NYT > Arts
-
Arts, Briefly: Open Ears, Cover Eyes: Jesus Lizard Returns
The Jesus Lizard, the provocative and unpredictable Chicago rock n roll band, has announced it is reuniting.
-
Arts, Briefly: Football Dominates the Nightly Ratings
Football topped the ratings on Sunday, boosting CBS and NBC during prime time.
-
Preservation and Development, Engaged in a Delicate Dance
Over a decade of whirlwind development, the Landmarks Preservation Commission has repeatedly played dance partner to a potent mix of preservationists, developers and city politicians.
-
Preserving the City: Houses of Worship Choosing to Avoid Landmark Status
Many argue that the citys Landmarks Preservation Commission has not done enough to protect churches from the overheated real estate market.
-
Getting to Carnegie via YouTube
The YouTube Symphony Orchestra, a project that will allow users to audition by uploading videos of themselves performing a composition by Tan Dun, was announced on Monday in London and New York.
-
Rescuing a Landmark From Time and the Elements
Part of the 90-year-old studio of sculptor and Whitney Museum of American Art founder Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney is being restored.
-
Honor Just to Be Asked In, as Film Academy Tightens Its Ranks
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is becoming more artsy and indie-minded just as much of the Hollywood establishment hoped to make it more commercial.
-
Preserving the City: Church and State
Many argue that the citys Landmarks Preservation Commission has not done enough to protect churches from the overheated real estate market.
-
Honor Just to Be Asked in, as Film Academy Tightens Its Ranks
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is becoming more artsy and indie-minded just as much of the Hollywood establishment hoped to make it more commercial.
-
Crumbling South Bronx as a Muse
Ray Mortensons photographs of the South Bronx in the early 1980s are featured in a new exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York.
-
Books of The Times: A Media Mogul With Relentless Moxie
Michael Wolff has written a supercilious yet star-struck portrait of Rupert Murdoch, the planets most notorious press baron.
-
Dance Review | George Balanchine's 'The Nutcracker': Reveling in Winter in All Its Warmth
Watching New York City Ballets George Balanchines The Nutcracker, I marveled anew at its sheer mastery of stagecraft.
-
Music Review | 'Tristan und Isolde': In His Met Debut, Barenboim Drives Tristan
Daniel Barenboims performance of Wagners Tristan und Isolde was rhapsodic and impassioned.
-
With Thanksgiving in the Past, Moviegoers Turn to a Christmas Comedy
Four Christmases, a holiday comedy starring Vince Vaughn and Reese Witherspoon, led the box office on a solid post-Thanksgiving weekend.
-
A Tribute to John Lennon Keeps to Its Quixotic Path
The 28th installment of an annual show remembering John Lennon is being planned for Sunday, even though corporate backing has evaporated and ticket sales are sluggish.
-
Rosenbergs Seen as Puppets, Literally This Time
The Julius and Ethel Rosenberg atomic bomb spy case is the subject of a musical tragedy staged by the Czechoslovak-American Marionette Theater.
-
Theater Review | 'London Cries': The Beggars and Strugglers Have a Music-Hall Opera
London Cries, an Old Vic Theater commission, gets its Dickensian flair from its source material, Henry Mayhews classic survey London Labour and the London Poor.
-
Music Review | Electrum Duo: Flute and Percussion in a Role Switch
The Electrum Duo the relatively unorthodox pairing of a flutist, Sophia Anastasia, and a percussionist, Ralph Sorrentino covered an impressive range of styles in 10 works composed since 1960.
-
Lipstick Fans Delayed Gratification
Whether NBCs Lipstick Jungle returns later this season or next season will largely depend on whether it increases its overall audience, and not just among those watching on a delayed basis.
-
Bridge: Two Top Players Keep Piling Up the Points
On the last day of the American Contract Bridge Leagues Fall North American Championships, two major titles were being decided.
