Top Posts From AJBlogs 11.12.15

Words that worry me
Audience engagement. Such a buzzphrase in the arts these days. … read more
AJBlog: Sandow Published 2015-11-12

A Small Detail, A Big Idea & Why You Should Care
Let’s marvel at a small detail that reveals a big idea. … read more
AJBlog: Audience Wanted Published 2015-11-12

Opera in Paris
On a ten-day visit to the City of Light I had the opportunity to attend two operas and one superb music rehearsal of three very different works. … read more
AJBlog: OperaSleuth Published 2015-11-12

Not a Dance? Are You Sure?
I plan to iron out the creases and frame the flyer for The Kitchen’s fall season. It’s an art work by Ralph Lemon that also appears in Lemon’s installation and performance there, Scaffold Room. … Oh, it’s a beautiful thing. It’s also as bewitchingly, sometimes infuriatingly enigmatic as Lemon’s staged creation …read more
AJBlog: Dancebeat Published 2015-11-12

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British Museum Invites The World Inside (Virtually)

“From today, fans of the British Museum will be able to avoid the crowds to snoop through more than 4,500 objects online, peering inside glass cabinets to inspect their finest artefacts. It will be the largest indoor Street View project in the world, allowing virtual entrance into the entire London institution as well as specially-curated digital collections.”

Philosopher-As-Interpreter – A Fraught Path

“We might need these difficult thoughts unpacked by interpreters and, since these are usually less gifted than the original authors, they might differ on the correct reading. But then, if a clear interpretation of the ideas can be provided, why didn’t the original authors do it themselves? Such a failure of communication is a defect rather than a virtue. Skilled writers shouldn’t need interpreters to patch up holes in their texts.”

Group Trying To Revive New York City Opera Makes A Bold Choice For Its First Production: ‘Tosca’

“The group, NYCO Renaissance, announced Wednesday that it would mount Puccini’s Tosca – the first production City Opera ever did, back in 1944 – Jan. 20-24 at the Rose Theater. … The group originally hoped to mount a lavish production by Franco Zeffirelli but now plans to use a historical, more economical one based on the designs Adolf Hohenstein created for the opera’s premiere in 1900 in Rome.” (But yes, the group’s future plans do include new and less-performed works.)

‘The Stradivari Of Sticks,’ Baton Maker Richard Horowitz, Dead At 91

“[He] was a renowned musician in his own right, a retired principal timpanist of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra. But in the rarefied artistic circles that were his orbit for more than half a century, he was also known as a maker of conductors’ batons, a fine trade plied by only a handful of people around the globe. … His art married the skills of a physician, a palm reader, a carpenter and a Savile Row tailor.”