ARTISTS AND THE NEW ECONOMY

“For the first time since the 18th Century, some observers believe, the arts world is poised on the edge of a massive shift in the way artists earn their keep. Nudged by the Internet and other technologies, a new paradigm is evolving, one that may render irrelevant the familiar quarrel over government funding of the arts.” – Chicago Tribune

SAME OLD STORY/NEW STANZA

Ireland is hot right now, and after decades of depression Dublin is roaring to life economically. But artists are getting squeezed out. “The opportunities for getting a studio space in the city are decreasing,” adds painter Mark Pepper, also from the Visual Arts Centre. “The commercial rents property owners can get for buildings now are huge, and artists can’t afford those rates.” – Irish Times

SAVING THE VIENNA FESTIVAL

After international protests over Austria’s inclusion of Jörg Haider’s right-wing Austrian Freedom Party in Austrian government, organizers of the Vienna Festival feared a disruption in this summer’s festival.  But after issuing an open letter strongly condemning Haider and the government’s inclusion of him, and appealing to artists not to boycott, the festival has gone on as usual. New York Times

SERIAL KILLER

When the history of post-war American music is written, which history will it be? “A widely held belief asserts that during these years a band of rigorous, cutting-edge composers, mostly based in prestigious East Coast universities, seized the intellectual high ground and bullied their colleagues and students into accepting serial procedures as the only valid form of modernism. Yet another, quite opposite take on that period holds that the 12-tone composers never wielded much influence, that they themselves were the beleaguered minority group marginalized by the majority of composers, who continued to write music that was essentially tonal and far more popular.” – New York Times

HAS AMERICA LOST ITS EDGE?

  • Sure there’s lots of new opera these days. But American composers look back to the familiar if they want a production. “There’s a general notion [in Europe] that we’ve fallen so far behind in innovations. They say there’s nothing happening in America anymore. I jump to the defense of our artists. But it’s true that the primary institutions in the U.S. have been reluctant to embrace innovators. . . . Without a doubt, there’s been a chilling effect.” – Philadelphia Inquirer

PONDERING THE POPS

Nothing new about crossover music. But “it is increasingly difficult to define what, exactly, an orchestral pops concert should be. And many, if not most, of the classical pops concerts I’ve heard in the past few years have epitomized a sort of weird potpourri – a little of this, a little of that, and nothing very specific at all.” – Washington Post

MONEYDANCE

“As a cultural phenomenon, Riverdance has been closely parsed from top to bottom, hailed by some as an expression of a confidently globe-conquering new Ireland, dismissed by others as a pile of Celtic clichés. What has been ignored, however, is the gargantuan financial muscle that promises to make Riverdance the country’s biggest cultural export. The three Riverdance shows touring the world, along with their myriad merchandising spin-offs, have grossed an estimated £½ billion to date.” – The Sunday Times

NEW RELEASE

“Dancers are flocking to classes in a number of ‘body therapies’ or holistic systems that explore different ways of moving effortlessly and efficiently. Many of them started as a response to performance strain and injury. But now ‘release technique’ has begun to fuel an aesthetic shift that could be the next great swerve for modern and postmodern dance.” – Los Angeles Times

THE POLITICS OF CLICHE

In the old days (the 1990s), it seemed like every Irish film played on nostalgic stereotypes. Now a new set of stereotypes have taken over. “Perhaps the moguls have simply updated their clichés – and, just as every Hollywood success spawns a raft of imitations, Irish films come in thematic waves. Rural melodrama is out; Dublin-based drug barons with dubious accents are in. It may not be much of a new wave, but at least it’s more exciting than the old one.” – The Sunday Times (UK) 07/09/00