All posts tagged: Arthur

A Fondazione Prada Exhibition Pairs Arthur Jafa and Richard Prince

A Fondazione Prada Exhibition Pairs Arthur Jafa and Richard Prince

What is appropriate to appropriate? That question is the one that animates practices of Richard Prince and Arthur Jafa, who are currently showing their work together at the Fondazione Prada in Venice.   At first glance, the pairing might seem like an unconventional one, even though both artists are well known for appropriating others’ images. “I’m surprised that people are surprised,” Jafa told me in a video interview ahead of the exhibition. “I think it’s pretty apparent that a large part of what I do, at least inside the art world, just wouldn’t be possible without Richard’s precedent.” Related Articles “They are both absolutely scavengers for and collectors of images from every possible source,” Nancy Spector, the exhibition’s curator, said in a recent interview.   Jafa and Prince met during the debut exhibition of Jafa’s AGHDRA (2021), a video of an ocean made of digital rocks that premiered that year at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise in Harlem. Jafa thought Prince might just come to watch about 10–15 minutes, but Prince stayed in the gallery for the …

Sci-Fi Writer Arthur C. Clarke Predicts the Future in 1964: Artificial Intelligence, Instantaneous Global Communication, Remote Work, Singularity & More

Sci-Fi Writer Arthur C. Clarke Predicts the Future in 1964: Artificial Intelligence, Instantaneous Global Communication, Remote Work, Singularity & More

Are you feel­ing con­fi­dent about the future? No? We under­stand. Would you like to know what it was like to feel a deep cer­tain­ty that the decades to come were going to be filled with won­der and the fan­tas­tic? Well then, gaze upon this clip from the BBC Archive YouTube chan­nel of sci-fi author Arthur C. Clarke pre­dict­ing the future in 1964. Although we best know him for writ­ing 2001: A Space Odyssey, the 1964 tele­vi­sion-view­ing pub­lic would have known him for his futur­ism and his tal­ent for calm­ly explain­ing all the great things to come. In the late 1940s, he had already pre­dict­ed telecom­mu­ni­ca­tion satel­lites. In 1962 he pub­lished his col­lect­ed essays, Pro­files of the Future, which con­tains many of the ideas in this clip. Here he cor­rect­ly pre­dicts the ease with which we can be con­tact­ed wher­ev­er in the world we choose to, where we can con­tact our friends “any­where on earth even if we don’t know their loca­tion.” What Clarke doesn’t pre­dict here is how “loca­tion” isn’t a thing when we’re on …

Reckonwrong: How Long Has It Been? review – wonky delight with shades of Arthur Russell and Robert Wyatt | Music

Reckonwrong: How Long Has It Been? review – wonky delight with shades of Arthur Russell and Robert Wyatt | Music

A decade ago, Londoner Alex Peringer intrigued underground club circles with his outlandish take on dance music. Structured around dizzying time signatures and wry tales of unfulfilling lovers and pills gone wrong, his tracks referenced everything from UK funky to new wave and sea shanties. Then came several years of near silence – now broken by this self-released debut album, How Long Has It Been? The record acknowledges this break not just in the title, but also in its sound. On first listen, it couldn’t seem more different to Peringer’s early work, with those discordant constructions now replaced by the warm tinkering of the Rhodes electric piano and ostensibly earnest sentiment. But traces of that eccentricity still linger in this collection of atmospheric bedroom-pop ballads. The record takes winter as its theme, though it feels fitting for this transitional time of year, with its stories of introspection and dodgy weather set against soft, simple arrangements. A handful of subtly wonky elements stop it from sounding overly polished or guileless: Before and After slips in a …

Nathan Lane in Arthur Miller Revival

Nathan Lane in Arthur Miller Revival

Few if any modern plays retain their scalding currency decade after decade like Arthur Miller’s heartrending commentary on the hollowness of the American Dream, Death of a Salesman. Joe Mantello’s psychologically probing Broadway revival takes place more than ever inside the head of its weary protagonist Willy Loman, played by Nathan Lane in an expertly judged performance that hits every lacerating note of pathos without denying the self-deluding character’s belligerence or entirely muffling the actor’s innate humor. He’s flanked by a superlative ensemble in a transfixing production directed with piercing clarity. In addition to being a play uncannily keyed into whatever period in which it’s staged, Salesman is also a work that touches different nerves depending on an audience member’s age. I’ve seen productions in four different decades, all with formidable casts, but I can’t recall one in which the jagged collision of past and present felt so unsettling, or the dissonance between comforting illusion and cold reality so cruel.  The tragedy of the ordinary man that the play represents is all around us if we care to …

10 Expert Habits From Arthur C. Brooks to Live Life With Purpose

10 Expert Habits From Arthur C. Brooks to Live Life With Purpose

Arthur C. Brooks has made a living by studying the myriad mysteries and meanings of life. Writing weekly columns about happiness for The Atlantic, penning three books about how to craft a better life, and teaching a class at the Harvard Business School literally called “Leadership and Happiness” all make Brooks well-equipped to handle the rigors of modern existence. “I’ll spend the rest of my life writing, speaking, and teaching about the science of happiness,” Brooks said in a recent video chat. His latest venture, a book titled The Meaning of Your Life: Finding Purpose In An Age of Emptiness, is out today. Per the book’s description, its purpose is to use science and evidence-based approaches to help you, dear reader, “find the meaning you need to live a happy, fulfilling life.” Now 61, the man with an eclectic background—he is also an accomplished French hornist, and in the ’90s, he did military research on a special project for the Air Force—shares his expert habits that can turn your life from unfulfilling to unstoppable. Become …

Doctor Who’s Arthur Darvill: ‘Me, Matt and Karen would jump at chance to return’

Doctor Who’s Arthur Darvill: ‘Me, Matt and Karen would jump at chance to return’

“I imbued it with a kind of low-level panic attack the whole time,” Doctor Who star Arthur Darvill says of his audition to play companion Rory Williams. “That seemed to work.” “My impression of it was that Rory was very much the eyes of the audience, and the person on the outside questioning everything,” he recalls “And I just found that really funny, in this show where everything’s so madcap, and everyone just goes, ‘Oh yeah, well, of course there’s aliens here,’ to be the person going, ‘Well, hang on a minute, what is actually going on? This is really panic-inducing!’” Sitting down for an in-depth chat for Radio Times’ Doctor Who Insiders, Darvill looks back on his time as Rory Williams, husband to Karen Gillan’s Amy Pond and companion in his own right. He starred on the show from 2010 to 2012, alongside Matt Smith’s Eleventh Doctor. Before he was cast, he and Smith were already good friends after starring together in the stage show Swimming with Sharks, which made the audition process at …

Legendary king dismissed as myth like King Arthur proven real by archaeologists | World | News

Legendary king dismissed as myth like King Arthur proven real by archaeologists | World | News

Archaeologists have discovered a royal decree bearing the signature of a once-legendary African monarch – retrieved directly from a centuries-old refuse pile along the Nile’s edge. The remarkable discovery, uncovered by a Polish research team from the University of Warsaw at Old Dongola in northern Sudan, carries the name of King Qashqash – a sovereign previously regarded as mythical, comparable to Britain’s King Arthur. Specialists have determined the document dates to the late 16th or early 17th century, establishing it as the earliest tangible archaeological proof of Qashqash’s genuine rule. Instead of chronicling military conquests, the Arabic decree, written by a royal scribe named Hamad, instructs a man called Khidr to exchange textiles for livestock and deliver everything to its rightful owner, concluding with a sharp directive: “do not hesitate!” Scholars suggest that instruction provides insight into the genuine royal authority and administration of a sparsely recorded period, reports The Jerusalem Post. The study describes it as a “rare glimpse into Sudanic kingship during one of the least‐documented periods in Sudanese history” and, echoing a …

Peaky Blinders creator reveals plan for Arthur Shelby changed while writing The Immortal Man

Peaky Blinders creator reveals plan for Arthur Shelby changed while writing The Immortal Man

*Spoiler warning for Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man* One of the biggest questions fans had going into Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man was how it would handle the absence of one of the show’s biggest characters: Arthur Shelby Jr. (Paul Anderson). The eldest Shelby sibling had always been a violent and troubled figure, sometimes proving to be a thorn in the side of his younger brother Tommy (Cillian Murphy). Peaky Blinders season 6 ended with Arthur still alive but mourning the departure of his brother Tommy. However, in the opening of The Immortal Man, we learn that Arthur is dead and buried in Tommy’s garden – initially suggested to be either through Arthur’s own actions or an accident in a struggle with Tommy. As the film goes on, we discover a much darker truth… Cillian Murphy as Tommy in Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man. Robert Viglasky/Netflix © 2026. “I’ve been avoiding saying that for so long,” Knight said on The Immortal Man podcast, as noted by TUDUM. “Sometimes something occurs to you that explains what you’ve …

Doctor Who’s Arthur Darvill on first impressions of Matt Smith and Karen Gillan

Doctor Who’s Arthur Darvill on first impressions of Matt Smith and Karen Gillan

Doctor Who star Arthur Darvill has looked back on his bond with co-stars Matt Smith and Karen Gillan, recalling the instant chemistry between them. The trio starred together in the BBC sci-fi from 2010 to 2012, heralding in a new era of the series with then-showrunner Steven Moffat. While Smith starred as the Eleventh Doctor, taking over from David Tennant, Gillan starred as companion Amy Pond and Darvill played her husband (and, later, a companion in his own right), Rory Williams. But, before starring in Doctor Who together, Darvill and Smith met when they were cast in the stage adaptation of Swimming With Sharks. Speaking exclusively to Radio Times, Darvill recalled of his bond with Smith: “I just felt like we were kindred spirits. We were thrown into this play – it was quite difficult process, the play, it was called Swimming with Sharks. It was Christian Slater and Helen Baxendale and Matt and me. “It was my first time on a West End stage. I was like, ‘Yes, this is great.’ The first days …

Here’s how Dutch art detective Arthur Brand tracks down stolen masterpieces : NPR

Here’s how Dutch art detective Arthur Brand tracks down stolen masterpieces : NPR

For 20 years, Dutch art detective Arthur Brand has acted as an intermediary between the police and people who know where stolen artwork might be hiding. Rebecca Rosman for NPR hide caption toggle caption Rebecca Rosman for NPR AMSTERDAM – In his modest IKEA-furnished apartment, Arthur Brand paces to distract himself. “I’m nervous,” he says, with the honesty of a man who has learned that bravado is useless in his line of work. He lights a cigarette, leans out the window, and scans the street below. “The waiting is the hardest part.” Brand, 56, has made a career out of waiting: for a phone call, a knock at the door, and, every once in a blue moon, a Picasso or a Van Gogh left discreetly on his doorstep. “Those are the moments you realize it’s worth it,” he says. Until, of course, everything resets, and the waiting game begins again. In another life, Brand says, he’ll take his mother’s advice and “find a normal job.” But in this one, he’s helped recover stolen art for …