Share

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:

  • Remaking West Side Story Front Page

    Screenwriter Tony Kushner and director Stephen Spielberg

    By: Jack Lyons - Jan 05th, 2022

    The original film of Leonard Bernstein's West Side Story was released in 1957. Why mess with a masterpiece? Now we have a remake collaboration by living legends screenwriter Tony Kushner and director Stephen Spielberg. While arguably not better it certainly is different and relevant for a new generation of viewers. Look for the fabulous 89-year-old Rita Moreno (Academy Award winner for her 1961 portrayal of Anita) as Valentina, the widow of the store owner ‘Doc.”

  • My Father's Portraits Front Page

    Aesthetic and Psychic Legacy of Raeford LIles

    By: Barbara Liles - Jan 05th, 2022

    During three years in New York in the 1960s I (Charles Giuliano) was assistant director of East Hampton Gallery. Raeford Liles was one of the artists we represented. A native of Birmingham, Alabama he came from a military family. During WW11 he was a fighter pilot in the South Pacific and later served with SAC based in Paris where he studied art and cooking. There PTSD caused a breakdown leading to a lifetime of treatment and medication. He often spoke of his daughters with whom he had a complex relationship. This is explored in a remarkable essay by Barbara Liles. A chapter of a larger work in progress it was published by Southern Humanities Review.

  • What’s in a Name Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 04th, 2022

    Benno

  • Turducken Food

    Fair or Fowl

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 02nd, 2022

    fowl

  • 39th Re-Rooters Day Ceremony Front Page

    What to Do With Post Holiday Trees

    By: Jay Critchley - Jan 01st, 2022

    You are invited to attend the 39th Re-Rooters Day Ceremony, Friday, January 7, 2022, 4:00 pm, Harbor Hotel beach, Provincetown Harbor (snow, storm or shine); bring something non-toxic to burn on a tree boat. Sponsored by the IRS, International Re-Rooters Society, Jay Critchley, President

  • Music for Abandoned Amusement Parks Front Page

    Uncanny Masterpiece by East Boston's Sal Baglio

    By: Frank Conte - Jan 01st, 2022

    In an uncanny masterpiece musician Sal Baglio, in Music for Abandoned Amusement Parks, captures the ambiance of colorful East Boston. Journalist Frank Conte is the venerable chronicler of the hood.

  • Spatchcocked Duck Food

    A Festive New Year's Dinner

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 01st, 2022

    duck

  • Jazz in the Berkshires Front Page

    What Are You Doing for New Years

    By: Berkshire Jazz - Dec 30th, 2021

    This very special concert features the amazing flutist Andrea Brachfeld with Insight: Bill O’Connell, piano; Harvie S, bass; and Jason Tiemann, drums

  • Good Government Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 30th, 2021

    government

  • What’s on Netflix and Amazon. Front Page

    Good, Bad and Ugly

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 28th, 2021

    In the dead of winter baby it's cold outside. It's time to curl up on the couch and hunker down with Netflix and Amazon. Here is a cheat sheet of what we've been watching.

  • Discombobulated Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 23rd, 2021

    b

  • The Play That Goes Wrong Front Page

    And That's the Truth

    By: Nancy Bishop - Dec 22nd, 2021

    The premise of the play that actually goes wrong is introduced by Chris Bean, president of the Cornley University Drama Society (played by Matt Mueller). The drama society is staging the play The Murder at Haversham Manor in the USA, a production made possible, the program notes, by the British-American Cultural Exchange Program.

  • The Perennial Woman in Black Front Page

    Produced by American Conservatory Theater

    By: Victor Cordell - Dec 20th, 2021

    The Woman in Black has drawn sufficient audience to run on London’s West End for over 30 years – second in longevity only to Agatha Christie’s “The Mousetrap.”  It’s had productions around the world and has been translated into 14 languages.  Not bad bona fides. Produced by American Conservatory Theater it plays at ACT’s Strand Theater, 1127 Market St., San Francisco.

  • Donald for Christmas Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 19th, 2021

    coin

  • Croakability Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 19th, 2021

    croke

  • The Art of Donald Shambroom Front Page

    A Hegelian/ Kantian Struggle

    By: Martin Mugar - Dec 18th, 2021

    Donald Shambroom’s art embraces a hybrid notion of the societal whole and the individual as its own kind of whole. He leans on the structure of a visual language derived from Rauschenberg to insert images of faces known from mass media side by side with those of people in his immediate family. Sometimes there is text given the same weight as the faces and bodies.

  • Shakespeare & Company News Front Page

    First Three Titles For 45th Season

    By: S&Co - Dec 16th, 2021

    Shakespeare & Company announces  the first three titles slated for production during its 45th Season, beginning in June 2022. Two works by Shakespeare and a modern production will open the season, which also marks the one-year anniversary of The New Spruce Theatre – Shakespeare & Company’s 500-seat amphitheater, constructed in the summer of 2021.

  • Unpacking NFTs Front Page

    Art or Scam

    By: Mark Favermann - Dec 15th, 2021

    NFT art is a new way of categorizing digital artworks that enables artists to monetize their creations. A pertinent question: how does valuing a physical artwork compare to valuing a virtual work of art? It turns out that the value of NFTs and crypto art is based on the value of cryptocurrency. NFTs are sold on the basis of Ether or Ethereum. The Ethereum is translated into monetary value. For example, if an NFT sells for 2 Ethereum, that would translate at the moment into about $2,255 dollars. If the speculative value of the Ethereum drops, then so does the value of the artwork.

  • Morning Sun Front Page

    Manhattan Theatre Club

    By: Edward Rubin - Dec 11th, 2021

    The magic of this play lies in the everyday ordinariness of each character’s lives which frequently tend to echo our own. I might add, when the lights went down there was not a dry eye in the house. Nor was there a heart left untouched.

  • Miss Bennet – Christmas at Pemberley. Front Page

    Playhouse on Park in West Hartford

    By: Karen Isaacs - Dec 11th, 2021

    The play is set two years after Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy have married and settled at his home. The family is arriving to celebrate Christmas.

  • When Comes the Moment Front Page

    By: Cheng Tong - Dec 08th, 2021

    As ever in our prayers a universal wish.

  • Be Bamboo Front Page

    By: Cheng Tong - Dec 08th, 2021

    Bend but don't break.

  • Sound of Music at Palm Canyon Theatre Front Page

    Enjoy the Tender Trapp

    By: Jack Lyons - Dec 08th, 2021

    “The Sound of Music”, is a show that the whole family can enjoy. It’s based on an inspirational true story of the famous Austrian von Trapp Family Singers and their escape to Switzerland on the eve of Germany’s 1938 Anschluss, and it’s annexing of Austria prior to World War II that will break out one year later.

  • Lonesome Pine Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 06th, 2021

    pine

  • Zero Slum Game Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 04th, 2021

    zweeo

  • << Previous Next >>