Fuse Visual Arts: Strandbeests " Theo Jansen's Divine Machinery
Theo Jansen's kinetic sculptures delightfully blur the conventional lines that divide art, science, and storytelling.
Theo Jansen's kinetic sculptures delightfully blur the conventional lines that divide art, science, and storytelling.
Madonna's show made for spectacular eye and ear candy. But what was it all about? That's where things got a little hazy.
This modest film manages to hold the viewer's attention, not to mention his or her compassion, throughout.
What seems to be a constant is a feeling that it is miraculous that these works have come into being, and that they are unlike any other kind of drawing.
Israeli Stage has opened its sixth season, which is dedicated exclusively to female playwrights, with a haunting work that examines the complicity of an ordinary German in the Holocaust.
It's the rare breed of rock band that makes such meaningful music so deep into its career.
These drawings are invitations to view the world in an active way, to encourage us to exercise (and stretch) our minds.
Boston Ballet's reconstructed versions of Yakobson's Pas de Quatre and four Choreographic Miniatures were a revelation.
Rarely is an actor so completely miscast in such a pivotal role.
A fascinating documentary in which you get both a Paul Taylor dance and the making of the dance.
"It was a dream of mine for many years to present the very best Asian dancers such as Cloud Gate for our audience and for dancers in the Pioneer Valley."
One of the hardest things to do as a writer of contemporary fiction is to create characters who are good.
is one high-energy spectacle: it is far more of a performance art piece than a 'well made' play.
Singer-songwriter Jackie Greene's new tunes are comfortable without being lazy -- this is a musician who flourishes in a more relaxed environment.
From the opening moment of this show, suspension of disbelief flies out the window and never returns.
Playwright Deborah Zoe Laufer has done a marvelous job of blending weighty ideas into a very human context.
Love and Money is a short play, lengthened beyond one-act duration by stuffing a Cole Porter interlude into its middle.'
Claims that Stephan Micus erases international boundaries and makes one-world music get it backward. You visit his world on his records.
Here is a random roster of playgoing pests, may Thespis strike each of them dumb.
Neither dancers nor the dance audience are out on the barricades demanding more and better dance coverage.
John Taylor introduces readers to an amazing array of sensibilities and life histories in a babel of languages and from an atlas of nations.
James Lecesne's one-man show delivers just what it promises....a lot of laughs and a few tears as well.
You could walk from Inman Square to Harvard, see Muddy Waters or John Lee Hooker play, and have your whole worldview changed.
There's no question Jon Stewart had the attention of millions but, all kidding aside, was he a part of the political game or just a color commentator?
This anthology is thought-provoking and often moving; a spearhead into a relatively undiscussed new demographic.