Advertisement

Monster Mash: Detroit Symphony’s first concert since strike; artists in Hong Kong rally for Ai Weiwei

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

Back to work: The Detroit Symphony performed its first concert since musicians agreed to end their six-month strike. (Detroit News)

Outraged: A group in the Hong Kong arts community has sent a letter of protest to the territory’s chief executive condemning China’s detention of artist Ai Weiwei. Meanwhile, China’s state-run news agency has reported that accusations of plagiarism have been leveled at the artist. (Wall Street Journal and Sydney Morning Herald)

Advertisement

Resigning: The Dallas Museum of Art said that Bonnie Pitman was stepping down from her post as director in May for health reasons. (Fort Worth Star-Telegram)

Controversial: A theater in Montreal has withdrawn its invitation to French rocker Bertrand Cantat to appear in a series of plays after a public outcry against Cantat, who was convicted in 2003 in the death of his girlfriend, actress Marie Trintignant. (Agence France-Presse)

Showing support: The Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra and Vienna’s State Opera will stage a benefit concert next month to help the victims of Japan’s earthquake and tsunami. (Associated Press)

Proud: Tenor Juan Diego Florez and his wife have welcomed a baby boy in New York. (ABC 7)

Young Capulet: Oscar nominee Hailee Steinfeld is in talks to star in a new film adaptation of ‘Romeo and Juliet.’ (Hollywood Reporter)

Renovations: The owner of a Los Angeles house designed by architect Paul Revere Williams is planning to restore it after it was damaged in a fire. (Los Angeles Times)

Advertisement

Honored: Radical art group Voina won a major art prize founded by the Russian culture ministry for painting a giant penis on a bridge. (Agence France-Presse)

Artistic differences: An opera scholar disagrees with the Metropolitan Opera’s current production of Rossini’s ‘Le Compte Ory.’ (New York Times)

Passing: Artist John McCraken, who specialized in geometric sculptures, has died at 76. (Los Angeles Times)

Also in the L.A. Times: Music critic Mark Swed reviews the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s ‘Aspects of Adès’; a review of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion; the operatic touches of HBO’s ‘Mildred Pierce.’

-- David Ng

Advertisement