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  • Clark Art Institute Free Concerts

    I/O Fest with Williams College Department of Music

    By: Clark - Jan 04th, 2023

    The Clark Art Institute hosts three free events as part of I/O Fest, the Williams College Department of Music’s annual immersion in the music of today. Students in the music program take audiences on a tour of new sounds and adventurous music during a concert for families on January 15.

  • Marjorie Minkin to Exhibit Opacity/Translucency

    Atrium gallery at the Moakley Federal Courthouse

    By: Marjorie Minkin - Jan 04th, 2023

    The artist Marjorie Minkin divides time between Boston and the Eclipse Mill in North Adams. Her Lexans have been shown in galleries and museums in MA, NYC, LA, Michigan, Canada, France, Belgium, Germany and Seoul. This is the first time a solo installation will be shown in Boston.  The work will be exhibited in the Atrium gallery at the Moakley Federal Courthouse in Boston from January 5th through March 30th, 2023.

  • The Best of 2022

    Theatre in Connecticut

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jan 04th, 2023

    Here’s my list of the best Connecticut productions I saw this year. Instead of ranking them, I’ve just listed what I found particularly noteworthy.

  • Arnold Trachtman: On the Town

    Childs Gallery

    By: Childs - Jan 03rd, 2023

    The works in On the Town celebrate city life and community, illuminating a Boston area of the past through the vision of one of its more unique residents. Arnold Trachtman’s paintings tell stories and reveal an artist as deeply invested in his neighborhood as it was in him.  

  • Sardinia 2022

      Tracking Brill Family History 

    By: Ralph Brill - Jan 03rd, 2023

    Around Six years ago, I signed up for the National Geographic Family History DNA Test.  For around $125, I received a Cheek Swab Kit and some paperwork.  I was instructed to reveal nothing more than my Name and Age.  A few weeks later, I received a box which included a Printed Brill Family History based solely on the DNA I presented.  The National Geographic Report let me know that I am Jewish and that my Father’s Family started in the Middle East and traveled to Sicily around a thousand years ago. 

  • Connected Spaces: Cheryl Ann Thomas & Michael F. Rohde

    At Gallery NAGA

    By: NAGA - Jan 03rd, 2023

    Gallery NAGA welcomes 2023 with a selection of works by two artists, Cheryl Ann Thomas and Michael F. Rohde, in a feat of interdisciplinary collaboration. This exhibition was first organized by the American Museum of Ceramic Art in Pomona California and curated by Jo Lauria, Adjunct Curator for the American Museum of Ceramic Art and a design historian based in Los Angeles, California. 

  • Peter Gelb Announces Cut Backs at Met Opera

    General Manager Only One Surprised by Ticket Sales

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 28th, 2022

    It comes as a surprise to noone who attends Met Operas that the House is in trouble. Only Peter Gelb, who at first said that people were asleep after Covid, seems to find the Met Opera's failure to sell tickets news. His response is also odd. The operas he proposes to produce to cure are chamber operas unsuited to an opera house too large for our times.

  • Dear Suzanne By Eve Rifkah

    19th Century French Artist and Model

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 28th, 2022

    Her father, an artist, took the poet Eve Rifkah to the Museum of Fine Arts. There the young girl became intrigued by Suzanna Valadon the model for Renoir's stunning Bal a Bougival. She has written a book of verse comprising conversations with and about herself and the legendary artist/ model. Our paths crossed at Manship Artists Residency.

  • Gloucester Encounters: Essays on the Cultural History of the City 1623-2023

    Four Hundred Plus Years

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 24th, 2022

    With the 2022 publication of Gloucester Encounters: Essays on the Cultural History of the City 1623-2023, edited by Martin Ray, we have a kick start launch of a year of commemoration in 2023. Originally planned for six writers it was expanded to 36 by editor Martin Ray. It reads like a pot luck supper with savory chapters as well as many not so. But you won't leave it feeling hungry for Gloucester.  

  • Daoist Traditional Practices and Stillness

    By: Cheng Tong - Dec 27th, 2022

    Zen Buddhist teaching and the use of Koans are for the purpose of disabusing one from thinking, and instead simply acting.  Quiet oneself sufficiently, be fully present in the moment, and the correct response to the moment will arise on its own – naturally, instinctively, organically.

  • St. John the Divine Hosts AMOP

    Julia Bullock and Christopher Reif Re-Design El Nino

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 26th, 2022

     Julia Bullock and the American Modern Opera Project brought a new version of John Adams’ and Peter Sellars' El Nino to the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, known for its support of the arts and blessing of all animals. This will become a traditional performance.

  • O Christmas Tree

    New Holiday Play Debuts in South Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Dec 23rd, 2022

    "O Christmas Tree," a new holiday play with music, made a triumphant world premiere at South Florida's Thinking Cap Theatre. The playwrights are Thinking Cap's Artistic Director, Nicole Stodard, and Thinking Cap's Managing Director, Bree-Anna Obst. The world premiere marks just the beginning of "O Christmas Tree's" theatrical life.

  • Guggenheim Museum 2023

    Schedule of Exhibitions

    By: Guggenheim - Dec 21st, 2022

    The Guggenheim Museum releases its schedule of exhibitions for 2023.

  • Red Speedo

    A Ronnie Larsen Presents Production in South Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Dec 20th, 2022

    Lucas Hnath's intense drama, "Red Speedo" is playing in an admirable production by South Florida-based producer Ronnie Larsen. The production runs through Dec. 30 at the intimate Foundry space in Wilton Manors, near Ft. Lauderdale. "Red Speedo" represents a significant departure from the kind of work that Larsen usually produces and creates.

  • Becky Nurse of Salem at Lincoln Center

    Sarah Ruhl Tackles Witchery

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 20th, 2022

    Women have often been called witches and other words that rhyme. What insights can we glean today about the trials held in 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts? Playwright Sarah Ruhl tackles the question.

  • Christmas in Connecticut

    Premiering at Goodspeed

    By: Karen Isaacs - Dec 20th, 2022

    As a world premiere, this is a work in progress. Changes are being made. When I saw it, one song had been moved, and a reprise was eliminated.

  • Beetlejuice

    SF Broadway's Gleefully Ghoulish Ghost Story

    By: Victor Cordell - Dec 17th, 2022

    Ghosts.  Dancing skeletons.  A giant toothy snake from Hell, like Saturday Night Live’s land shark on steroids. “The Handbook for the Recently Deceased.”  When the title character mirthfully tells the audience that this is a play about death, he’s not kidding.  Fortunately, it’s all in good fun, and there is plenty of it in this delightfully camp musical adaptation of the highly successful 1988 comedy-horror film.

  • Cabaret to Open Barington Stage Season

    Directd by Alan Paul

    By: BSC - Dec 13th, 2022

    “I am always amazed at how Cabaret manages to speak to our time, making it one of the most remarkable and resilient works of American musical theatre,” commented Alan Paul. “As the US experiences a rise in acts of virulent anti-Semitism, it seemed an appropriate time for our audiences to revisit this enduring classic. It’s also an opportunity in my first season to celebrate one of the shows that helped establish the legacy of this theatre company.” 

  • America's Foremost Arts Cities

    Pittsfield Makes the List

    By: SMU DataArts - Dec 15th, 2022

    The Arts Vibrancy Index report is an indispensable resource for anyone seeking to better understand how the arts and culture sector contributes to a community’s economy and public life. Now in its seventh iteration, the report has helped organizations evaluate where to relocate or focus their operations; provided clarity for funders on how and where to invest; and made it easier than ever for communities to learn how to cultivate arts vibrancy in their area.

  • The Brightest Thing in the World at Yale Rep

    A Work in Progress

    By: Karen Isaacs - Dec 13th, 2022

    Leah Nanko Winkler writes in a cinematic style – the play opens with a series of brief scenes (fewer than five lines), which sets up the meeting and subsequent developing relationship between Steph and Lane at the Revival Coffeeshop. It is the usual Rom-Com mixture of unsaid things, clues that aren’t picked up, and fears.

  • Death of a Salesman on Broadway

    Starring Wendell PIerce

    By: Karen Isaacs - Dec 10th, 2022

    Death of a Salesman, starring Wendell Pierce, is getting an interesting, if not always successful, revival at the Hudson Theater on W. 44th Street. The revival produced by the Young Vic Theatre originated in London last spring to acclaim.

  • Hand Shadow Puppetry by Steven Wendt

    HERE Presents Phil Soltanoff, Director

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 12th, 2022

    This and That delights.  The production also raises questions: Can a serious effort be delivered with casual aplomb?  Great beauty?  Mystery?  From a messy theater?  In the hands of Philip Soltanoff  and Steven Wendt, the answer is a resounding Yes.

  • Metropolitan Opera Website Down

    Never Underestimate Putin and Netrebko

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 09th, 2022

    The Metropolitan Opera website is down for the third day in a row. Griner freed. Met Opera now captive?

  • Clark Offers Free Admission

    January Through March

    By: Clark - Dec 08th, 2022

    “There’s no better way to start the new year off than by making sure that our doors are wide open for our community and for all visitors to the area,” said Olivier Meslay, Hardymon Director of the Clark. “We believe that the chance to engage with art is a truly fulfilling and enriching part of life and we want to make sure that everyone has plenty of opportunities to visit the Clark and to get to know us better.”

  • Geoffrey Richon Contractor and Philanthropist

    Co-Founded Gloucester Stage Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 05th, 2022

    Geoffrey Richon is a major contractor and philanthropist in Gloucester. He co-founded Gloucester Stage Company. For artistic director he hired and later fired the playwright Israel Horovitz. He was outed as a sexual predator, first by the Boston Phoenix in 1993, and then by the New York Times in 2007. The company has been through rough times but Richon sees a bright and expanded future.

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