Louisville To Consolidate Arts Funding

“Louisville’s four key performing-arts groups would get a total of nearly $2 million a year to erase their recurring budget deficits during the next three years under a new plan to combine city, state and private funding. The plan is part of a broader Cultural Blueprint that has just been completed after nearly two years of gathering data in Louisville and Southern Indiana. The intent was to get detailed information on how all regional arts groups could best respond to the market. Much of the effort focuses on the Louisville Orchestra, Kentucky Opera, the Louisville Ballet and Actors Theatre of Louisville — organizations that have largely defined the city’s national and international arts reputation but have struggled to balance their budgets.”

Chimp Art Comes Up For Sale

Congo was a chimpanzee who painted. Picasso owned one of his works, as did Miro. “Now, for the first time, three Congos have come on to the open market and will be auctioned alongside works by Renoir, Andy Warhol and the Chapman Brothers at Bonhams in London this month. The pictures, created with tempera on paper, are from the artist’s most productive period in the late 1950s. They are estimated to be worth between £600 and £800 for the three, but such has been the interest already that they may well fetch much more.”

Legacy Of An Orchestra Executive

Joe Kluger’s departure from the executive directorship of the Philadelphia Orchestra will leave a large void not only in Philadelphia, but in the American orchestra scene writ large. For better or for worse, Kluger was a major player on the national scene, and he led his orchestra through some of its most tumultuous years, including a bitter strike in 1996. The orchestra’s musicians don’t seem terribly sorry to see him go, but the ensemble’s board chair points out that he loved the ensemble enough to take a far lower salary than his peers in the industry. A search for Kluger’s replacement will commence immediately.

Young Named California Poet Laureate

California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has named screenwriter/novelist Al Young as the state’s new poet laureate. “Young, 65, is a two-time recipient of Pushcart Prize for poetry – a national small press award – and a winner of the PEN/Library of Congress Award for short fiction. He has also taught creative writing at Stanford, the University of California at Santa Cruz and the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He has also written film scripts for Sidney Poitier, Bill Cosby and Richard Pryor.”

Former Quebec Premier Weighs In On Montreal Symphony Strike

Former Quebec premier Lucien Bouchard says he’s ready to step in and intervene in the strike at the Montreal Symphony. Bouchard is chairman of the orchestra’s board. “The MSO earned its reputation as one of the top 10 orchestras in the world through touring and recording, but Bouchard says the inflexibility of the musicians’ current contract makes it impossible to keep that up. ‘The proof is in the pudding. For the last five years, we have not been able to tour abroad’.”

Public’s Taste In Art – More Ikea Than Museum?

UK researchers say that public taste in art has gone through a dramatic change. It appears that the public is more interested in designer art than that found in museums. “Indeed, it appears, the popularity of famous artists makes them less appealing because people want their homes to look individual and do not want the same picture as their neighbours. When talking to people, Alison Kidd found being “fresh” and “individual” was more important than fame or quality.

Study: Writers Hit Their Peak At 50

A study has pinpointed the average writer’s peak. “The average age of writers who topped the hardback fiction section of the New York Times Bestseller List from 1955-2004 was 50.5 years. Of the 350 authors who saw their novels reach the number one spot over the past 50 years, Francoise Sagan was the youngest with Bonjour Tristesse, published at the age of 19 in 1955. By comparison, Agatha Christie was the oldest author to top the list, with her novel Sleeping Murder, published shortly after her death at the age of 85.”

Belgium – Crossroads Of Stolen Art?

“Belgium is known to be a key transit point of stolen art in Europe. And its bad reputation for tackling the problem has yet again been slammed in ‘La Collection egoiste’ (The Egoist’s Collection), by Liberation journalist Vincent Noce. Noce highlights just how active the ‘art mafia’ is in the country, French-language daily La Libre Belgique reported on Thursday.”