BACK TO BASICS

While YBAs Tracey Emin and Damien Hirst have pushed traditional artistic boundaries with their unmade beds and pickled animals, the Royal Academy of Arts in London believes in the simple power of the line: drawing. This October, the Academy will sponsor a program in which more than 500 galleries and museums in Britain will offer sessions for adults and children to draw with artists, designers, mathematicians. – Sydney Morning Herald (AP)

THE POWER OF PRINT

The new National Opera house in Beijing, designed by a French architect in the shape of an enormous titanium bubble, has sparked a raging debate in mainland China. Days before authorities are to make the final decision on the project, the China Daily newspaper publishes petitions by more than 150 Chinese intellectuals who believe the futuristic building is all wrong for China. – China Times

UNLIKELY ALLIES

The Artists Coalition, an artists’ advocacy group led by Don Henley and Sheryl Crow, reached an agreement Thursday with the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in the dispute over the recently enacted “works made for hire” law (an amendment to the 1976 Copyright Act). The law allows record companies to maintain ownership of an artist’s recorded works for 95 years instead of the previous 35-year limit. The RIAA has agreed to join with the artists in petitioning Congress to repeal the law. – Live Daily

THE POWER OF PRINT

The new National Opera house in Beijing, designed by a French architect in the shape of an enormous titanium bubble, has sparked a raging debate in mainland China. Days before authorities are to make the final decision on the project, the China Daily newspaper publishes petitions by more than 150 Chinese intellectuals who believe the futuristic building is all wrong for China. – China Times

CRITICAL DISCOMFIT

Movie critic Stanley Kauffmann finds his opinion has changed after 40 years. “The plain, discomfiting fact is that every one of us who has watched plays and films or read books or listened to music or looked at painting and architecture is, in some measure, self-deceived. Filed away in the recesses of our minds are thousands of opinions that we have accumulated through our lives, and they make us think that we know what we think on all those subjects. We do not. All we know is what we once thought, and any earlier view of a work, if tested, might be hugely different from what we would think now.” – The New Republic

STRIKE PREP 101

As the actors’ strike against TV commercial makers drags on into a fourth month, TV and movie studios are coming to the alarming realization they may be facing actors strikes for their projects too next year. “We are trying to get everything done and wrapped up by a June deadline. You don’t want to be halfway through a project when the strike hits.” – Washington Post

CRITICAL DISCOMFIT

Movie critic Stanley Kauffmann finds his opinion has changed after 40 years. “The plain, discomfiting fact is that every one of us who has watched plays and films or read books or listened to music or looked at painting and architecture is, in some measure, self-deceived. Filed away in the recesses of our minds are thousands of opinions that we have accumulated through our lives, and they make us think that we know what we think on all those subjects. We do not. All we know is what we once thought, and any earlier view of a work, if tested, might be hugely different from what we would think now.” The New Republic 08/10/00