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“No More Rosy Celestial Fantasies” At the Frick
By: Esther Larson The Frick is bringin’ New Yorkers back to the ‘80s – not the scrunchies, slap bracelets, and MC Hammer pants trends of course – in classic, classy Frick style, they’re bringing back Johannes Vermeer’s piece “Girl with a Pearl Earring” for the first time to New York since 1984. In the recent NY Times piece r...
October 28, 2013 -
Arts & Architecture Month Feature
By: Katy Hartman He always told me there was light in everything, even in darkness. I looked for it in the musty space behind the refrigerator, in the cabinet under the sink where pipes snaked through stale air, in the closet where a lopsided ironing board lurked in a corner. I hid from my brother in a closet among sweaters that still smelled of my mothe...
October 17, 2013 -
City Rhythms: Art & Architecture
On October 17, 2013 CFW looked at the sectors of the Arts and Architecture, by featuring several key representatives doing exciting work in these arenas: Mason Jar Music and the 2nd Avenue Subway Project. Rebecca Locke was also announced as the inaugural Artist-In-Residence for the Center for Faith & Work. A SUMMARY of the evening is HERE...
October 14, 2013 -
Arts & Architecture Month Feature
THE STRONG ONE is a story that follows a young boy as his imagination takes him on adventures with his best friend, a brontosaurus, and begins to help him deal with the struggles of growing up. Directed by Nicholas Sailer, and based on an original poem by Tim Reavis, this story captures a visual glimpse of one child’s imaginative adventures. THE STRONG ONE was filmed, ...
October 10, 2013 -
Echoes of Eden
By: Kyle Werner I recently read Jerram Barrs’ new book Echoes of Eden: Reflections on Christianity, Literature, and the Arts, and found it to be immensely inspiring. Tim Keller hailed this book as “the most accessible, readable, and yet theologically robust work on Christianity and the arts that you will be able to find.” I would a...
September 17, 2013 -
Badly Broken
By: Daniel Lee and Chris McNerney In 2008, we were introduced to a high school chemistry teacher who turned drug dealer after being diagnosed with advanced lung cancer. Breaking Bad’s Walter White was just an average man who wore unflattering patterned shirts and an awkward mustache. Slowly but surely, however, the mild-mannered husband and father transformed i...
August 28, 2013 -
The Broadway/Hollywood Relationship
By: Dan Watkins Patrick Healy's excellent New York Times feature explores the increasingly dynamic relationship between Hollywood and Broadway. Although stage musicals have spawned films and vice versa for some time, the advent of the Broadway “mega-hit” has generated significantly more studio involvement in the development and financing of musicals...
August 9, 2013 -
NYC Arts When Bloomberg Leaves Office
By: Whitney Britt What happens when Mike Bloomberg, the most visible public figure in NYC who supports the arts with his Office, his attendance, and his own personal philanthropy? The mayor is an outspoken advocate of the arts as an economic driver of the city, and has put his money where his mouth is, donating over $200 million in personal fortune, as well as ...
July 4, 2013 -
Free Shakespeare?
By: Lauren Gill For 17 years, Shakespeare in the Parking Lot has been performed by The Drilling Company to audiences using empty parking spots in NYC’s municipal lots. These free shows are now being asked by the city to pay for the space they use… even though those spaces are empty. The New York Times discusses the conflict between the city, lookin...
June 26, 2013 -
Pilot Season’s Lack of Diversity
By: Lauren Gill Thirty-five new prime time television shows will be showing on the major networks in the fall and the lack of diversity and reinforcement of typical stereotypes is fairly startling. In The New TV Season, One Stereotype at a Time, Mike Hale points out only two of the 35 shows that will be premiering have minority actors as their main leads. His ...
June 20, 2013