be reigned in. He’s not competent. “Under his stewardship the ABC has wasted millions of dollars of taxpayers’ money on a restructure that is ineffective and unworkable.” The Age (Melbourne) 03/21/01

HOLLYWOOD WRITERS’ STRIKE? MAYBE NOT: “[T]he two sides’ bargaining positions aren’t really all that far apart. When contract talks recessed on March 1, the negotiators for the Writers Guild and the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers were only about $70 million-$80 million apart on their proposals for a new three-year contract. That’s a difference of only about $25 million a year — chump change, by Hollywood’s standards.” Backstage 03/20/01

Tuesday March 20

D IS FOR DOCUMENTARY: To the academy handing out Oscars, “documentary is less a popular art form than a public service medium: Over the past decade, the films nominated, with a few honorable exceptions, have been the cinematic equivalent of castor oil. Then-New York Times critic Janet Maslin described them as ‘films about the Holocaust, the disabled, hard-working artists and inspirational programs in the inner city’ – worthy subjects that all too often get mediocre or sentimental treatment.” The Nation 04/02/01

HITCHCOCK BEFORE HE WAS FAMOUS: Even as a young director, Alfred Hitchcock impressed critics. “He works with the mind of an intelligent child who gets angry when his adventure story bogs down midway with talk of love, duty, and other abstractions. Let’s skip that part, he says; what happens after that? Hitchcock’s favorite story is the odyssey, the journey made in a great cause, with the hero beset by plots, accidents, and malign coincidences.” The New Yorker 03/19/01

Monday March 19

CHINESE CINEMA LANGUISHES AWAY FROM HOLLYWOOD: “Chinese cinema has come into the media spotlight in the wake of Taiwanese director Ang Lee’s martial arts box office smash ‘Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.’ But while Chinese directors in Hong Kong and Taiwan have wooed international markets with a vision of China gone by, mainland cinema is in the doldrums and getting progressively worse.” China Times (Taiwan) 03/19/01

AS SEEN ON… “Now that museums are commissioning Internet-based art projects, they are confronting a digital dilemma: how to present virtual, small- screen art in a real-world, public space.” The New York Times 03/19/01 (one-time registration required for access)

A WORRIED HOLLYWOOD: It’s movie award season. But “while nominees jet from award show to award show, the mood for the rest of Hollywood remains glum. Indeed, for those not directly involved in the festivities, the hubbub of the Oscar season sounds much like the band playing as the Titanic went down, so palpable is the sense of foreboding that has begun to circle the industry.” Los Angeles Times 03/19/01

Sunday March 18

IT’S ALL ABOUT THE PROCESS: Seven German artists are bringing the spectacle of creating art to the public with a seven-day marathon Internet broadcast. “Art lovers around the world can go to www.live-art.tv and watch one participant a day paint, develop or sculpt an original work to be completed within seven hours in a studio at the Museum of Fine Arts in the western German city of Celle.” Nando Times 03/18/01

DIGITAL MOVIES ARRIVE: The time for digital movies has arrived. Within a few years, movie theaters without digital projection systems won’t be able to show the most popular movies. “This is the future. Six months ago, people were saying it would take five years to get to this point, but here we are. We love that there are no more cans of film to fall off trucks.” Christian Science Monitor 03/17/01

PHONY APPRAISERS INDICTED: Two antiques experts are indicted for staging phony appraisals on the popular PBS antiques appraisal program “Antiques Roadshow.” Boston Herald 03/17/01

TV TURNS TO THE STAGE: The next few weeks will see an astonishing number of stage plays make their debut on the small screen. And while the struggling world of theatre is certainly in need of the boost TV can provide, there is always the risk that the dumbed-down, sound-bitten world of the tube can suck the life out of a great stage piece. San Jose Mercury News 03/18/01

Friday March 16

TOEING THE UNION LINE: The battle between the big Hollywood studios and the Writer’s Guild is ongoing, and with a strike looming if a settlement is not reached soon, analysts are weighing in on the union’s chances. “While studios dig in their heels against what they say are unprecedented union demands, both sides must weigh the realities of a slowing economy, changing industry, and labor relations in Los Angeles.” Boston Globe (AP) 03/16/01

TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT: The Oscar-nominated “Traffic” opens in Mexico this weekend, amid shrieks of protest and sad smiles of recognition. The film, which focuses on the darkest aspects of the Mexican and American drug trades, is cutting awfully close to the bone in a country overwhelmed by poverty and the fear of powerful drug kingpins, and many Mexicans hope that the movie somehow raises American awareness of the problem. Dallas Morning News 03/16/01

DRIPPER’S LEGACY: Ed Harris’s riveting portrayal of one of the 20th century’s most fascinating artists has earned “Pollock” an Oscar nod and critical raves. But art historians have been irked by Harris’s decision to make it seem as if Jackson Pollock’s innovations were nothing more than an outgrowth of his descent into madness. “Pollock’s epiphany likely didn’t arise out of locking himself in a Greenwich Village walkup for three weeks, as the film suggests. Abstract Expressionism built on European modernist painting.” The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 03/16/01

Thursday March 15

WHAT IF NOBODY CAME? Last year, convergence – the idea that all media would come together and be distributed through portals – was all the rage. This year the talk has died. A high-profile panel on the subject at a prominent internet convention in Hollywood failed to attract anyone to even talk about it. Toronto Star 03/14/01

Wednesday March 14

KEEP IT SHORT: One hundred Academy Award nominees gathered at the annual pre-Oscars lunch on Tuesday were urged by the ceremony’s producers to keep their acceptance speeches brief. The show clocked in at just under 4 hours last year, and the show producers fear its length is costing them viewers. “The Academy is calling upon all nominees to write up a laundry list of people to thank. Winners’ lists will be immediately posted on the Oscar Web site, Oscar.com..” Variety 3/14/01

Tuesday March 13

THIS MESSAGE WILL SELF-DESTRUCT… An Austin-based software firm comprised largely of former intelligence agents has developed the next generation of copy protection for online media. The program works by taking control of your computer, and disallowing the copying of trademarked material. Try to hack the nearly invisible program, and it destroys itself, and all your copyrighted files. No doubt, some 15-year-old in Topeka is already working on how to crack this one. Inside.com 03/13/01

HOW KIDS WATCH TV: It used to be that teenagers all watched more or less the same TV programs. No more. “This fragmentation of viewers has become a disturbing fact of life for television executives, especially at the three traditional broadcast networks. Once they could ignore teenagers, figuring that they would watch the networks because they had no choice. The changes in the past decade have left those executives feeling rather like children after a visit to the planetarium, realizing that they are not the center of the universe but only a speck in the cosmos.” The New York Times 03/13/01 (one-time registration required for access)

THE DAY THE BLACKLIST BROKE: For more than a decade, the Hollywood blacklist drove writers, actors, and directors underground, with Joe McCarthy’s reign of terror helped along by the complicity of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences. But then, one glittering evening in 1957, the chokehold began to loosen, when a blacklisted writer, working under a pseudonym, was awarded the Oscar for Best Motion Picture Story. Los Angeles Times 03/13/01

Monday March 12

AUSTRALIA’S ABC IN TURMOIL: Australia’s ABC, the country’s public broadcaster and one of its primary cultural institutions, seems to be unraveling in some important ways. John Shier has been running the corporation for a year now, and his vision for the company seems increasingly difficult to comprehend. Sydney Morning Herald 03/12/01

MOVIE THEATRES IN DANGER? “No one believes that movie theaters are in immediate danger of losing their cherished theatrical primacy — it is too ingrained, and the buzz that a film’s initial release creates is still the greatest engine for its subsequent earnings — but there are some disturbing trends for theater owners.” The New York Times 03/12/01 (one-time registration required for access)

PUMP EM UP, MOVE EM OUT: Vancouver is the third-largest film-making city in the world (after Los Angeles and New York), and the second-largest TV-series factory. About $1.8 billion is spent on making movies there. But here’s a secret no one talks about: they’re almost all bad movies. The reason – the cheap Canadian dollar lures cheap, mediocre productions. Ottawa Citizen 03/12/01

OF MYTH AND POLLOCK: The new bio-pic of Jackson Pollock has a lot to cram into it. But, beautiful as it is, it’s not possible to fully put into perspective the artist’s life, legend and myth. Herewith an attempt at clarification. The Idler 03/12/01

Sunday March 11

SOMETHING YOU CAN’T SELL ON EBAY: Lucien Lallouz had what he thought was a great idea. The Ebay auctioneer offered a deluxe trip to the Academy Awards – including admission to the Oscars ceremony and the Governors’ Ball. But the Academy threatened legal action – Oscar tickets are “non-transferable” – and Lallouz backed down – even though bidding had reached $11,000. Inside.com 03/09/01

Friday March 9

PITY THE POOR DESPISED CRITIC: “I’ve been examining fictional works that include critics as characters. The result? Forget about positive role models. Each film critic I’ve discovered in a movie is a walking and laboriously talking stereotype. Some portraits are playful and satirical; others are malicious. In every case, though, the film reviewer is boorish, obsessive, and neurotic (and almost invariably male), someone you wouldn’t want to be stuck next to at a movie. Boston Phoenix 03/09/01

THERE’S GOLD IN THEM THAR KERNELS: The most intense battle for movie-goers’ money is not at the box office. It’s at the concession stand. Dozens of new flavors of cookies and pretzels and countless new varieties of candy are available, at a mark-up of 300 to 500 percent. The money-making champ, though, is still popcorn: one brand promises theater owners a 2500 percent markup. Newsweek 03/09/01

Thursday March 8

TV AND ALZHEIMER’S: Researchers have discovered that those who spend a lot of time in passive activities – like watching TV – in their middle years are more likely to develop Alzheimer’s later in life. Exercising your brain by reading, on the other hand, helps delay onset of the disease. The Age (Melbourne) 03/07/01

THE END OF CELLULOID? Two of Hollywood’s biggest technology vendors are trying to sell their plan to finance the conversion of America’s movie theaters to full digital projection. The conversion would allow distributors to send pictures to theaters electronically, but would require a large capital investment. The plan is for a small portion of each ticket sold to go towards the conversion, and execs doubt that theater owners will go for it. Variety 03/08/01

Wednesday March 7

CAN THEY GET ANY BIGGER? AOL Time Warner is merging the Turner Cable networks with the WB television network, creating the nation’s largest television group. How large? The group will include the WB, TBS, TNT, TCM, Cartoon Network, CNN, Headline News, CNNFN, CNNSI, and several others we’ve forgotten the initials for. Nando Times (AP) 03/06/01

MOVIES ON DEMAND: Movie studios are set to start offering movies for downloading over the internet. “At least three studios or more will begin offering movies that can be downloaded in a form of video-on-demand or pay-per-view type of service” within three to six months. Wired 03/07/01

PRAYING FOR DAYLIGHT: The Screen Writers’ Guild is trying to quash the notion that a strike is inevitable in the ongoing dispute between writers and Hollywood studios. “‘To put it in football terms, this is half-time,’ said John McLean, chief negotiator and exec director of the Writers Guild of America, during a town hall meeting at the Sheraton Universal. ‘We’ve got eight more weeks.'” Variety 03/07/01

THE STORY OF “O”: Miramax has shelved, for the second time, its modern-day remake of Shakespeare’s “Othello,” in the aftermath of Monday’s school shooting in California. “O” ends with a shootout in a high school that kills off four main characters. The studio had previously delayed the release date following the Columbine massacre. New York Post 03/07/01

REDEFINING PUBLIC TV: Public broadcasting is feeling pressure everywhere – in Britain, in Canada, and in Australia. The head of Australia’s ABC lays out a roadmap for the next five years: “To do nothing is not an option for the ABC. We are at an early point in the digital communications revolution – one in which the rules will be rewritten for all, commercial and public broadcasters alike.” The Age (Melbourne) 03/07/01

Tuesday March 6

THE TITLE SAYS IT ALL: Universal Pictures has decided not to release the debut movie of one of its hottest directors. In the carefully-chosen yet highly-revealing words of one executive, “We have the utmost respect for Rob [Zombie], who made a really intense and compelling movie, but it turned out far more intense than we could have possibly imagined.” The title? House of 1000 Corpses. Los Angeles Times 03/06/01

Monday March 5

NEXT GENERATION HYPERTEXT: A number of digital artists are “using the interactive elements of motion graphics (as online animations are called)” to enhance their stories. “Characters and objects may move on the screen, but what matters more is that they also respond to the reader’s mouse click. The story will progress without any help, yet a click can change what the reader sees and feels.” The New York Times 03/05/01 (one-time registration required for access)

Sunday March 4

THE QUESTIONS OF SUCCESS: So PBS’ “Jazz” was a big hit. “As PBS congratulates itself for making a program that many Americans actually wanted to watch (creating Sidney Bechet and Bix Beiderbecke fans in Iowa in the process), this uncomfortable question pops up: Why can’t more of its shows be like that?” San Francisco Chronicle 03/04/01

THE CASE FOR MICRO-RADIO: The US Congress has all but killed a plan that would have allowed thousands of small micro-radio stations in the US. “To low-power advocates, radio deserves special government protection because it is or ought to be the ultimate grass-roots medium. Even in the age of the Internet and cable television, radio remains the cheapest way (short of a bullhorn) to be heard by your friends and neighbors.” The New York Times 03/03/01 (one-time registration required for access)

Friday March 2

“HARRY POTTER” TRAILER: The trailer for the movie adaptation of “Harry Potter” went live on the film’s official web site Thursday. “Early evidence suggests a high-gloss tale strung someplace between Roald Dahl and Charles Dickens.” The Guardian (London) 3/02/01

NO DEAL: After nearly six weeks of haggling over a new contract for Hollywood’s writers, negotiations between the Writers Guild of America and film and TV producers broke down on Thursday, making the prospect of a summer strike even more likely. “There’s still one major factor keeping them apart: Money.” E! Online 3/01/01

US STRIKE A MIXED BLESSING UP NORTH: A strike in Hollywood will have a pronounced ripple effect in Canada, where some 300 US movies and TV shows are shot every year. There will be less big-dollar work from the south, but it may re-focus some energy on the Canadian culture. As one Toronto film maker noted, “From a strictly selfish point of view, this would make it a lot easier to make a movie.” Globe and Mail (Canada) 03/02/01

Thursday March 1

A NO WIN: The British Board of Film Classification is all over the news lately, and for two seemingly contradictory charges: granting two extremely violent foreign films certification, and recent remarks by its director that suggested the end of mandatory ratings. But is anyone asking if Britain still needs an official censor? The Guardian (London) 3/01/01

GOING DIGITAL: Digital filmmaking has been steadily gaining popularity in Hollywood, and now director Robert Zemeckis has founded a 35,000-square-foot digital arts center to show new filmmakers the ropes. “The grand opening is as good an occasion as any to ask how the rapidly evolving digital world will influence new filmmakers, many of whom grew up with home video cameras and have never worked with film in their lives.” New York Times 3/01/01 (one-time registration required for access)

GOING OUT WITH A CYBER-FLOURISH: If you don’t watch “The Sopranos” on HBO – and many millions do – you may not know about Livia, Tony’s mother. Think Lady Macbeth. Think Mommy Dearest. Nancy Marchand, the actress who played Livia, died last year, but like any good villainess, Livia isn’t quite gone yet. With file footage and computer wizardry, the show’s third season will debut Sunday with a four-minute death bed tirade by the old girl. New York Post 02/28/01