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Charles Giuliano

Bio:

Publisher & Editor. Charles was the director of exhibitions for the New England School of Art & Design at Suffolk University where he taught art history and the humanities. He taugh tModern Art and the Avant-garde for Metropolitan College of Boston University. After many years as a contributor, columnist and editor for a range of print publications from Art New England, Art News, the Boston Phoenix, the Boston Herald Traveler and Patriot Ledger, to mention a few, he went on line with Maverick Arts which evolved into a website.

Recent Articles:

  • April in Paris Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 07th, 2024

    april

  • Season of Hits Planned for Lyric Stage Front Page

    Programming Proven Winners

    By: LYRIC - Apr 06th, 2024

    From Urinetown to Hello Dolly Boston's Lyric stage has programmed a seasons of hits. Unabashedly Artistic Director Courtney O’Connor says, “We’re thrilled to share six stories that focus on character connection and joy told by artists you already know and love and new artists we can’t wait for you to meet."

  • TEETH: When Men Attack, Her Body Bites Back Front Page

    A Pop/Horror Musical at Playwrights Horizons

    By: Jessica Robinson - Apr 05th, 2024

     Drawing inspiration from the 2007 cult-horror film by Mitchell Lichtenstein, this energetic show satirizes purity culture and sexual desire while tossing in a bit of biting commentary on misogyny.  

  • Comedy at Barrington Stage Company Front Page

    Laughter in Pittsfileld

    By: BSC - Apr 03rd, 2024

    Comedy reigns this summer in the Berkshires! Barrington Stage Company (BSC) is pleased to announce that it will be the new home of the Berkshire Comedy Festival, produced by the Long Island Comedy Festival in partnership with BSC. The company will also present special preview performances of Alison Larkin: Grief...A Comedy, written and performed by Berkshire resident, writer, and comedian Alison Larkin, prior to its UK premiere and world tour this summer.

  • Biennial Prilla Smith Brackett Award Front Page

    Davis Museum at Wellesley College

    By: Davis - Apr 02nd, 2024

    The Davis Museum at Wellesley College is proud to announce the third iteration of the biennial Prilla Smith Brackett Award. This biennial award honors an outstanding female-identifying visual artist based in the Greater Boston area. Funded by Prilla Smith Brackett (Wellesley Class of 1964) and administered by the Davis Museum at Wellesley College, the Brackett Award will be given to the artist whose work demonstrates extraordinary artistic vision, talent, and skill. The award winner will be announced in Fall 2024.  

  • Gatsby the Musical Front Page

    American Repertory Theatre

    By: ART - Apr 02nd, 2024

    Gatsby is directed by Tony Award-winning director Rachel Chavkin (Hadestown; Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812; Moby-Dick) with choreography by Tony Award winner Sonya Tayeh (Moulin Rouge!). The production features an original score by international rock star Florence Welch (Florence + The Machine) and Oscar and Grammy Award nominee Thomas Bartlett (Doveman), and a book by Pulitzer Prize winner Martyna Majok (Cost of Living). Keenan Tyler Oliphant is associate director and Camden Gonzales is associate choreographer. Casting will be announced at a later date. 

  • Fooling Around Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 01st, 2024

    fool

  • Kathia St. Hilaire at the Clark Front Page

    Lunder Center at Stone Hil

    By: Clark - Apr 01st, 2024

    "Kathia St. Hilaire is a remarkable young artist who creates captivating works that combine a wide range of media,” said Olivier Meslay, Hardymon Director of the Clark. “She interweaves Haiti’s history and her own personal biography into images that are beautiful, sometimes difficult, and utterly original.”

  • Henrick Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People Front Page

    Stunning Revival on Broadway

    By: Karen Isaacs - Apr 01st, 2024

    Jeremy Strong stars in revival. Audiences may be amazed by how many issues in Ibsen's play equate to issues in our times.

  • Unhurried Grace Front Page

    Patience of a Forest Stream

    By: Cheng Tong - Mar 31st, 2024

    While offering instruction in the various taiji forms I teach, I often refer to a forest stream and urge my students to become it, ever-flowing, to find and then move at the pace of their breath, ever-flowing, just as the stream finds its pace.  The stream does not move from one place to the next; there is no line of demarcation between places.  The stream simply flows.  

  • Cape Ann Museum 2024 Front Page

    Is there Life After Hopper

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 30th, 2024

    With minimal marketing and fanfare the Cape Ann Museum launches its 2024 season with the special exhibition In the Round: 20th Century Cape Ann Sculpture which opens April 6 from 3 to 5 pm. It focuses on major sculptors who lived and worked on Cape Ann. In July there will be a survey of women artists. The museum has pulled back to business as usual following last summer's blockbuster Edward Hopper and Jo Nivison exhibition in collaboration with the Whitney Museum of American Art.

  • Two at Gallery Naga Front Page

    Joseph McNamara Josué Bessiake: A Bird’s Last Look

    By: NAGA - Mar 29th, 2024

    Joseph McNamara is a New York-based, realist painter whose work—often large-scale—is centered on paintings of the industrial landscape and his relationship to it.  His paintings are painstakingly detailed and can take months and even years, to complete.  McNamara uses photographs as aids, however, the paintings are not “photo-realistic”:  each painting strays away from a strict accounting of the subject matter and takes on a life of its own.

  • Morgan Bulkeley at Bernay Fine Art Front Page

    Great Barrimgton Group Show Opens March 30

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 28th, 2024

    Get ready to embark on a whimsical journey through the world of cartoons and illustrations as Bernay Fine Art presents ARToons. This vibrant exhibition promises to enchant both the young and the young at heart.

  • Williamstown Theatre Festival's Beth Hyland Front Page

    Wins L. Arnold Weissberger New Play Award

    By: WTF - Mar 28th, 2024

    Williamstown Theatre Festival is pleased to announce Beth Hyland as the recipient of the 2024 L. Arnold Weissberger New Play Award for her play SYLVIA SYLVIA SYLVIA. Hyland will receive the $10,000 award and the accompanying $10,000 Jay Harris Commission to write a new play.

  • Swan Lake Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 27th, 2024

    swan

  • Escaped Alone at Yale Rep Front Page

    Signifying Nothing

    By: Karen Isaacs - Mar 22nd, 2024

    I admit to still being perplexed. It kept reminding me of the Shakespeare lines from MacBeth, which begin “Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,/Creeps in this petty pace from day to day, To the last syllable of recorded time;” and ends with “It is a tale/ Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, /Signifying nothing.”

  • Ringling Museum in Sarasota, Florida Front Page

    A Three Ring Circus of Art

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 22nd, 2024

    The Ringling Museum in Sarasota, Florida is one of the most unique, and curious collections in America. It is sited on a manicured, tropical, 66-acre campus that conflates nature, leisure, warmth and depth in Old Master paintings, Ancient Mediterranean art, Asian art, 19th and  20th century art, prints, drawings and photography, as well as extensive circus related memorabilia. There are period rooms with collections of decorative arts. Through expansion it is now the 20th largest American museum.

  • The Hot Wing King Front Page

    At Hartford Stage

    By: Karen Isaacs - Mar 22nd, 2024

    It is easy to see why this play won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 2021. The play is about family, friends and dreams. It is about the challenges we all face in navigating the potential pitfalls in families and the difficulties of new romantic relationships.

  • Power of Stillness Front Page

    Present Moment Awareness

    By: Cheng Tong - Mar 21st, 2024

    One exercise I suggest to my students is a “slow by slow” day each week:  walk just a little slower than you usually walk; speak just a little slower than you usually speak; eat just a little slower than you usually eat.  Not slow motion, and not so anyone else would notice, but slower than usual. 

  • Berkshire Jazz Festival Front Page

    Tickets on Sale

    By: Ed Bride - Mar 18th, 2024

    Starting with an open jam session and ending with a jazz brunch at Dottie’s, the events include the popular Jazz Crawl, a swing dance, the jazz prodigy concert introducing two (!) young musicians to Berkshires audiences, and headline concerts featuring Brandon Goldberg and Marcus Roberts. The box office is open, and you can find a link at the end of this newsletter.

  • Erin Go Bragh Yourself Front Page

    Luck of the Irish

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 18th, 2024

    Once a year I get to celebrate my half Irish heritage with a vengeance. That means corned beef and cabbage and raucous singalong at the Freight Yard Pub in North Adams.

  • Pooches at the Clark Front Page

    Walking the Dogs

    By: Clark - Mar 18th, 2024

    On Friday, April 19, the Clark Art Institute offers free activities as part of its April School Vacation Week programming. At 10 am, the Clark hosts Earth Walk with Dogs, offering three walks through its trails, ranging in difficulty. From 11 am–1 pm, the Clark presents a pop-up display of dogs and nature-themed works on paper in the Manton Study Center for Works on Paper, located in the Manton Research Center.

  • Conflating Lovecraft, Mugar and Houellebecq Front Page

    iterary Sources for an Artist’s Work  

    By: Martin Mugar - Mar 18th, 2024

    Of course my painting is not in the realm of the noxious monsters of Lovecraft but the eventual push of the visual event off the surface seems to speak to a similar aggressive desire to reach out and engage the viewer. It also begins to abandon the pleasant color field that had dominated my work from the beginning of the millennium. 

  • Mother by Kelsey Shultis at Eclipse Gallery Front Page

    New Paintings and Works on Paper

    By: Eclipse - Mar 15th, 2024

    The paintings of Mother explore the diverse aspects of Motherhood, from the Divine Feminine to the Kitchen Witch.

  • Dara Haskins at Corridor ’62 Front Page

    When Life Gives You Lemons You Paint Them

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 12th, 2024

    It was energizing to meet the 31-year-old artist, Dara Haskins, who was born in Baltimore and now lives in Philadelphia. We found it impossible to resist her charm and enthusiasm. She was eager to sell me a small painting but I fended off stating that I was there as a critic. Her intent is to raise enough money to return to Cuba where she recently resided for a month.

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