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  • Sculptor John Chamberlain at 84

    Car Crash as Art and Metaphor

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 23rd, 2011

    Car Crashes with their bent and distorted slabs of polyrchormed sheet metal were the inspiration and metaphor for the signature work and jagged life of sculptor John Chamberlain. An appreciation with memories of time spent with the artist in the late 1960s and 1970s in New York and the Berkshires.

  • Vaclav Havel Dead At 75

    Czech Playwright, Poet, Dissident Conscience and President

    By: George Abbott White - Dec 18th, 2011

    George Abbott White met and admired Vaclav Havel, and Havel's death has brought back memories of Havel's impact not only on the Czech Republic democracy but even more so on his historic contribution to his time and place.

  • Denise Markonish Part Three

    Curating a Survey of Canadian Art for Mass MoCA

    By: Denise Markonish and Charles Giuliano - Dec 16th, 2011

    For the past three years Mass MoCA curator, Denise Markonish, has trekked across Canada making hundreds of studio visits. When not on the road she has researched exhibitions and catalogues. Few American curators and critics are as broadly informed on the vast and complex topic of contemporary art in Canada. It is a project she took on almost by default given the general lack of interest and commitment. In June the museum will exhibit the work of 64 artists in what should prove to be an eye opening and ground breaking overview. This is the third and final segment of a critical dialogue.

  • Denise Markonish Part One

    Mass MoCA Canadian Show Opens May 26

    By: Denise Markonish and Charles Giuliano - Dec 15th, 2011

    On May 26 Mass MoCA curator, Denise Markonish, will present the result of a three year long survey of contemporary art in Canada. From some 400 studio visits she has selected roughly sixty artists. During an in depth dialogue we explored our common roots as alumni of Brandeis University and its troubled Rose Art Museum. In this first installment we explore her education and career as a young curator prior to joining the staff of Mass MoCA. The article has links to parts two and three.

  • Denise Markonish Part Two

    Projects for Mass MoCA

    By: Denise Markonish and Charles Giuliano - Dec 15th, 2011

    The concept of Mass MoCA was initiated more than twenty years ago by Tom Krens then the director of the Williams College Museum of Art. When he departed for the Guggenheim Joe Thompson took over. The museum opened some eleven years ago with Laura Heon as chief curator and her associate Nato Thompson. Both have since parted. The team of curators Susan Cross and Denise Markonish accentuate Chapter Two of the museum's evolving history. When Markonish was hired the museum was in the midst of an ugly conflict over a later abandoned project by Christoph Buchel in the vast Building Five.

  • James Aponovich Part Two

    Is Conceptual Realism an Oxymoron

    By: James Aponovich and Charles Giuliano - Dec 13th, 2011

    Working nine to five, six and a half days a week, the realist painter James Aponovich sees himself as an art worker. Over a year which ends in May he has set a goal of completing one new painting a week. All 52 works will be shown at the Clark Gallery in June. While he has been out of the New York art world for several years in 2014 he is scheduled for a one man show at the prestigious Hirschl & Adler Gallery. This is the second and final installment of a dialogue with the New Hampshire based artist.

  • Painting Marathon by James Aponovich: One

    A Painting a Week for a Year Then a Show at Clark Gallery

    By: James Aponovich and Charles Giuliano - Dec 11th, 2011

    James Aponovich is regarded as among the foremost American realist painters. He is in the midst of a conceptual project to finish a painting a week for a year. It was the subject of a broadcast on Chronicle this past week. In May the entire series of 52 paintings will be shown at Clark Gallery in Lincoln, Mass. This was an occasion to catch up with a superb artist and old friend.

  • What Is the Fate of the Syrian Blogger Razan Ghazzawi?

    Syrian Regime Repression on Freedom of Speech

    By: Nelida Nassar - Dec 05th, 2011

    Razan Ghazzawi an America born Syrian blogger was arrested on Sunday on the Jordanian-Syrian border on her way to a conference in Amman on the laws governing freedom of speech and expression.

  • Social Media Subterfuge As Art

    Egyptian Magda el-Mahdy Aliaa’s Controversial Blog

    By: Nelida Nassar - Nov 26th, 2011

    Can art coalesce with social change? It can indeed and has historically been the case. Nowadays, with the social media prevalence the information streams are more than ever instantaneous while being more diluted. In the name of “Democratic Despotism” to quote Alexis de Tocqueville all stories have their one minute bite so is Magda el-Mahdy Aliaa’s different faces of extremism blog.

  • Julianne Boyd of Barrington Stage: Two

    Planning Several Seasons in Advance

    By: Julianne Boyd and Charles Giuliano - Oct 25th, 2011

    In planning plays for Barrington Stage Company artistic director Julianne Boyd relies on a small circle of trusted associates like composer/ lyricist, Bill Finn, actor Christoher Innvar, and playwright Mark St. Germain. Usually she is developing programming two and three years into the future. Since, ultimately, decisions fall on her shoulders she describes it as a lonely job.

  • Art, Fiction Intersect with Reality

    Memory of a Car Accident

    By: Nelida Nassar - Oct 24th, 2011

    A car accident in Brookline, Massachusetts elicits Andy Warhol and Malcolm Morley vivid car crash paintings. It also ignites the enigma of memory and the necessity of reflection and public discourse as in Proust’s Search of Lost Time.

  • Lewis Black on Caris’s Peace

    Documentary Featured in Williamstown Film Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 20th, 2011

    Surgery for a brain tumor left the actress Caris Corfman with long term memory but no short term memory. In a struggle to overcome a cornucopia of health and memory issues she developed a one woman play. It is the culmination of a documentary film by Gaylen Ross which will be screened as a part of the Williamstown Film Festival. Her friend and one of the producers, the comedian Lewis Black, discussed Caris, his approach to comedy, and the play One Slight Hitch which was produced at the Williamstown Theatre Festival this past summer.

  • Elayne Polly Bernstein Schwartz, on October 4

    Remembering a Patron of the Arts

    By: S&Co. - Oct 06th, 2011

    Elayne Polly Bernstein Schwartz, was known to the arts community as Elayne P. Bernstein. Her name is attached to the theatre at Shakespeare & Company, in Lenoz, which she generously helped to create. She was involved with many Berkshire cultural organizations including Jacob’s Pillow, Barrington Stage, Berkshire Theatre Group, Tanglewood, and Norman Rockwell Museum among others. Her overriding passion revolved around Shakespeare & Company.

  • Mark St. Germain Four

    On Not Reading His Reviews

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 22nd, 2011

    During dialolgues with theatre people it is usual to learn that they do not read reviews of their work. Or if they do well after a production has closed. We asked the playwright Mark St. Germain about that and found a rational and compelling response. While his play The Best of Enemies, which returns to Barrington Stage Company from October 6 to 16, got rave reviews he indicated knowing of them indirectly.

  • Mark St. Germain Playwright Part Two

    Relationship with Barrington Stage Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 21st, 2011

    In this segment of an extended dialogue with the playwright he describes a unique relationship with Julianne Boyd, the artistic director of Barrington Stage Company. They have worked together on a number of plays including the hits Freud’s Last Session, which continues its run Off Broadway through October and The Best of Enemies which will return to Barrington Stage from October 5 to 16. It opened to rave reviews and sold out houses in August. From New York Freud travels to Chicago for an open ended engagement

  • Mark St. Germain Three

    Integrating Durham Schools in 1971

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 21st, 2011

    What does it take for the playwright Mark St. Germain to get into the heads of explosive combatants the black activist, Ann Atwater, going head to head with the Klansman. C. P. Ellis. Or to put a screed of racial slurs into the mouth of a young black mediator, Bill Riddick, sent by the federal Department of Education to bring about the integration of schools in Durham in 1971. It is the topic of St. Germain's play, The Best of Enemies which returns to Barrington Stage for its second run from October 5 to 16.

  • Playwright Mark St. Germain Part One

    The Best of Enemies Returns To Barrington Stage

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 19th, 2011

    The August run of Mark St. Germain’s new play The Best of Enemies set attendance records for a drama on the Main Stage of Barrington Stage Company in Pittsfield, Mass. The play returns from October 5 to 16. We met with him to discuss the play, his relationship with Barrington Stage and the craft of a playwright.

  • Blythe Danner at Tanglewood Jazz Festival

    Returning to Old Haunts in the Berkshires

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 08th, 2011

    Tony Award-winning actress Blythe Danner will be the featured guest on Judy Carmichael’s “Jazz Inspired” on Saturday, September 3, at the Tanglewood Jazz Festival. Danner will perform with pianist Mike Renzi and bassist Neal Miner. Judy Carmichael’s “Jazz Inspired” will be taped before a live audience at Seiji Ozawa Hall on Saturday, September 3, at 2 pm, and broadcast at a later date on 170 stations in the United States and worldwide.

  • Nicholas Martin Part Two

    With a Little Help from My Friends

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 21st, 2011

    As the Beatles song suggests, during a long and fruitful career in theatre, producer/ director, Nicholas Martin has been "Getting by with a little help from my friends." Actors from his well tended Rolodex regularly appear in plays that he produces and directs. Members of his theatrical family are gathered for the comedy She Stoops to Conquer which opens this week at the Williamstown Theatre Festival.

  • Nicholas Martin Returns to Williamstown Theatre Festival

    Part One With the Former Artistic Director

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 20th, 2011

    When Nicholas Martin, after eight years of running the Huntington Theatre in Boston, took a similar position at Williamstown Theatre Festival the renowned festival was widely viewed as not what it had been. From 2008-2010 that state of the art excellence returned to the Berkshires. Under new artistic director, Jenny Gersten, Martin is directing She Stoops to Conquer surrounded by his theatrical family. During a rare day off we discussed his remarkable life in theatre.

  • Boxing Writer George Kimball at 67

    The Fight Game

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 09th, 2011

    George Kimball, dead at 67, was a One Eyed Jack of sports journalism. A giant of his era who covered some 350 title bouts. Like a lot of us he started out in the alternative weekly press of Boston/ Cambridge in the 1970s. Our paths crossed, and I had huge respect for him as a writer, but George was rough around the edges. He was at his best wallowing in the sloppy trough of the fight game.

  • Katy Kline Interim Director at WCMA

    Joins Williams College Museum of Art in August

    By: WCMA - Jun 01st, 2011

    Williams has announced the appointment of Katy Kline, former director of Bowdoin College Museum of Art (1998-2008), as interim director of the Williams College Museum of Art. She will serve from early August until the permanent director is in place.

  • Beaver Rescue at the Eclipse Mill

    Memorial Day Saga

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 30th, 2011

    A Memorial Day picnic and gathering of friends at the Eclipse Mill has an unanticipated dramatic element. In the river bed next to the mill an exhausted beaver was desperately trying to walk up against the current of a waterfall. The drama dragged on until after dark.

  • Stuart Chase Appointed CEO of 1Berkshire

    New Position for Former Berkshire Musem Director

    By: 1Berkshire - Apr 28th, 2011

    Stuart Chase will provide 1Berkshire and its affiliates, the Berkshire Chamber of Commerce, the Berkshire Visitors Bureau and Berkshire Creative Economy Council, with executive leadership in all areas vital to the growth and success of 1Berkshire including strategic and organizational management, fundraising, economic development and marketing.

  • John R. Stomberg To Direct Mt. Holyoke Museum

    Leaving Williams After Nine Years

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 21st, 2011

    Several months ago Williams College Art Museum announced its director, Lisa Corrin, will resign as of June. Today we learned that deputy director, John R. Stomberg, at the museum for the past nine years, is also leaving. As of August he takes over as director of the Mount Holyoke College Museum of Art. Come the fall semester it begs the question of who will be in charge at Williams in a transition that may take at least a year.

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