Boris Johnson Or Jeremy Hunt — As UK Prime Minister, Which One Would Be Better For The Arts?

Ed Vaizey, who was Conservative PM David Cameron’s minister for culture: “Safe to say, the arts and cultural policy have not featured highly in the many debates and hustings that have taken place in the last few weeks of campaigning. Nevertheless, there is some hope for the arts, when one analyses the background of the main contenders.” (Vaizey goes on to compare Johnson to Marmite.) – The Art Newspaper

At Youth Festival In Crimea, Play Shows Girls Kissing; Russian Right Fumes About ‘Gay Propaganda’

“The production was staged by the Gogol School theatre lab during the Tavrida Festival, an annual art event organised by Russian state youth agency Rosmolodyozh. Reaction has been mixed, with some praising the audacity of the director, Ilya Romashko, and others calling it pure provocation. Given Russia’s 2013 law banning the spread of ‘gay propaganda’ among under-18s, the festival’s organisers have since issued an apology.” – BBC

David Koloane, Major South African Artist Of Apartheid Era, Dead At 81

“Koloane’s work — which comprised art-making, curating, activism, and writing — dealt head-on with colonialism and the continued oppression of black South Africans. His [art], which often takes the form of semi-abstract cityscapes, evokes the tensions felt in his country through clusters of swirling lines and compositions that evoke violence.” – ARTnews

Female Video Game Designers Take On The Debate Over Abortion Rights

“As Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi and Ohio work to reverse hard-won reproductive rights with ‘fetal heartbeat’ bills and potential 99-year sentences for performing abortions, game designers in the United States – and around the world – are creating interactive experiences that challenge the simplistic ways that many people think about abortion, and the blunt … laws that politicians have drafted around their constituents’ bodies.” – The Guardian

‘Undisturbed’ Ancient Roman Shipwreck Discovered Near Cyprus

“Not many details have been released about the shipwreck, but the Department of Antiquities notes that it ‘is the first undisturbed Roman shipwreck ever found in Cyprus.’ The vessel is still packed with amphorae — jugs that the ancients used to hold foodstuffs like oil and wine — that likely came from Syria and Cilicia, a region that is now southern Turkey.” – Smithsonian Magazine

Next Head Of Paris Opera Will Be Canadian Opera Company’s Alexander Neef: Report

According to the French newspaper Le Figaro, Neef, who was director of casting at the Paris Opera before becoming General Director of COC in 2008, will succeed Stéphane Lissner as General Director in Paris in 2022. Neef’s contract in Toronto currently runs to 2026, and last fall he took on the job of artistic director of the summer-only Santa Fe Opera. – Ludwig van Toronto