BROKE BERLIN

“For a city of around 3.5 million souls, the sheer volume of cultural life is staggering: eight symphony orchestras, numerous choirs, chamber orchestras and three major opera houses, not to mention myriad theatres, museums, galleries and festival organizations.” All of which makes for a splendid cultural scene. But behind it all, the arts world is in chaos – it all costs money and Berlin is spectacularly broke. – The Globe and Mail (Canada)

BOSTON ADVOCATE

Since the city’s cultural commissioner resigned a year ago, the local arts community has been without an advocate in government. “This is a critical time for artists,” says one critic. Major development plans for the city are being completed without input from artists. – Boston Herald

NEVERLAND

“‘Peter Pan,’ presented by the Atlanta Ballet, making a British debut at the Festival Hall, is by Broadway out of Disney, and the delivery room was a long way from the Mariinsky. Eagerly bright, ferociously energetic, perfectly frightful in almost every way, is it ‘ballay’ for the tots.” – Financial Times

PHILADELPHIA IM-PEDIMENT

Betty Greenwood was a secretary at Atlantic Richfield Oil, a hotline counselor and lover of tennis who died in 1992. She loved a pediment filled with colorful sculptures on the Philadelphia Art Museum, which she passed each day on her way to work. When she died in 1992 she left $1 million to “add to the sculptures in any or all of the uncompleted pediments” around the building. But the job has turned into a bigger one than anyone had anticipated. – Philadelphia Inquirer

CULTURAL CUBA

Cuban filmmaker, artist and writer Agustin Blazquez reflects on cultural exchange with Cuba: “In recent months, the US has participated in what is called “people-to-people cultural exchanges” in what I see as a naive effort to reach out to the citizens of Cuba. Naive because these events ignore the interlace with politics — and because ordinary Cubans are forbidden to participate.” – The Idler