WHO IS SYLVIA?

For all the fascination with Sylvia Plath’s life after she died, in truth, “she was boring. Not stretches of emptiness punctuated by tragedy, like a made-for-TV movie, but dull in precisely the way everyday life is: full of waiting for mail, love, something to happen.” – Feed

GOOD TIMES FOR PRIVATE ARTS SUPPORT

Spending by philanthropies on arts and culture increased by 47 percent last year, reports the Journal of Philanthropy in its annual ranking of the Philanthropy 400. Philanthropic support for arts and culture organizations on the list totaled $1.15 billion last year. Overall charities took in 14 percent more last year than the year before. (table at the end of story) – Chronicle of Philanthropy 10/30/00

MISSING JEWS

“Despite the work of Pinter, Arnold Wesker and Deborah Levy, Jewish writing is a neglected presence in British theatre. If you want to see an overtly Jewish character on the British stage, you usually have to wait for the ambivalent hero-villains in Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice or Marlowe’s The Jew of Malta, both written at a time when Jews were officially banished from the country.” – New Statesman

I COME TO PRAISE THE CITY

  • “The modern city is a city of contradictions….it houses many ethnes, many cultures, many religions. [It] is too fragmentary, too full of contrast and strife; it must therefore have many faces, not one…. The lack of any coherent, explicit, image may therefore, in our circumstances, be a positive virtue, not a fault, or even a problem.” – The New Republic 10/30/00

NOT SO GREAT?

“‘A History of Britain with Simon Schama’, is this year’s big-budget blow-out to maintain the BBC’s stature as the carrier of High Knowledge. Now it’s time to come home, to let history put the Great back into Great Britain. Great, because every step of Schama’s grand tour of digs and cathedrals, battlefields and museums, is filled with self- congratulation. Self-congratulation for the historian, for the corporation and, above all, the ‘nation’.” But can we trust it? – New Statesman 10/30/00

LESS IS STILL MORE

Germany’s 80-year-old Bauhaus design movement, whose guiding principle of “less is more” was popularized in the ‘20s, is inspiring a whole new generation of designers ready Sto apply its tenets to enlivening urban architecture and creating affordable design choices for the average city dweller. “The idea here is not to reproduce the Bauhaus. The idea now is to try to pick up where it was before it suffered an unnatural death and apply it to today’s challenges presented by globalization.” – Los Angeles Times

GETTY MUSEUM BLOCKED

“The J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles has been blocked by a judge from building renovations and additions to its villa overlooking the Pacific Ocean. At issue is the $150 million project to modernise the Roman-style structure that opened in 1974 as the original J. Paul Getty Museum. The museum stands on what is officially classified agricultural land.” – The Art Newspaper