Picasso’s Provençal Château Opens To The Public, Briefly

“In the grounds of Château de Vauvenargues, near the Provençal town of Aix-en-Provence, there is a simple mound of earth, covered in grass and ringed by ivy. Perched on top is a curvaceous bronze nude, made by Pablo Picasso in 1933, and exhibited alongside Guernica in the Paris international exhibition of 1937. But, in terms of significance, it doesn’t come close to what lies beneath: the body of the artist himself.”

Paperless Tickets, Another Attempt To Combat Scalping

Ticketmaster is going paperless on the Miley Cyrus tour. “Concert-goers won’t receive an actual paper ticket. Rather, as they enter arenas, the credit cards they used to purchase the tickets will be swiped and they will receive a seat locator.” Which means parents will either have to go in with their kids or send the moppets in with their credit card. “It also means that if four tickets are purchased on one credit card, the concert-goers all need to enter the venue together.”

Did Audience And Biography Sway Van Cliburn Jury?

Nobuyuki Tsujii, one of this year’s two winners of the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, “riveted the audience. And juries, even at the highest level, are not immune to audience responses.” Did the 20-year-old’s blindness play a role? “If all the contestants had performed behind a scrim, if no one had known anything about them, if they had been judged purely on musical values, I honestly believe some other pianists would have advanced ahead of Tsujii.”

What If Chicago’s Lakefront Really Were Wide Open To All?

“Chicagoans love to brag about their open, people-friendly lakefront. In reality, 4 of the city’s 30 miles of Lake Michigan shoreline are unavailable to the public” — “an outrageous violation of Daniel Burnham’s ringing epigram that the lakefront ‘by right belongs to the people.'” An advocacy group’s new plan would give it back to them, plugging “these holes with 2 miles of new parkland on both the north and south lakefronts.”

27,000 Flock To Ballpark For S.F. Opera’s Tosca Simulcast

“The San Francisco Opera set an attendance record Friday for its continuing simulcasts of live performances from the War Memorial Opera House to AT&T Park. An audience estimated by the Opera at 27,000 showed up for the free simulcast of Puccini’s ‘Tosca,’ shown on the scoreboard screen, starring soprano Adrianne Pieczonka as the doomed heroine.”

Brooklyn Ballet To Open Its Downtown Digs

“The Brooklyn Ballet will officially open its new headquarters on June 16 on the ground floor of the Schermerhorn House, the company announced on Monday. The 11-story building in downtown Brooklyn, which also houses low income artists and the formerly homeless, is a collaboration between a real estate development company and a nonprofit affordable housing project.”

Without Tonys To Save It, Neil LaBute Play Will Shutter

“‘Reasons to Be Pretty’ became the first post-Tony Awards casualty on Broadway, with the struggling play — which came away empty-handed from the kudocast — announcing its final perf would be Sunday. The well-reviewed Neil LaBute play was the season’s most notable illustration of the difficulty of attracting auds in an unusually crowded Broadway slate.”