Share

  • Julis Bullock Expands Harawi in Aix

    Choreographed Drama by Zack Winokur

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 22nd, 2022

    Julia Bullock has made a big opera career outside conventional wisdom. At the Aix Festival in Provence this year she sang Olivier Messiaen's Harawi, a challenging work to which she brings unusual insights.

  • Death of a Salesman

    Palm Beach Dramaworks in South Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Apr 07th, 2024

    Palm Beach Dramaworks delivers an award-worthy production of "Death of a Salesman." The company's mounting of Arthur Miller's masterpiece runs through April 20.

  • 41 Park St. Adams - Open Studio

    November 20, Open House 2-6PM

    By: Park - Nov 18th, 2021

    On Saturday, Nov. 20, at 41 Park St. Adams there will be an  Open Studio / Open House from 2-6pm. It features the artist Alvin Ouellet and Lynda's Antique Clothing Loft.

  • Corona Cookbook: Unique Pasta

    By: Phillip S. Kampe - Jan 11th, 2021

    Pasta

  • Brooklyn Museum Deaccessions 12 Works

    AAMD Sanctions Corona Emergency Measures

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 17th, 2020

    While Trump's billionaire golf buddies are begging for a bailout the arts in America are left twisting in the wind. Closed for months museums are depleting reserve funds to survive. That has meant furloughs, pay cuts and staff reductions. As a desparate measure, in a lapse from guidelines for deaccessioning, the Brooklyn Museum is selling twelve works to raise $40 million. It recalls when the Berkshire Museum gutted its collection to raise $50 million. This is never a good idea but we discuss crucial differences.

  • Art New England

    Letter from the Publisher

    By: Tim Montgomry - Sep 15th, 2020

    We are planning a return to print with a January/February 2021 issue of Art New England. In the interim, we are working on enhancing ANE’s website and adding a few exciting new features, including a “rolling” Artist Directory (updated every two weeks); and a “rolling” Destination: New England section dedicated to the entire region.

  • More on Wagnerism by Alex Ross

    George Eliot Absorbs Wagner

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 10th, 2020

    When Wagner’s music crossed the English Channel, it attracted the attention of novelist and critic, George Eliot, who always took a great interest in music. Early on, she identified Wagner’s achievement as a path to the future, writing, “…anyone who finds deficiencies in opera as it has existed hitherto...” must admit that Wagner “…has pointed out the directions in which lyric drama must develop itself, if it is to be developed at all.”

  • I’m Thinking of Ending Things

    Daunting Charlie Kaufman Film on Netflix

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 06th, 2020

    Charlie Kaufman's "I'm Thinking of Ending Things" is being touted as one of the best new films of what proves to be a rather thin year. It is available on Netflix. You will need to see it at least twice. The first time to immerse in its convoluted twists and turns. Then, read the reviews, and follow the clues to figure out what the heck it is all about. Trust me, this is a work of genius, and while at times agonizingly, enervating and slow, it's well worth the time and effort.

  • 'The Madres' Wins Francesca Primus Prize.

    ATCA Annually Administers Award

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 03rd, 2020

    Stephanie Alison Walker wins ATCA's Francesca Primus Prize. The honor annually recognizes an emerging female playwright. The award's namesake was a playwright, dramaturg, theater critic and ATCA member.

  • Tending to the Garden

    Cutting Back Perennials

    By: Cheng Tong - Aug 16th, 2020

    I have begun cutting back the perennials in the meditation garden that have passed for the season. Bleeding hearts, ligularia, lilies, with hostas not far behind. It is the way of things, the time of season. The butterfly bushes have presented their seed pods, and I’ve collected them for drying.

  • Irish Repertory Theatre Streams Love, Noel

    Steve Ross and KT Sullivan Delight

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 12th, 2020

    Players Club ,where the Irish Repertory production of Love, Noel is set, seems like just the right elegant space. Edwin Booth felt he had to make up for the assassination of Lincoln by his brother. Booth realized that a club where actors could socialize with the elite and elevate their status from rabble-rousers to artists was what New York needed. In 1888, he founded The Players Club at 16 Gramercy Park South together with fifteen other incorporators, including Mark Twain and General William Tecumseh Sherman. Players is the oldest club in New York City that’s still in its original location. Love, Noel graced its halls.

  • Eclipse Mill Artists, North Adams, Ma. 2020

    Projects during COVID-19: Impromptu and Airborne Transmission

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Aug 11th, 2020

    Artists everywhere are communicating and presenting work virtually that was conceived and created or executed this year during the COVID-19 pandemic. Life and art had mostly moved from our physical to our virtual world. Artists at the Eclipse Mill have done the same. Here we present three projects, two 'real' and one online, just a slice of artistic work that's being created in 40 studios. 'IMPROMPTU' has become a virtual exhibition on August 15 and 'Airborne Transmission' has been installed as described below.

  • Shaker Museum to Create Facility in Chatham, NY

    Selldorf Architects to Design $15 Million Project

    By: Shaker - Aug 03rd, 2020

    Housing its comprehensive collection of Shaker material, the new museum facility will embody Shaker values of inclusion, innovation and equality. $15 Million project is expected to break ground in 2021 and be completed in 2023.

  • Good Dog Foundation Provides Helping Dogs

    Berkshires Benefit from Canines

    By: Jessica Robinson - Aug 03rd, 2020

    The Good Dog Foundation: Helping Humans Heal For more than 30,000 years dogs have been providing companionship and loyalty to humans. No wonder they are called ‘man’s best friend.’ Residents of the Berkshires benefit from the Good Dog Foundation. It provides Certified Therapy Dog visits to Fairview Hospital in Great Barrington and Crossroads Center for Enrichment in Pittsfield.

  • Lawrence Brownlee and Friends

    Lyric Opera of Chicago Streams a Virtual Concert

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 28th, 2020

    Lawrence Brownlee is an ambassador of song. He is not only a great bel canto tenor, but also leader in discussions on our racial divide. Identifying as a descendant of Africans and a person of dark skin tone, he has mentored young singers and helped direct the conversation on race in the arts and in the world about us. Yet he does not like the designation of Ella Fitzgerald as part of Black Heritage, her position on a postage stamp. Rather he sees her as a great American singer. Blacks are part of a larger community, not self-segregated.

  • Bop Singer Annie Ross

    Recorded as Lambert, Hendricks & Ross

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 24th, 2020

    Among the elite and most innovative jazz vocalists of her generation, Annie Ross who died this week at 89, was born in a suitcase and traveled for the rest of her life. She is best know for recordings with the legendary Lambert, Hendricks & Ross.

  • Virtual Summer Camp

    New Work by NAGA Artists

    By: NAGA - Jul 20th, 2020

    We have decided to put together a virtual group show that will run through August 29th. We wanted to show you what our artists are making right now and keep beautiful things in front of you until we (hopefully) come back for in-person exhibitions in the fall.

  • Downton Abbey the Movie

    Sequel to PBS Series

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 15th, 2020

    Just how successful was the popular TV series phenomena known as “Downton Abbey”? Mind boggling and totally entertaining and one of the most endearing and engagingly written Masterpiece Theatre/ BBC co-productions in the history of Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). It ran for six seasons with audiences clamoring for Julian Fellowes to write another season. He authored all 70 episodes of the series.

  • Corona Cookbook: Wiener Crown Roast

    A Culinary Classic

    By: Harry Bikes - Jul 14th, 2020

    For a fesive summer feast, that's fun for the whole faimily, try a Wiener Crown Roast. It has the eye appeal of a pricey crown roast but at just a fraction of the cost. With the proper boxed wine or cheap beer this is a meal fit for a king.

  • Alice Sachs Zimet The Collector

    Follow Your Heart and Eyes, but not Your Ears

    By: Jessica Robinson - Jul 02nd, 2020

    In December of 1984 Alice Sachs Zimet attended an exhibition at the Parrish Art Museum in Southampton, New York. She had come with Sam Wagstaff, the lover of Robert Mapplethorpe. They were there to see a flower photography exhibition from Wagstaff’s vast and groundbreaking collection.That’s where Zimet saw an image by contemporary photographer Andrew Bush titled Columbines. It was love at first sight.

  • David Lang's Love Fails Streams

    Beth Morrison Projects Presents Opera of the Week

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 02nd, 2020

    Beth Morrison brings us the 'love fails' stream. Morrison is a leader in the march forward of opera into the 21st century. The opera was recorded in Poland with the superb Quince Contemporary Ensemble performing. Echo is used effectively to hover voices in the performance space.

  • Corona Cookbook: Pizza

    Basil in the Dough

    By: Phillip S. Kampe - Jun 16th, 2020

    Fresh basil mixed into the dough.

  • Theatre in Connecticut

    Mark Your Calendar

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jan 16th, 2020

    We look forward to theatre in the coming months. This is what is scheduled for Connecticut.

  • Villainous Company

    Suspenseful Play at South Florida's Primal Forces

    By: Aaron Krause - Dec 23rd, 2019

    Boca Raton-based Primal Forces presents a riveting production of Villainous Company. Three actresses thrive in their roles. The characters aren't quite whom they claim to be in Victor L. Cahn's suspensful play.

  • The Jack Quartet in Residence at New School

    Exploring the Different Sounds of the Bow

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 21st, 2019

    Jack Quartet is in residence at the Mannes School of Music, the New School. They opened their program with Clara Iannotta’s “Dead Wasps in the Jam-Jar." The title is rich with suggestion. Wasps are not bees, but the buzzing was reminiscent of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s orchestral interlude from "The Tale of Tsar Sultan."

  • << Previous Next >>