- How much would it cost for a Christmas trip to Rome? The Farnese palace will soon be reunited with the famous art collection it once housed -- and will be opened to the public, beginning on December 17 and continuing through April 27, for a rare exhibit since the building became the French embassy. [Le Figaro]
- Ionarts Central was relocated to upstate New York over the Thanksgiving vacation. Now Alex Ross informs me of a new performing arts space I need to visit on our next trip up there. [The Rest Is Noise]
- Countertenor Philippe Jaroussky has sold out a series of three solo recitals this month at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées (December 1, 11, and 17). Marie-Aude Roux reviewed the first one, devoted almost exclusively to the music of Antonio Caldara. They will all apparently be broadcast -- and thus available online for at least some time -- on Arte and/or France Musique. [Le Monde]
- With hat tip to Jessa Crispin, what it means to be the failed brother of a great writer. [Open Letters Monthly]
- Alan Gilbert did something rather interesting things with Schoenberg's Pelleas und Melisande with the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France. [Musical America]
- Watch the online video of the above concert. [Arte]
- A singer friend has helped start another small choral ensemble in Washington: catch them today as they offer free performances of carols and other holiday music, in the lobby of the Willard Hotel (starting at 5:30 and 6:45 pm). [The Capital Hearings]
- Nothing like a good old argument about decency and art to get people exercised. [CNS News]
- Critics and other media commentators have fallen all over themselves to condemn the Smithsonian's decision to pull one of the artworks in the exhibit, David Wojnarowicz's video A Fire in My Belly (1987), from public view. However, if they link to a version of the video, most hasten to add that the content of the video may get one in trouble if watching at work, which is a pretty good indicator that we could at least agree that the work is controversial and susceptible to this sort of public outcry. [Los Angeles Times]
- An online excerpt of the video has been flagged as possibly "inappropriate for some users," for example. [YouTube]
- Art blogger Tyler Green has been out in front of this story from the start. [Modern Art Notes]
- A Swiss contemporary art collector, who was also a former Swiss ambassador to China, paid 300,000 yuans to acquire an original reproduction of the famous Hellenistic sculpture known as the Venus de Milo -- made of panda turds. Children in the Sichuan province made the sculpture under the direction of sculptor Zhu Cheng. [Libération]
- You don't see that every day: the Washington Times actually published an editorial calling for the assassination of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. [DCist]
5.12.10
In Brief: Advent 2 Edition
Here is your regular Sunday selection of links to good things in Blogville and Beyond.
is it more disturbing that the sculpture was made of panda turds or that children handled panda shit to make the sculpture????
ReplyDeleteNo, I think it was that viewers of the sculpture reported liking its "sweet smell."
ReplyDelete