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Opinion

  • Obama’s Picks for Best Films

    Everyone’s a Critic

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 30th, 2019

    The conventional wisdom is that everyone is a critic. Which is an insult to those of us who pursue the difficult and complex craft. Why on earth would I give a fig about the year end movie list of former president Obama? I don't dabble in politics or take up brain surgery as a hobby. Having an opinion, and posting on social media, does not make you a critic.

  • Boston Artist John Powell at 73

    Memorial Exhibition at Howard Yezerski Gallery

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 13th, 2020

    John Powell finished but did not see his final exhibition. He died at 73 just days before the opening of Neon Shadows at Howard Yezerski. Artists and former fellows of the Center for Advanced Visual Studies at MIT will gather to pay their respects. He will be celebrated for a career in art, science and technology. That was manifested in large public art projects. Using dramatic lighting he transformed quotidian into sublime. A bridge we traverse every day and hardly notice was transformed into an enormous sculpture with light shaping its form.

  • Magic and Stillness

    Preparing for a Pandemic

    By: Michael McGrath - Feb 27th, 2020

    Between the news and my daily contact with friends in China, the coronavirus is a daily presence in my awareness. I returned from China just shortly before the first cases in Wuhan. My temple is in Hubei Province, and Wuhan is the province's capital city, only about 500 km from the temple. CDC officials tell us it is not a question of if, it is a question of when the virus will spread across the country, notwithstanding the President's assurances last night. My friends all over China have been inside their homes since the first of the month, and will remain there for several weeks to come, it would seem. That may be us someday, too.

  • Drew Hyde Was Seminal ICA Director

    Led Institute Back from the Brink

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 29th, 2020

    In 1968 the Institute of Contemporary Art was evicted from Newbury Street. Bag and baggage it was mothballed in its failed former home on Soldier's Field Road. Connected to new Mayor Kevin White and Deputy Mayor, Katky Kane, they gave Andrew C. Hyde a long shot at turning things around. The relaunch largely entailed embracing an emerging generation of artists which formed the Studio Coalition in 1969 and Boston Visual Artists Union in 1970.

  • Jazz Pianist McCoy Tyner at 81

    Played Boston’s Jazz Workshop with Trane

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 07th, 2020

    In 1963 at The Jazz Workshop I heard McCoy Tyner with Trane. It was Trane's only Boston gig. Later Tyner played Lulu White's and we caught him a few back at the Mahaiwe in Great Barrington. His massive attack was much admired by aspiring pianists. He just checked at 81.

  • Seventh Seal

    Playing Chess with Death

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 14th, 2020

    Recently, on Turner Classic Movies, I saw Ingmar Bergman’s iconic 1957 film Seventh Seal. That was before the death of the actor Max Von Sydow or the widening global pandemic. Yet again there is the contrast of art and artifice. Art is a means of navigating the collape of the American Empire in real time and vivid color. When this passes what will be left of our arts, culture and way of life? How will we pick up the pieces of a new order? Will the elections of 2020 be yet another cancellation? Is this Apocalypse Now?

  • More Zombie Formalism

    Do the Right Thing

    By: Martin Mugar - Mar 21st, 2020

    Artists without faces. Or what do you hang your hat on? Jean Gabin, Cecily Brown, Dana Schutz and John Currin.

  • Home Alone

    Coping with Self Isolation

    By: Cheng Tong - Mar 21st, 2020

    I was joking with one of my daughters this morning about masks. She works in law enforcement, and was sharing a few stories about people who have called 911 about running low on toilet paper, and people who have come to her station to complain about a spouse who won't take this "virus thing" seriously. She wears a department-issued N95 mask, but she asked me if I knew where she could get a mask to protect her from stupid

  • Boston Gallerist Arthur Dion

    Gallery NAGA on Newbury Street Since 1977

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 25th, 2020

    Gallery NAGA, with a lease from Church of the Covenant, was organized as a cooperative in 1977. In 1982 Arthur Dion was hired as director and soon became sole owner. With a commitment to painting and studio furniture it prevails on what was formerly Boston's gallery row. Now director emeritus Dion stepped away from daily management. As part of compiling an oral history of contemporary art in Boston, Dion shared insights of his remarkable career.

  • Corona Chronicles

    Senior Shopping at Big Y

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 27th, 2020

    In a time of pandemic the early bird scores the toilet paper. When the quality of life is measured in sheets.

  • Rafael Mahdavi: Corona Chronicles

    Pandemic News from France

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 30th, 2020

    During a time of confinement we reach out to family and friends by phone and e mail. From France my artist friend, Rafael Mahdavi, wrote a wonderful detailed note. He also sent a remarkable new work that inspired this piece. Art represents hope and salvation through the darkest moments of human condition.

  • Jacob's Pillow Cancels 2020 Season

    Response to Pandemic

    By: Pillow - Mar 31st, 2020

    For the first time in its 88-year history, the Jacob’s Pillow Board of Trustees and Executive Leadership have made the decision to cancel the 2020 Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, previously scheduled for June 24-August 30 along with its annual gala scheduled for June 20.

  • Berkshire Theatre Group to Open in August

    Revising plans for Summer 2020

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 01st, 2020

    This week Jacob's Pillow cancelled its coming season. Can Tanglewood be far behind? Today Williamstown Theatre Festival pulled back from selling tickets with a note for further review of seasonal plans. Berkshire Theatre Group announces the launch of its season on August 1. We have yet to hear updates from Shakespeare & Company, Barrngton Stage Company or other regional theatres. As non essential business Berkshire museums are closed with no time line for resumed programming.

  • Update from Shakespeare & Company

    Letter from Allyn Burrows

    By: Allyn Burrows - Apr 03rd, 2020

    Shakespeare saw the theatres closed two times in as many years due to the plague, and he subsequently must have viewed the world through the lens of what the epidemic wrought.

  • Jeremy Denk on Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier

    Preludes and Fugues Revealed

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 08th, 2020

    The pleasures of streaming music are revealed in this delightful meeting with Jeremy Denk in his country home. He focuses on the C sharp Prelude and Fugue and dips into two others. What a joy!

  • New Music Virtual Town Hall

    Our Digital Present and Future Explored

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 07th, 2020

    Many of us sense that coming out of lockdown we will find ourselves in a very different world. Ideas that have emerged from isolation suggest ways in which a wider group of people, worldwide, can connect. Music is a universal language. Organizations like the International Contemporary Ensemble have led the way into a musical future unimaginable before the most recent technology revolution. Gathered to discuss subjects like how to make an audience out of disparate listeners and platforms available for cooperation and sharing, many other organizations offered insights.

  • Yin and Yang

    Facing Fear and Uncertainty

    By: Cheng Tong - Apr 09th, 2020

    There is a line from the movie “Tombstone,” spoken by Doc Holliday to Wyatt Earp: “There is no normal life, Wyatt. There is just life.”

  • Former ICA Director Sydney Roberts Rockefeller

    Recalling Events 1973-1974

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 15th, 2020

    Then 27 the Institute of Contemporary Art was the first of many boards that Sydney Roberts Rockefeller joined. Director Andrew C. Hyde quit not long after the beginning of his second term. Left in the lurch was a planned conference on public art. When she stepped up to rescue the conference the board made her director. She was on site during the renovation of 955 Boylston Street. It was designed and largely funded by the architect Graham Gund.

  • Curator James Manning

    Overview of Boston's Artists and Alternative Galleries

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 17th, 2020

    For decades artist, curator, installer James Manning has covered Boston's emerging artists and alternative galleries. Other than when Bill Arning was at MIT List nobody has made a greater effort to interact with emerging artists and their galleries. He had his own gallery Art Vigor in East Boston and was director of Gallery FX, a pioneer of the SOWA art district. This activity was rarely covered by the mainstream media. This is an attempt to document a vibrant era . From 2008 until his death in 2018 Manning worked with curator Joe Ketner at Emerson College.

  • Letter from Hancock Shaker Village

    Three Little Lambs

    By: Jennifer Trainer Thompson - Apr 19th, 2020

    Jennifer Trainer Thompson, the director of Hancock Shaker Village, has a letter for friends and neighbors. It's spring and the lambs have been born. Soon it is time to plant the traditional gardens. Trying times call for creative solutions.

  • Watching Theatre from Home

    Adapting to the Pandemic

    By: Aaron Krause - Apr 21st, 2020

    Stage shows are going on – maybe not live, but via live streaming and through other means. Since the world is in the midst of a pandemic, theater lovers are not able to experience the vitality and immediacy that comes with truly live theater. However, that doesn’t mean theater can’t be a part of your life under quarantine.

  • Hancock Shaker Village a Living History Museum

    Jennifer Trainer Thompson Discusses Plans for a 2020 Season

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 23rd, 2020

    In a normal season the Hancock Shaker Village, which was founded sixty years ago near Pittsfield, is open from April through December. With spring planting and the birth of livestock this is a busy time of year. The annual Baby Animals Festival draws some 20% of annual visitation and 15% of earned revenue. We spoke with director Jennifer Trainer Thompson about strategies to function during the pandemic.

  • Persimmon

    A Tree Grows in North Adams

    By: Cheng Tong - Apr 26th, 2020

    The tree grows. It does not try to; it just does. This is our life, and the purpose of it is to live. In this moment, and the next. It’s okay once in a while to sit on the Old Bastard’s bench, and catch our breath. But life does not stop, and we must continue to live it.

  • Do the Math

    Response to the Unmasked

    By: Cheng Tong - May 04th, 2020

    We are all connected; we are one. One plus one is one. There is even a word for this. That word is love. As difficult as it may be sometimes, it is nonetheless the answer.

  • Theatre and the New Normal

    The View from My Sofa

    By: Nancy Bishop - May 06th, 2020

    Since we have to do without live theater for the foreseeable future, however, theater on my sofa can be an excellent replacement.

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