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  • Begin the Beguine: A Quartet of One-Acts

    Performance Space New York and Oakland Theater Project

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 02nd, 2021

    One can only imagine how many treasure troves of artistry lie hidden away around the world in dusty attics and musty cellars.  Nina Collins, daughter of playwright and poet Kathleen Collins, has collected and released a rich reserve of her late mother’s previously unpublished works from the 1970s and 1980s.  Included are four short plays that, while they are uneven, and despite their age, resonate today.

  • Festival of Classics

    A Livestream Event from South Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Jun 02nd, 2021

    South Florida groups to present "Festival of Classics." The livestream event is scheduled for 2 p.m. EST on Saturday, June 5. Expect to see selections from Twelfth Night, The Merchant of Venice, Hamlet, The Taming of the Shrew, The Diary of Anne Frank, and more.

  • Black Beans Project at Boston's Huntington

    Extended through June 13

    By: Huntington - Jun 02nd, 2021

    The Huntington announces the extension of Black Beans Project, a world premiere digital work by Huntington artist-in-residence Melinda Lopez and award-winning performer Joel Perez, directed by Jaime Castañeda, now available for on-demand streaming through June 13, 2021. All tickets are pay-what-you-can.

  • Aaron Tveit Live! In Concert

    Barrington Stage Adds Second Performance

    By: Barrington - Jun 03rd, 2021

    Barrington Stage Company (BSC), announces that a second performance has been scheduled for Aaron Tveit Live! In Concert on Monday, July 19 at 8:00pm. The encore performance has been scheduled to accommodate worldwide audience demand after tickets for BSC’s Gala performance of Aaron Tveit Live! on Sunday, July 18 quickly sold out.

  • Woodie King Jr. Steps Down

    Insights from 50 Years of New Federal Theatre

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 04th, 2021

    Woodie King Jr. is stepping down as Artistic Director of the New Federal Theatre, the company he founded in 1970. His original mission was to give voice to actors and writers of color, black, Hispanic and Asian, and to women. The mission  has been richly fulfilled. The list of artists to whom King gave a first chance includes every important performing artist of color and many women..

  • Tiny Beautiful Things

    George Street Playhouse’s Filmed Play

    By: Edward Rubin - Jun 04th, 2021

    Tiny Beautiful Things, George Street Playhouse’s filmed play, based on Cheryl Strayed’s book, Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar (2012), a collection of Strayed’s columns is beautifully brought to life by actress Laiona Michelle, who as Sugar, plays a down-to-earth, expletive-spouting advice-giving columnist

  • Making Connections

    Materiality, French Deconsturtionists to Ha Chong Yuan

    By: Martin Mugar - Jun 06th, 2021

    Almost a year after I wrote my essay in 2013 on Zombie Abstraction I got an email from Mark Stone at https://henrimag.com/ that I had received confirmation of my role in coining the term Zombie Formalism from “Art in America” critic Raphael Rubinstein in an article he wrote in that magazine on French postmodernist thinking and French abstraction:"Theory and Matter."

  • Bright Colors and Bold Patterns

    An Island City Stage production

    By: Aaron Krause - Jun 07th, 2021

    Southeast Florida's Island City Stage presents a delightfully comic 'Bright Colors and Bold Patterns." The Drew Droege one-man comedy is onstage through June 29. The production will also include a period during which people can virtually watch the show. 'Bright Colors and Bold Patterns' completes Island City Stage's 9th season.

  • Provincetown Tennessee Williams Theater Festival

    TENNESSEE WILLIAMS & CENSORSHIP SEPTEMBER 23-26

    By: Tenn - Jun 07th, 2021

    Featuring four Williams plays, the newest from Penny Arcade, Mae West’s shuttered 1926 Broadway smash, a witchy satire from 1616, and more. The Provincetown Tennessee Williams Theater Festival was founded in 2006 in Provincetown—the birthplace of modern American theater—where Williams worked on many of his major plays during the 1940s.

  • Mezze in Williamstown

    Soup is Chill

    By: MEZZE - Jun 09th, 2021

    Mezze in Williamstown changes with the seasons. Now in a heat spell they are creating chilled beet soup garnished with cucumbers, green olive, gammelgarden yogurt and salmon roe.

  • Nikolai Astrup: Visions of Norway

    Summer Show at Clark Art Institute

    By: Clark - Jun 09th, 2021

    Nikolai Astrup is considered one of Norway’s most important artists, yet he is largely unknown outside of his homeland. Nikolai Astrup: Visions of Norway, on view June 19 through September 19, 2021, features more than eighty-five works and celebrates this brilliant painter, printmaker, and horticulturalist. 

  • Hold These Truths by Jeanne Sakata

    Produced by San Francisco Playhouse

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 10th, 2021

    Playwright Jeanne Takata’s one-man, biographical drama “Hold These Truths” beautifully captures Gordon Hirabayashi’s courage and sacrifice in challenging President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s 1942 Executive Order 9066, which consigned Japanese-Americans, including those who were American citizens, to internment camps during World War II.

  • Horace D. Ballard Appointed to Harvard Art Museums

    Was a Curator for Williams College Museum of Art

    By: HAM - Jun 10th, 2021

    Horace D. Ballard is the new Theodore E. Stebbins Jr. Associate Curator of American Art at the Harvard Art Museums, effective September 1, 2021. Ballard is currently curator of American art at the Williams College Museum of Art, in Williamstown, Massachusetts, where he was previously assistant curator from 2017 to 2019.

  • Tania Leon Wins 2021 Pulitzer for Music

    Stride Premiered by the NY Philharmonic Before Pandemic Struck

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 12th, 2021

    Tania Leon has been awarded the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for music for Stride, commissionedb by Project 19 of the New York Philharmonic. The project commissioned work by women composers.

  • A Different Approach to Annie

    Area Stage Company's Immersive Production

    By: Aaron Krause - Jun 14th, 2021

    Area Stage mounts 'Annie' with eight actors, all of them adults. The production takes place inside a speakeasy. This immersive 'Annie' is yet another triumph for visionary theater artist Giancarlo Rodaz. The production runs through July 4.

  • MFA Exhibits Acquisitions

    New Light: Encounters and Connections

    By: MFA - Jun 14th, 2021

    This summer, New Light: Encounters and Connections at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), brings more than 60 works of art from across the collection—including 23 newly acquired contemporary pieces—into thought-provoking dialogue. Organized into 21 “conversations,” the exhibition juxtaposes each contemporary work with one or two rarely seen objects acquired earlier in the Museum’s history.

  • Fuller Craft Museum  Presents International Exhibition,

    Another Crossing: Artists Revisit the Mayflower Voyage

    By: Fuller - Jun 14th, 2021

    Developed in partnership with Fuller Craft Museum, Plymouth College of Art, and The Box (both in Plymouth, England), Another Crossing brings together artists from the United States and Europe for a global, cross-cultural effort that examines a pivotal event in world history.

  • Jacob's Pillow

    Global Pillow Available Until June 19

    By: Pillow - Jun 14th, 2021

    Did you miss Global Pillow this weekend? There's still time to watch this global celebration of dance!

  • Miroslav Antic’s Conceptual Realism

    Brave New Work

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 15th, 2021

    All phases of the oeuvre have been interesting going back decades to our first encounters. Trained in Europe there has been an intriguing cultural confluence of L'art pompier, formalism, conceptualism, Americana, and pop. Imagine a painting conflating Bougereau, Malevich, Duchamp, Warhol and Rosenquist. Miroslav Antic sent images of work created during the pandemic.

  • The Museum of Wild and Newfangled Art

    Pandemic Statements Directed by Cari Ann Shim Sham

    By: Wild - Jun 18th, 2021

    The Museum of Wild and Newfangled Art (mowna) announces a special sneak-peek of the film "pandemic statements," directed by cari ann shim sham* with a pre-show musical performance featuring accordionist Sarah Bellows, and a post show Q&A with the "pandemic statements collaborative” in the mowna party room. The event will take place virtually on June 25th at 8 pm Eastern Time. Tickets for this event are sliding scale, pay what you wish, and include access to the 2021 mowna Biennial exhibition.

  • Juneteenth At Shaker Village

    Celebrating BLack Shakers

    By: Shaker - Jun 18th, 2021

    Beginning in the eighteenth century, the Shakers welcomed many African Americans into their communities. The Shakers believed that all were equal in the eyes of God, and allowed anyone to join their communities, provided that they turned over their property and all material wealth once they committed to communal life.

  • Art in Focus: The Provocation of Conditions

    Online Films from The Yale Center for British Art

    By: Yale - Jun 21st, 2021

    The Yale Center for British Art opens a student-curated online exhibition that showcases four decades of experimental British filmmaking. The result is the Center’s first exhibition presented exclusively online. Art in Focus: The Provocation of Conditions features four short films. All four films can be viewed exclusively on the Center’s website from June 21 through August 23, 2021.

  • The Late Wedding by Christopher Chen

    Produced by California's Pear Theatre

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 21st, 2021

    With their fully-staged production of Christopher Chen’s work, kudos to Mountain View’s Pear Theatre for leading the way in the return to indoor theater after 15 months of pandemic-imposed darkness.  The adventuresome small company not only offers socially-distanced indoor performances to a play with a full cast, but also outdoor performances and online streaming, to accommodate all manner of theater lover.  Hallelujah!  

  • Mount's Summer Lecture Series

    Women on Women

    By: Mount - Jun 22nd, 2021

    The Mount, Edith Wharton’s Home announces its line-up for the 2021-2021 Summer Lecture Series. Now in its 28th year, the Summer Lecture series bring leading biographer and historians to the Berkshires. This year’s series will New York Times bestselling author Janice P. Nimura, Pulitzer-prize winner author Debby Applegate, and Biographer Sydney Ladensohn Stern.

  • Cowboy by Layon Gray

    Bass Reeves First Black U.S. Deputy Marshall

    By: Aaron Krause - Jun 22nd, 2021

    Layon Gray's historical drama "Cowboy" tells the tale of the first black U.S. Deputy Marshal. The play is Off-Broadway-bound. The world premiere production at the National Black Theatre Festival in 2019 sold out its run in a few hours. The current Miami production is nearing its closing weekend, and has been selling out .

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