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Arts Blog

Reviews and news from the world of the arts

Modernism à la mode

  • 0 comments
  • Posted by Veronica Horwell
  • 20 November 2008

The Allure of Chanel
Paul Morand
Pushkin Press,200pp, £12

Coco Chanel: an outsized ego, even for the world of haute couture

Paul Morand first met Gabrielle Chanel at a New Year's Eve party in 1921 at her salon in the rue Cambon, Paris. She was almost 40 by then, and for a decade had created her own, and then other women's, clothes more by appropriation and elimination than by design. As a provincial kept woman, she had worn adaptations of male sportswear; later, opening a hat shop with her English lover [...]

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Adieu Mitch Mitchell

  • 1 comments
  • Posted by Harry Williams
  • 17 November 2008

All roads lead to Google

Imperial Rome has been rebuilt. Never mind the tourists, the ruins, the choking traffic: if you really want to get to grips with 4th century Rome all you have to do is download Google Earthh. Their new programme 'Ancient Rome 3D’ allows the virtual tourist to swoop amongst the 7000 digitally reconstructed buildings as they stood on the morning of April 1st [...]

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Is Broadway dying?

  • 3 comments
  • Posted by Ruth Collins
  • 10 November 2008

Change has come...for the arts?

Obama’s victory at the US elections this week has been tipped as the dawn of a new era in both North American and world politics, but what will it mean for the arts? American literature, in particular, suffered greatly during Bush's tenure, Horace Engdahl at the Nobel Academy scorned its literary efforts as "parochial" when announcing the prize shortlist this year. During the [...]

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A load of Banksy?

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  • Posted by Ruth Collins
  • 03 November 2008

Taking liberties

In a week of controversy fuelled by the Brand-Ross duo, it seems pertinent to question the extent to which we should exercise our freedom of expression. Certainly, when Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi decided to fund the 1977 film The Message starring Anthony Quinn as the Prophet Mohammed, he never guessed that the film would have incited such violent public outrage. Protesting against its [...]

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More than just the Beatles

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  • Posted by Ruth Collins
  • 24 October 2008

Cultured crowds flock to Merseyside, while the people of Madrid occupy themselves in daubing fibre-glass cows

Capitalising on Culture

Liverpool has crowned its successful year as European Capital of Culture by winning the Visitor Impact Award at the North West Tourism Awards this week. The urban regeneration carried out to accommodate this year’s cultural programme has made Liverpool a tourist hub with record-breaking numbers of visitors pouring into the North West. Who could blame them, with a host of must-see exhibitions included in the [...]

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Blooming in the desert

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  • Posted by Ruth Collins
  • 20 October 2008

Houellebecq and Henri-Levy are raging against the French media, while Qatar gets a new publishing house. Ruth Collins rounds up seven days in the arts.

Eastern promise

This week the publishing house Bloomsbury announced their decision to launch Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing, a new Arabic-language partner company in Qatar. This may have less to do with raising the profile of native Arabic writers than it does with tapping into the riches currently circulating in Gulf states. Yet it is also in keeping with the trend set at the London Book Fair earlier this [...]

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'Unruly Slavic eyebrows'

  • 2 comments
  • Posted by Annie McDermott
  • 13 October 2008

Mocha chocca libraries

Many were terrified by the picture of new "21st century libraries" painted by the Secretary of State for Culture, Andy Burnham, this week: libraries modelled on Waterstones and Virgin Megastores, filled with mobile-phone-talkers, McDonalds-eaters, Wii-players and Youtube-watchers, with books featuring low down on the list of priorities.

More terrifying still, however, is the fact that this sort of thing seems to work: in [...]

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Smoking Kurt Cobain

  • 2 comments
  • Posted by Annie McDermott
  • 06 October 2008

Hermetic America? Nobel Prize controversy

Nobel Prize judge Horace Engdahl’s criticism of American literature this week has incensed the literary world. His claims that American novels were ‘too isolated, too insular’ merited no more than a one-word response from author Giles Foden, and Harvard Professor Werner Sollors, specialist in American literature, complained of Engdahl’s ‘historical and literary myopia’.

But perhaps Engdahl has a point – or more [...]

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Going underground

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  • Posted by Annie McDermott
  • 30 September 2008

Questionable pop ballads and Deptford's very own subterranean feel

'A song from the darkest hour': Brown's party playlist

All poets want to be rock stars, and all rock stars want to be poets. Which is fine. There will always be a place in the world for ageing poets in leather jackets, and no-one would begrudge a rock star a few too many bad metaphors. It’s more perilous by far, however, when it’s not poets but politicians who decide they [...]

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New hope for the West End?

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  • Posted by Annie McDermott
  • 22 September 2008

The success of Ivanov this week is a beacon of hope for those who worried that the West End is drowning in a glittering sea of overpriced musicals.

Tom Stoppard’s version of the Chekhov play is part of the Donmar's residency at Wyndham's theatre, an ambitious project that aims, says director Michael Grandage, to bring about a return to straight theatre in the West End and make it accessible to all.

Tickets will be sold at Donmar rather than West End prices, with 130 tickets per performance going for £10, which means that each show will [...]

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Sliced from the curriculum

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  • Posted by Graeme Allister
  • 15 September 2008

Armed with three complaints (two about knife crime, one about a goldfish being flushed down the toilet) Britain’s biggest exam board has removed a poem by Carol Ann Duffy from its GCSE English syllabus. The loudest complaints came from one Pat Schofield, an exam invigilator who described the poem, "Education for Leisure", as "horrendous". The poem details feelings of internalised rage and inadequacy as a man signs on to [...]

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Taking aim at Sarah

  • 6 comments
  • Posted by Graeme Allister
  • 08 September 2008

It’s been a tough time for wise-cracking American talk-show hosts of late. Letterman, Leno and Stewart have found Obama just a little too perfect to make the butt of their jokes and their lines about McCain’s age were getting a little, well, old. But then along came Sarah, the answer to their prayers. They’ve been taking aim at her lack of experience, her image and of course her gun-love. [...]

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Romantic comedy can survive

  • 1 comments
  • Posted by Graeme Allister
  • 29 August 2008

America could be on the verge of falling in love with Gavin and Stacey

Gavin and Stacey in the USA

James Corden’s already perilously large ego may be about to go super-sized. If the critics are anything to go by, America may be on the verge of falling in love with Gavin and Stacey. The LA Times called the show, which has just started on BBC America, “funny, touching and welcome proof that the romantic comedy can and will survive irony, Botox, Judd [...]

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Drink acid or read lesbian fiction?

  • 1 comments
  • Posted by Graeme Allister
  • 18 August 2008

Enthusiasm is in short supply, as the arts world throws up a muted defence of the North and a tempered celebration of The Well of Loneliness

Grim up North?

In the week when David Cameron’s favourite think tank decided the North of England should be packed up and moved nearer the Thames, there’s been little outrage from the Northern arts world. Even the Liverpool Cultural Company, responsible for the events marking Liverpool’s year as European City of Culture had nothing to say about the fact said city was “beyond revival”. Perhaps it’s too much [...]

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Letching at the theatre

  • 1 comments
  • Posted by Graeme Allister
  • 11 August 2008

Rothko vs. Warhol

Hadrian? Sorry mate, you’re only the warm-up act; the real contenders for this year’s "must-see" exhibition are Mark Rothko and Andy Warhol. First up is the Rothko exhibition at Tate Modern. The gallery, which already has a Rothko room, is hosting the first significant exhibition of the artist’s work for two decades. Warhol, being celebrated at the Hayward, is a little more familiar. The [...]

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Recent Posts

Modernism à la mode

  • By Veronica Horwell
  • 20 November 2008

Adieu Mitch Mitchell

  • By Harry Williams
  • 17 November 2008

Is Broadway dying?

  • By Ruth Collins
  • 10 November 2008

A load of Banksy?

  • By Ruth Collins
  • 03 November 2008

More than just the Beatles

  • By Ruth Collins
  • 24 October 2008

Blooming in the desert

  • By Ruth Collins
  • 20 October 2008

'Unruly Slavic eyebrows'

  • By Annie McDermott
  • 13 October 2008