Saving The Met’s Aural History

The Metropolitan Opera has a trove of recordings of its week-by-week performances across seven decades. “The house is pressing forward with a project to preserve, and in many cases locate, nearly 1,400 recordings of its Saturday broadcasts. Met officials said they have completed 403 preservations, with 868 still to go, spending about $1.4 million in an open-ended project that is predicted to cost more than $4 million.”

A New Kind Of 21st Century Art Center?

Peter Noever, the “globe-trotting head of Vienna’s MAK Center” has a plan for a new art center in an old WWII antiaircraft tower in Vienna. “The idea is to build a collection of the 21st century. And to do it on site, and step by step. It will be very slow — 15 to 20 years. You invite one artist, and then see what he has done, and then see what you do next. It is the very opposite of the kind of collection that’s offered on the market, which changes as parts are bought and sold.”

What Did Howard Stern Do To Radio?

“Whether he was a force for further vulgarizing the culture or liberating it from its puritanical neuroses depends upon the ear of the listener. But whatever your viewpoint, one thing is clear: In addition to almost single-handedly creating a new species of talk show hosts — involving behavior that morning show newcomers now must either emulate or surpass — Stern also pushed, stamped and shook pop culture.”

Chihuly Sues Glassbowers Over Copyright

Glass artist Dale Chihuly is suing two glassblowers, claiming they are copying his designs. “How does an artist go about proving — or disproving — copyright infringement? How do you differentiate between Chihuly’s influence on other glass artists and artistic plagiarism? Can he claim exclusive rights to designs that are modeled on things such as Navajo blankets and sea life? And what does it mean for the world of art glass?”

New JetBlue Terminal – How To Wreck A Modernist Classic

Eero Saarinen’s 1962 masterpiece TWA Terminal at JFK airport is a classic. It’s now being used by JetBlue, which in only a few years has become the airport’s biggest carrier. So now the airline is expanding. “JetBlue’s new terminal, unfortunately, shows just how low air travel can go. At $875 million, it’s $125 million cheaper than the bare-bones JFK barracks that American Airlines opened last summer — and looks it.”

What American Dance Needs…

“After the postmodern multidisciplinary melting pot era, it’s my opinion that the dance world is in need for specializing again: finding new movement techniques, new working ethics, new ways how the art form could communicate to an dance-alienated public who has lost contact with their own bodies. Though both the infrastructure and the financial situation necessary for accomplishing this is within the US unfortunately almost completely absent, the mindset for establishing for such developments is most definitely there. And that’s where it all starts.”

When It Comes to Books, Gimmicks Don’t Work

“Gimmicky books make awful gifts. Why? Because they’re so much easier to give than they are to receive. They’re so much more gratifying to gift givers than they are to recipients. And the act of follow-through is not often a big part of these transactions. A gift book may be chosen on impulse, but it can confound whoever winds up with it for a long, long time.”

Ottakar’s Says It Can’t Compete

UK book chain Ottakar’s says it can’t compete with big discount chains. “Ottakar’s said like-for-like sales since the end of January had fallen 3.4%, with a marked deterioration from the summer with sales falling by 6.7% despite the release of the latest installment in the Harry Potter saga. Shares in the company, which dropped below 400p this month when a proposed £96m takeover by Waterstone’s was referred to the competition commission, fell a further 2% to 357.5p.”