China’s New Accessibility

The Metropolitan Museum’s big fall Chinese show would not have been possible a few years ago. “Behind this prodigious exhibition is a story of curatorial obsession and adventure, as well as a glimpse at how China’s internal bureaucracy has subtly opened up recently, at least vis-à-vis the art world. American specialists found their Chinese museum counterparts accessible in a way that would have been unheard of just a few years earlier.”

Chart: Ringers Top CDs

Musical ringtones are outselling CDs, according to the new Billboard charts. “The inaugural top ringy-dingy choice goes to … drumroll … “My Boo” by Usher and Alicia Keys. It inspired 97,000 purchases last week. By contrast, the No. 1 legal song download of the week – U2’s “Vertigo” – drew 25,000 buyers.”

Book-Buying For Idealogues

There have been lots of political books in this election season. Do their sales foretell any political direction? “Informal polls taken by our store managers indicate that some 70 percent of our customers say they have no intention of reading these books; 15 percent say they will; and 15 percent are undecided. One Kansas City customer said, ‘I’m buying this book to show people where I stand.’ Another in New York said, ‘I’m buying this book because the author agrees with me’.”

Digging Up Mozart’s Relatives

Archaeologists have opened a grave in Salzburg thought to contain the remains of Mozart’s father and other relatives. Experts plan to compare the remains’ genetic material with a skull to determine if it belonged to the famed Austrian composer. Legend has it that a gravedigger who knew which body was Mozart’s sneaked the skull out of the grave. Through different channels, the skull came to the Mozarteum in Salzburg in 1902.

MoMA Entry Fee Sign Of Future?

There have been howls about the Museum of Modern Art’s decision to charge $20 to enter its new building. But “though MoMA’s new price tag seems to have caused sticker shock, museum admission prices are clearly headed higher. To keep the public interested, museums must keep booking blockbuster shows housed in new, jaw-dropping buildings designed by architectural superstars. Neither comes cheaply.”