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Charles Giuliano

Bio:

Publisher & Editor. Charles was the director of exhibitions for the New England School of Art & Design at Suffolk University where he taught art history and the humanities. He taugh tModern Art and the Avant-garde for Metropolitan College of Boston University. After many years as a contributor, columnist and editor for a range of print publications from Art New England, Art News, the Boston Phoenix, the Boston Herald Traveler and Patriot Ledger, to mention a few, he went on line with Maverick Arts which evolved into a website.

Recent Articles:

  • Financial Crisis of the Berkshire Museum Front Page

    What Do the Numbers Add Up To

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 16th, 2017

    As a matter of public record we have examined the Federal tax information Form 990 disclosures of the Berkshire Museum from 2011 to 2015. They do not appear to create a profile of a cultural institution in dire straits. The museum is going forward with last ditch plans to sell 40 works of art. It is possible that there has been a dramatic downturn in the past two years? A Berkshire Eagle editorial asked “Why deny access to the museum's profit/loss statements for the past two years?" Based on reports for the prior five years we have questions for the museum, its director, Van Shields, and the board of trustees.

  • Nugents of Rockport Front Page

    Patrick and Mary Raised Thirteen on Beaver Dam Farm

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 16th, 2017

    On Wednesday, August 23, there will be a reading and book launch for Gloucester Poems: Nugents of Rockport at the Gloucester Writers Center. It will feature the author. Charles Giuliano, and poet Geoffrey Movius.The new book is built around an extensive interview with the author's mother, Dr. Josphine R. Flynn, that was conducted in 1986 during a commute from Palm Beach to her summer home in Annisquam. In this excerpt from the book they discuss the Nugents of Rockport and summers she spent with her grandmother on Beaver Dam Farm in Rockport. The book is available through Amazon.

  • Figuratively Speaking at Eclipse Mill Gallery Front Page

    Five Berkshire Artists Explore the Human Condition

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 15th, 2017

    The special exhibition Figuratively Speaking, at the Eclipse Mill Gallery, September 1 to 24, offers fresh and evocative interpretations allowing for a broad range of approaches to the perennial conundrum of the human condition. The five Berkshire based artists include William Archer, Joanna Klain, Linda O’Brien, Opie O’Brien, and Wilma Rifkin.

  • Company by Stephen Sondheim Front Page

    Stunning Revival at Barrington Stage Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 15th, 2017

    This season Julianne Boyd has taken another crack at Sondheim's Company and critics appear to be unanimous that a sensational production is on the short list of her best work. She is noted for loving musicals and this one is a corker.

  • Actually at Williamstown Theatre Festival Front Page

    Maat the Ancient Egyptian Feather of Truth

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 14th, 2017

    At the end of a night of binge drinking the Princetown freshmen Tom (Joshua Boone) and Amber (Alexandre Socha) hook up. In the clear night of morning was she raped?. They were so drunk that neither can recall details. It is up to a review panel of faculty to hear both sides and decide on appropriate action. It is a poignant and timely issue as lives are in the balance on college campuses all over America.

  • Laurie Norton Moffatt on the Role of Trustees Front Page

    Rockwell Museum Director Argues for Respect

    By: Laurie Norton Moffatt - Aug 14th, 2017

    In a key op-ed piece for the Berkshire Eagle, Laurie Norton Moffatt the director of the Norman Rockwell Museum, called on the Berkshire Museum to "pause" its plans to sell 40 works including two by Rockwell. Largely based on her position the story broke in the national media. In the process the rhetoric escalated. In this opinion piece she asks for a wider understanding of the commmitment and responsibilites of serving on boards of non profits. With so many cultural institutions looking for funding from the same small pool of donors there are parfticular and extreme pressures for boards in the Berkshires. She calls for a focus on issues and not individuals.

  • David A Ross Opposes Berkshire Museum Sale Front Page

    Renowned Former Whitney Museum Director Posts Statement

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 13th, 2017

    The renowned former Whitney Museum director, David A. Ross, in an exclusive statement posted to Berkshire Fine Arts strongly opposes plans initiated by the Berkshire Museum. “This is a sad affair. Perhaps the board, if unwilling to raise funds in the way all museums have to, should resign (along with its feckless director). My feeling is it should merge administratively with another educational non-profit in the region, and then begin the process of stabilization. It would be preferable to see the museum close for a few years of re-organization, than to forever destroy the core of its irreplaceable art collection.”

  • Pickets Protest Berkshire Museum Meltdown Front Page

    Orderly Demonstration in Front of Museum

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 13th, 2017

    From 9 AM to noon there was an ordely and peaceful demonstration in front of the Berkshire Museum in Pittsfield. Pickets came and went with between 40 and 80 individuals linuing the sidewalk at any given time. Most passing cars honked their support. There was a media presence. While museum director, Van Shields, remained hunkered down in the bunker, board president Elizabeth "Buzz" Hayes McGraw delivered her boilplate message to a TV crew from Albany.

  • The Curious Dog in Los Angeles Front Page

    All the Bells and Whistles for Ahmanson Theastre Production

    By: Jack Lyons - Aug 11th, 2017

    To help the audience experience what takes place inside the head of Christopher, director Elliott employs the full technical arsenal of the Ahmanson that is available to her. The set design by Bunny Christie, is a huge three sided space staging area with colored LED lights both on the walls and the floor that are cued by Christopher’s dialogue and stage movement. It’s all very technical and very eye-popping. In a transfer from Lodon “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time” won a Tony Award in 2015.

  • Sea Span Word

    Beautiful Bay

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 11th, 2017

    Span

  • Hamlet Opera in Oakland Front Page

    West Edge Opera at the Pacific Pipe Warehouse

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 11th, 2017

    Much of the criticism of this work is noteworthy but inappropriate. Complainers argue that the opera misses much of the play, which must be expected unless you want a five-hour opera. This is the same argument people use when they’ve read a long book and then see the movie.

  • Night Watch Word

    Vigil at First Light

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 10th, 2017

    Vigil

  • Protesting Berkshire Museum's Unethical Sale Front Page

    Pickets Planned for Saturday Morning August 12

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 10th, 2017

    The artists and their supporters in the Berkshires will take to the streets on Saturday, August 12, from 9 AM to noon. There will be picket lines in front ot the Berkshire Museum in Pittsfield. They will provide a visible presence of those protesting the pending sale of 40 choice works and plans to gut and "reboot" the historic museum and collections.

  • The Chastity Tree by West Edge Opera Front Page

    Pacific Pipe Warehouse In Oakland

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 09th, 2017

    The music of The Chastity Tree is very much of its time and place. From the classic era, it still embraces baroque traces in tinkling harpsichord and clipped recitatives. The Bay Area is blessed with and attracts an abundance of great young opera singers, and West Edge always casts well from this enviable pool.

  • Shakespeare in Love Front Page

    Oregon Shakespeare Festival Premieres Play from Movie

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 09th, 2017

    Shakespeare-centric theater companies like Oregon Shakes must provide a balance of Elizabethan era works with other offerings to attract sufficient audiences. Sometimes, a hybrid, and especially a sophisticated comedy that is about Shakespeare or one of his plays can be well received. So it is with Shakespeare in Love, the U.S. premiere of the stage version of the highly successful film.

  • Rhinestone Cowboy Word

    Fast Eddy in Nashville

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 09th, 2017

    Eddy

  • Blues Is a Woman Front Page

    Custom Made in San Freancico

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 09th, 2017

    After development at music venues, the musical revue "Blues is a Woman" has begun a theatrical run at Custom Made Theater in San Francisco. In a memorable production, six women wail and moan and plead in a rewarding evening of blues standards and original music by lead singer Pamela Rose in a format that is as informative as it is entertaining.

  • Remembering Barbara Cook Front Page

    Iconic Broadway and Cabaret Singer at 89

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 08th, 2017

    Broadway and cabaret artist Barbara Cook was 80 wehen we first saw her perform at Ozawa Hall and several times after that. In Indiana we enjoyed a concert wth Michael Feistein and an interview for critics that followed. We have compiled a collage from those reviews.

  • Hair in Chicago Front Page

    Revisiting the Age of Aquarius

    By: Nancy Bishop - Aug 08th, 2017

    A half century later in the spirit of the Summer of Love there is a revival of Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical. Two and a half generations of later it still casts magical spells. Nancy Bishop takes on a trip down memory lane.

  • Hannah and the Dread Gazebo by Jiehae Park Front Page

    Oregon Shakespeare Festival

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 08th, 2017

    Jiehae Park’s innovative and fast moving world premiere play, Hannah and the Dread Gazebo, touches on a dizzying number of themes including familial relationships, aspirations, wishes, creation mythology, international relations, cross-culturalism, and even a humorous twist on racism.

  • This by Melissa James Gibson Front Page

    Theatrical Thirty-Something Sitcom at Barrington Stage

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 07th, 2017

    Moving on from an endemic fixations with plays about milennials Barrington Stage has progressed by a generation with This by Melissa James Gibson. The focus is on the trials and tribulations of friends who met in college. Add to this a dark and sexy stranger in a French doctor without borders,

  • A Legendary Romance in Williamstown Front Page

    Music and Lyrics, Geoff Morrow, Book, Timothy Prager

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 06th, 2017

    This is the second producton of the musical A Legendary Romance with music and lyrics, Geoff Morrow, book by Timothy Prager. While it needs more work, the norm for musicals, starring Jeff McCarthy and Lora Lee Gayer it is the best work we have seen this season from Wiliamstown Theatre Festival. It is a tragic love story set to music about lives and careers ruined during the 1950s when Holywood was on trial for its alleged communism.

  • Henry IV, Part One Front Page

    Oregon Shakespeare Festival

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 06th, 2017

    Director Lilean Blais-Cruz does well with limited resources. Actors extract whatever drama and humor that the words allow. Lighting and sound achieve expected OSF standards. This production plays in the round and with a minimum of staging – the fixed portion being a number of vertical white pipes with light wands attached to a maze of pipes above.

  • Off the Rails by Randy Reinholz Front Page

    Oregon Shakespeare Festival Reconfigures Measure for Measure

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 06th, 2017

    This play is both entertaining and rich with messages. It deserves to be seen. At the same time, the playwright tries to accomplish a great deal, perhaps at the expense of cohesion. The tone changes often as dialogue alternates between Shakespearean tracts taken directly from the source and the naturalistic speech of the Old West.

  • Rockwell Family Opposes Berkshire Museum Sale Front Page

    Game Changer and Time to Rethink the Reboot

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 05th, 2017

    When Laurie Norton Moffett, director of the Norman Rockwell Museum, in a Berkshire Eagle op-ed piece asked the Berkshire Museum to "pause" in its plan to sell 40 works the story broke as national news. In daily coverage since then the pro and con has rocked back and forth. I seemed like game over when Joe Thompson, director of MASS MoCA, endorsed the sale and radical plans urging readers to "get real." Then lawyers waded in questioning that the works may or may not be "unrestricted." The controversy went into extra innings when the Rockwell family, in an Eagle letter, stated that the artist never intended for his works to be sold as a last ditch bailout for the poorly managed and curatorially aenemic museum.

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