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Opinion

  • New Public Art

    Past, Present, and Future Ghosts of the Imagination

    By: Mark Favermann - Aug 09th, 2021

    For many, public art  conjures up images of bronze statues of a soldier on horseback, images of historically significant and/or forgotten politicians or leaders, or symbolic (often mythological) figures of metaphoric significance. But these days public art takes a wide variety of sizes, shapes, and forms. It can be temporary or permanent.

  • The Scream,  Sunflowers, and  Mona Lisa

    Gone Baby Gone

    By: Mark Favermann - Aug 09th, 2021

    It happened during the last week in June. Two prominent paintings by 20th-century masters were recovered nearly a decade after they had been stolen from a gallery in Athens. A contractor was arrested for committing what had become a notoriously audacious theft of works by Pablo Picasso and Piet Mondrian.

  • Painters Andrew Forge and David Row

    Exhibitions in New York and Maine

    By: Martin Mugar - Aug 14th, 2021

    Here Martin Mugar considers two abstract painters. The gesture of Forge is one of the traditional hand-application of the brush to canvas. The notion of a painting existing in time took on some meaning when I saw the show of David Row at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art. It is probably one of the more perfect installations I have ever seen.

  • Chuck Close at 81

    An Appreciation

    By: Martin Mugar - Aug 21st, 2021

    Martin Mugar posted this in 2005 to the site Art Deal. Overcoming many physical and emotional handicaps Chuck Close prevailed leaving a daunting legacy of work.

  • Art Writing at the School of Visual Arts

    Off the Rails

    By: SVA - Aug 29th, 2021

    The program has had a good long run of 16 years. It was a writing program for people who wanted to write about art, with an emphasis on literature, philosophy, the relation between aesthetics and politics, and the history and future of the image.

  • Memories of Atrocities to Come –

    Published with Ref. to 9/11, WWII, and Today

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Sep 09th, 2021

    'Memories of Atrocities to Come:' Written at night, edited at daytime - published in remembrance of 9/11 - atrocities of WWII - and of today....

  • Melvin Van Peebles, Going the Distance

    An Appreciation

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 27th, 2021

    Melvin Van Peebles, the black entrepreneur, died on September 21. Over the years, brief encounters revealed many of his sparkling facets.

  • Trump Promised to Drain the Swamp

    DC Still Mucked Up

    By: Jack Lyons - Oct 02nd, 2021

    It’s been almost a year since November 2020 when Mr. Trump lost his presidential reelection bid but secretly refuses to accept his defeat.  And “the big lie’ theory continues to poison the political well being of the nation.

  • Arnie Reisman Journalist, Playwright, Poet at 79

    Resident of Martha’s Vineyard

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 05th, 2021

    Arnie Reisman, a Martha Vineyard resident died suddenly. He was 79. Starting as editor of the Brandeis University Justice he was later editor of the weekly Boston After Dark/ Phoenix. He was a prolific documentary filmmaker and playwright as well as publisher of several books of poetry. With his wife Paula Lyons, he was also a panelist on NPR’s Says You!, the long-running comedy quiz show. His documentary The Powder and the Glory was the basis of the Broadway show War Paint.

  • Clark Presents Zoom Lecture on Stockbridge-Munsee Community

    By Heather Bruegl, Director of Education at Forge Project

    By: Clark - Oct 07th, 2021

    On Saturday, October 16, Heather Bruegl, Director of Education at Forge Project, discusses the history of the Stockbridge-Munsee Community, the indigenous people who once lived on these lands.

  • The Mount Calendar

    Events Update

    By: Mount - Oct 08th, 2021

    Experience the beauty and splendor of Edith Wharton’s beloved estate. The Mount is currently open Wednesday – Sunday for tours. We are open on Saturdays and Sundays in November & December. See the mansion all dressed up for the Holidays! Holiday House tours start November 27. Tours can be booked online at EdithWharton.org. Please visit our website for the latest calendar of events.  

  • Facing Columbus

    Four Italian American Artists at NY's Museum of Arts and Design

    By: MAD - Oct 13th, 2021

    Italian American Artists Grapple with Christopher Columbus's Legacy at MAD Museum. The Museum of Arts and Design will host 4 NYC artists of Italian heritage for a discussion about the colonial legacy of Christopher Columbus and his importance to the Italian American community. 

  • Mussorgsky's Original Boris Godunov at the Met

    How Do we Assess Versions

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 18th, 2021

    Alternate versions of an opera arouse controversy.The multiple versions of Verdi’s grand opera Don Carlos (Don Carlo) were a response to different productions. Terrence Blanchard adapted his opera Fire Shut up in My Bones for the Metropolitan Opera’s stage. Now we have the magnificent, original Boris Godunov.

  • Lewis Hine and North Adams Eclipse Mill

    Children Once Labored in Artists/ Loft Complex

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 22nd, 2021

    During the era of KIng Cotton North Adams thrived by processing bales shipped north from plantations. The Eclipse Mill produced thread which was woven across the street in the Delftree Mill. Until 1938 the mills employed child labor. During a single visit Lewis Hine created nine photographs outside the mill. These images as well as vintage views of the Eclipse Mill comprise a special exhibition. They flank the entrance ramp to the vast artist/ loft complex. The community based project is an aesthetic, historic and humanistic accomplishment.

  • Magic and Stillness

    Autumn in the Berkshires

    By: Cheng Tong - Oct 27th, 2021

    My life is mostly solitary. This is by choice.  When I returned from my first year in China to visit my daughters, I found living in society once again to be noisy.  The temple where I lived is isolated in the Wudang mountains 30 kilometers from the nearest city, Shiyan.  The temple complex sits atop the mountain, and life is very quiet, simple, and hard.

  • Shakeup at Williamstown Theatre Festival

    Mandy Greenfield Out and Jenny Gersten Back In

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 01st, 2021

    After seven seasons of woke programming Mandy Greenfield has resigned as artistic director of Williamstown Theatre Festival. There was a tech crew walkout last summer over brutal conditions during hazardous and stressful outdoor productions. During a production of Row in a reflecting pool at Clark Art Institute there were days of delays due to rain and thunder storms . Problems were widely reported in the media. Former artistic director, Jenny Gersten, has rejoined WTF as interim artistic director.

  • Julianne Boyd Steps Down at Barrington Stage

    Co Founded Theatre Company in 1995

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 04th, 2021

    In 1995 Julianne Boyd co-founded Barrington Stage company producing sparsely attended but critically well received shows in a high school auditorium in Sheffield. In 2005 the company purchased and renovated a formed vaudeville house in Pittsfield. Coping with Covid-19 Boyd mounted a successful 2021 season. With the company is good shape, citing age, she is passing the reins to new leadership. In December she turns 77. She will stay on through the search and transition for a new artistic director.

  • Letter About Charles Giuliano’s Seventh Book

    Museum of Fine Arts Boston, 1870-2020: An Oral History

    By: Bill Wadsworth - Nov 05th, 2021

    The poet and Columbia University professor, Bill Wadsworth is a neighbor and friend. He has been on the road for the past month. I sent an e mail inquiring when next we might enjoy another witty and insightful literary luncheon. His response comprised a critique of my current MFA book. This ‘review’ is posted with his permission.

  • MFA Union On Strike November 17

    Administration Nickle and Dimeing Staff

    By: Maida Rosenstein - Nov 12th, 2021

    Over 96% of staff at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,voted to strike on Wednesday, November 17 in support of a fair union contract. Workers in departments across the Museum will picket at 465 Huntington Avenue that day starting at 8:30 am. The MFA Union includes curators, conservators, library workers, public-facing staff, educators, and administrative and professional workers.

  • Hamlet and Me

    The Danish prince and I Go Way Back

    By: Nancy Bishop - Nov 14th, 2021

    I saw college productions—and I read Hamlet in a memorable Shakespeare course at one of my alma maters, Harvard on the Rocks—the two-year University of Illinois in Chicago at Navy Pier. (Later it became a four-year university and moved to its current campus.) The first Hamlet production that I remember vividly was during the 1963 opening season of the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis.

  • Giuliano at Williams Faculty Club on November 19

    To Discuss Museum of Fine Arts Boston, 1870 to 2020: An Oral History

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 15th, 2021

    Remarkably, Museum of Fine Arts Boston , 1870 to 2020, by Charles Giuliano is only the second comprehensive history of the MFA. Much has transpired since the centennial publication some fifty years ago. Over those decades the author interviewed directors, curators, trustees and administrators. The museum's great collections as well as issues of elitist exclusion, racism and anti Semitism are conveyed in their own words. The Me Too and Black Lives Matter movements have impacted all of America's cultural institutions. Giuliano will discuss the book at the Williams Faculty Club on Friday, November 19 at 7 PM.

  • Berkshire Theatre Critics Association

    2021 "Berkie" Award Winners

    By: Berkie - Nov 16th, 2021

    The big winners of the Berkies were A Crossing: A Dance Musical, presented by Barrington Stage Company, which won the Sally and Robert Sugarman Award for a World Premier of a New Work as well as many acting and design awards, and Nina Simone: Four Women, presented by the Berkshire Theatre Group. 

  • The Butterfly Process

    Boston Lyric Opera Fires the Canon

    By: BLO - Nov 17th, 2021

    Madama Butterfly inspires a deep look at its historical context through a contemporary lens. Internal and public discussions are part of the project dubbed The Butterfly Process by Boston Lyric Opera.

  • Fittness Tips for Seniors

    Be the Envy of All

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 28th, 2021

    It's time for sweating to the oldies. Or is it time for oldies to be sweating. Ok gang, all together now. Get off the couch, Start with a five pound potato sack in each hand.

  • If They Should Meet When I’m Not Here

    By: Chen Tong - Dec 01st, 2021

    Sharing morning tea with a squirrel come rain or shine for past eighteen months. Then the bobcat prowled about. Evoking fear of losing a friend. Yet nature is what it is.

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