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Art News from Elsewhere


Creative Aging
Via metromag.com
May 4
“[C]reativity does not decrease with memory loss, making it a great platform to build self-esteem and community,” writes Rose Hansen of the Walker’s program for people with Alzheimer’s. “The work can also evoke memories buried deep beneath the surface.”
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Museums and the Economy
Via umn.edu
May 2
We all know the intangible benefits of visiting museums—inspiration, education, a chance to get out of the house—but a new study finds a more concrete benefit: Last year, museums provided a $674 million boost to Minnesota’s economy.
VA
Art News from Elsewhere

NEA Cuts PBS Funds
Via nytimes.com
Apr 26
The National Endowment for the Arts announced major cuts to PBS programming Wednesday, with shows like “Live From Lincoln Center” losing all NEA funding, and others, like the documentary series POV and Independent Lens, seeing deep reductions.
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Berlin Lab Back On
Via hyperallergic.com
Apr 5
BMW Guggenheim Lab cancelled its planned appearance in Berlin’s Kreuzberg neighborhood after reportedly receiving threats. But now the project’s back, with a planned residency in June and July in Prenzlauer Berg.
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Franken to Arts Advocates
Via youtube.com
Mar 27
U.S. Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) couldn’t attend Arts Advocacy Day in St. Paul last month, but he did cut a video greeting, in which he discussed his plan for an “overhaul” of No Child Left Behind that’d include a focus on the arts.
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Skinny Venus
Via guardian.co.uk
Mar 9
Botticelli’s Venus slimmed down through photo-imaging “makes you realise how remote in attitudes to the body the great nudes of art are from contemporary ideals of beauty, and how bizarre and limiting our own perspective has become.”
EC


Art News from Elsewhere



Simulated Brain
Via nature.com
Feb 27
Is Henry Markram’s Human Brain Project — an initiative to build a supercomputer simulation that integrates everything known about the human brain — genius or, as some neuroscientists claim, “crap”? “Simulation-based research is an inevitability,” he contends.

