At least, that is, until now, with the advent of the Pascal Institute, in the Netherlands, with which St. John’s has formed a ...
Verdi’s masterpiece of 1853, La traviata. She fashioned her production in 2016. It was staged last Wednesday night at the ...
It is not an exaggeration to say that we live today in the Age of Friedman, an era shaped by his ideas about the importance ...
Paris’s Petit Palais makes a point of selecting artists for exhibition who are largely foreign to contemporary France and yet whose art was influenced by the School of Paris of the nineteenth and ...
On the Aspen Music Festival, American chamber music, John Ashbery, the Fraunces Tavern Museum & more from the world of culture. R. B. Kitaj, Untitled (Portrait of John Ashbery), 1970, Charcoal and ...
Paul du Quenoy on a performance of Tchaikovsky’s “Sleeping Beauty” by the Hungarian National Ballet, Budapest.
On dining rooms, newspapers, musical instruments, the Dunlap broadsides & more from the world of culture. Joseph Willems after two engravings by François Boucher, The Music Lesson, ca. 1765, ...
The presentation of retrospective exhibitions of the work of obscure artists has become an obsession for museums, with curators drawing in a public hungry to discover the next big thing. But Robin ...
Roger Kimball writes: With the death of David Horowitz at the age of eighty-six on April 29, America lost not only one of its most passionate, well-informed, and effective critics of the Left but also ...
Just ten days before Robert A. M. Stern died, I received New York 2020, the final volume of his series of exhaustive and illuminating histories of New York architecture. I wrestled the 1,488-page ...
There is much talk of dreams in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman (at the Winter Garden Theatre through August 9), and Willy Loman’s existence is defined, in the winter of his life, by his daydreams ...