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Charles Giuliano

Bio:

Publisher & Editor. Charles was the director of exhibitions for the New England School of Art & Design at Suffolk University where he taught art history and the humanities. He taugh tModern Art and the Avant-garde for Metropolitan College of Boston University. After many years as a contributor, columnist and editor for a range of print publications from Art New England, Art News, the Boston Phoenix, the Boston Herald Traveler and Patriot Ledger, to mention a few, he went on line with Maverick Arts which evolved into a website.

Recent Articles:

  • Vam Morrison at Tanglewood Front Page

    First Appearance Sunday, September 4

    By: BSO - Mar 21st, 2022

    On Sunday, September 4 at 7 p.m., Grammy Award-winning singer, songwriter, author, poet, and multi-instrumentalist Van Morrison performs for the first time at Tanglewood.

  • Bacchanale Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 20th, 2022

    bbb

  • Passing Strange by Stew Front Page

    Produced by Shotgun Players

    By: Victor Cordell - Mar 20th, 2022

    With “Passing Strange,” musician/playwright Stew created a multi-faceted coming-of-age story set to music and verse.  The music is a mashup of rock era styles that never hits a false note.  Both song lyrics and spoken sections set to music drive the narrative forward.

  • Echo Land at Installation Space Front Page

    North Adams Gallery Launches Season

    By: Anna Farrington - Mar 19th, 2022

    Installation Space on Eagle Street in North Adams launches its season on April 1 with a vernissage for Echo Land. The artists are Henry Bamford, Pao Chutijirawong, Kristina Rea,  Hugh Schatz-Allison, Kyra Stupik, and Jin Yao.

  •  Corned Beef and Cabbage Food

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 18th, 2022

    beef

  • March 16 An Anniversary of Sorts Front Page

    Long and Winding Road

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 16th, 2022

    At seven AM, March 16, 20221 my friend Michael drove me to Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield. Along the way he told truly terrible jokes to distract me from major surgery for severe spinal stenosis. It entailed five vertebrae. Thankfully, the next three days were a blur and I was out of my gourd on oxy. In rehab/ slammer there was a homeless woman camped in my room with her daughter. They ordered pizza but wouldn't share. That now seems so long ago and far away.

  • Williamstown Theatre Festival Front Page

    Back Inside This Summer

    By: WTF - Mar 15th, 2022

    The 2022 Williamstown Theatre Festival season promises laughs, singing, and introspection, including a thrilling new suspense comedy, a disarmingly personal and intimate WTF-commissioned world premiere play, and a musical concert event celebrating Frank Loesser's magnificent score from The Most Happy Fella, retold with dazzling new orchestrations

  • Champagne Served at the 94th Oscars Front Page

    Pitt, Perrin & Peter's Champagne Fleur de MIRAVAL

    By: Miraval - Mar 14th, 2022

    Check out what your favorite actors and filmmakers will be sipping all night long at the 94th Oscars®. Fleur de MIRAVAL - the only Champagne house exclusively devoted to Rose? Champagne - announced today it will be the Champagne poured at this year's Oscars, taking place on Sunday, March 27.

  • That Wilder Image Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 12th, 2022

    wild

  • So Sad, So Sad, Indeed Word

    By: Michael McGrath - Mar 12th, 2022

    sad

  • Red Winged Blackbird by Alyosha Zim Front Page

    Produced by SparklePlenty Productions

    By: Victor Cordell - Mar 11th, 2022

    In part, “Red Winged Blackbird” is a classic play about two special generations of Americans – the parents being from the “greatest generation” who sacrifice all for their progeny, and the children being of the loving but self-indulgent “flower power” generation

  • Michael McGrath to Teach at Williams College Front Page

    Living a Daoist Life in Today’s World

    By: Chen Tong - Mar 11th, 2022

    Born on Cape Cod and formerly an attorney and chef, the North Adams based Daoist monk, Chen Tong, spent several years training in a monastery in China. On the deck of his North Adams home, even in the dead of winter, he teaches meditation, qigong and taiji. He has been invited to teach during the spring and fall semesters at Williams College. The course he is offering is fully enrolled.

  • Shakespeare & Company Front Page

    March Mash-up: Contemporary Readings and Comedy

    By: S&Co - Mar 10th, 2022

    Shakespeare & Company will present March Mash-up: Contemporary Readings and Comedy on Saturday, March 26 and Sunday, March 27.

  • The Tempest Front Page

    Oakland Theater Project

    By: Victor Cordell - Mar 10th, 2022

    Productions in the intimacy of Oakland Theater Project’s venue continue to be among the most daring, provocative, and entertaining in the Bay Area.  In taking on William Shakespeare’s political fantasy, “The Tempest,” the company offers a stunning, if somewhat confusing, rendering of this compact study of the illicit taking of power and land. 

  • Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem Front Page

    BSO Free LIve Stream

    By: BSO - Mar 10th, 2022

    The Boston Symphony’s archival concert stream of its 1963 American premiere of Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem, recorded at Tanglewood, will be made available free of charge at bso.org/now, March 10 through April 8. Under the direction of Erich Leinsdorf (BSO Music Director, 1962–69), the historic recording features vocalists Phyllis Curtin, Nicolas di Virgilio, and Tom Krause, as well as Chorus Pro Musica and Columbus Boy Choir.

  • Utter Novelese Word

    By: Ashleigh Cheshire - Mar 10th, 2022

    poet

  • The Herbarium    Word

    By: Ashleigh Cheshire - Mar 09th, 2022

    herbarium

  • Clark Art Institute Front Page

    Free on Sunday April 3

    By: Clark - Mar 09th, 2022

    The Clark Art Institute’s popular First Sunday Free program continues on Sunday, April 3, offering free admission to the galleries and special exhibitions from 10 am–5 pm, along with a series of special activities. April’s theme is “Photography.” As a part of the Clark’s special programs, visit a pop-up installation of early photography in the Manton Study Center for Works on Paper from 11 am–1 pm, enjoy art-making in the Clark Center’s lower lobby from 1–4 pm, then bring along a camera (phone cameras work just fine) and head outdoors to join a guided hike from 2:30–4 pm to learn best practices for photographing nature.

  • Berkshire Opera Festival Front Page

    Three Decembers by Jake Heggie

    By: BOF - Mar 08th, 2022

    Berkshire Opera Festival mounts a new production of THREE DECEMBERS by Jake Heggie as its Second Stage production this year. BOF to partner with PS21, a state-of-the-art green-energy theater in Chatham, NY, which since completing its new theater has evolved into the Hudson Valley's mecca for innovative programming by leading and emerging artists in contemporary music. It will be staged July 21 & 23 at PS21 in Chatham, NY.

  • Jack Shear Collection of Tibetan Art Front Page

    Gifts to Skidmore Vassar and Williams

    By: WCMA - Mar 08th, 2022

    In an innovative collaboration among three prominent college art museums, the directors announce the joint acquisition of an extraordinary gift of Tibetan art from the Jack Shear Collection. Ian Berry of the Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College, T. Barton Thurber of the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center at Vassar College, and Pamela Franks of the Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) extend their gratitude to Jack Shear for his generous gift.

  • Frida Kahlo at the Rose Art Museum Front Page

    Three Self Portraits

    By: Rose - Mar 08th, 2022

    The Rose Art Museum presents an intimate display of three self-portraits by the iconic Mexican artist Frida Kahlo (1907-1954), generously loaned from private collections. Framing the paintings are photographs of Kahlo taken by her beloved father, Guillermo Kahlo (1871-1941), and her close friend and lover Nicholas Muray (1892-1965).

  • Verdi's Otello Front Page

    At Livermore Valley Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Mar 07th, 2022

    Despite its musical and dramatic excellence, “Otello” has never achieved the audience popularity of “Aida” or Verdi’s great middle-period trio of “La Traviata,” “Il Trovatore,” or “Rigoletto,” which are among the most performed operas year after year.

  • Talk to Your People by Dan Hoyle Front Page

    Produced by The Marsh Theater

    By: Victor Cordell - Mar 06th, 2022

    “Talk to Your People” is a deserving show.  One improvement would be if Dan Hoyle lost his facial hair for the duration.  It renders a visual sameness to each depiction that can’t be overcome with wardrobe and accessories, and temporary facial hair could be applied as wanted for particular characters. 

  • Transitional Word

    By: Ashleigh Cheshire - Mar 06th, 2022

    transitional

  • Periods Word

    By: Ashleigh Cheshire - Mar 06th, 2022

    period

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