“The creative industries suffer from an ‘under-investment in human capital’, have too few training opportunities and unfair access to jobs, according to a new report … written for the Creative Industries Council, co-chaired by culture secretary Jeremy Hunt and business secretary Vince Cable.”
Category: issues
French Government Bans Film Advertising Posters For Being Too Risqué
France’s advertising regulators have ordered that ads for the new film Les Infidèles (which co-stars Jean Dujardin of The Artist) be taken down for what one commissioner called “an attack on the dignity of women”.
How Iraq’s Great Universities Were Destroyed
“In just 20 years, then, the Iraqi university system went from being among the best in the Middle East to one of the worst. This extraordinary act of institutional destruction was largely accomplished by American leaders who told us that the US invasion of Iraq would bring modernity, development, and women’s rights. Instead, as political scientist Mark Duffield has observed, it has partly de-modernized that country.”
How Can Skeptics Make Convincing Religious Art?
Terry Teachout observes that, in many genres, “great works of devotional art have been created by skeptics, not a few of whom were fire-breathingly militant about their doubt.” How do we recognize this paradox? Teachout finds a clue in one instance where Ralph Vaughan Williams meets Plato.
Can Italy Change Italy?
“When I first came to Italy thirty years ago, there was a lot of talk about change. It was always located in the very near future, but never quite in the present. The paradigm almost everybody accepted was that of an “abnormal” and in some respects archaic society on the brink of becoming normal and modern, falling into line, that is, with the powerful democracies of Northern Europe–as if there were something natural about their models.”
Restored And Glittering, Bolshoi Theater Still Has Problems
“In the three months since its reopening” following a long and troubled $700 million renovation, “performers have criticised the renovation, audiences booed its operatic premiere and complained about ticket prices, two Bolshoi ballet stars decamped to a rival theatre and other dancers suffered injuries.”
Asia Society Expands From New York To Houston And Hong Kong
“Even as cultural organizations around the country contract because of the economic downturn, Asia Society is pushing against the tide with two new multimillion-dollar buildings, one of which opens in Hong Kong next week, the other in Houston this spring.”
What Was That? (Thinking About Modernism)
“Of all the topics in the humanities, modernism may be the most ill taught, because it is both too close (having flourished between the 1880s and World War I) and too distant (having been eclipsed by postmodernism, whatever that means).”
Engage! Arts Council England Launches £37M Fund To Do Just That
“Arts Council England has launched a £37 million fund aimed at engaging people in cultural activities in areas where involvement is low. The ‘creative people and places fund’ will support around 15 initiatives that will develop cultural experiences for communities that are currently not engaging with the arts.”
Against Copyright? Why?
“Why do people do it? Because they have no fear of reprisal. Sure, some of them pay me after they are confronted or take the image down, but why should I have to find them and confront them? I guess it shouldn’t be so surprising since modern journalists call aggregation “journalism,” when really it’s just slapping your name on someone else’s work and sometimes adding a snarky couple of sentences. People say that they will link to my site. Oh, really? That’s great, but I prefer cash.”
