Ronan Tynan: Surgeon, Athlete, and Yes, Irish Tenor

Ronan Tynan Performance and Talk

Once again BU offered a full cultural menu last night.   I attended a concert and talk by tenor, Ronan Tynan, at the Tsai Center sponsored by the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center.  Many know of Tynan as one of the Irish Tenors but there is a lot more to this talented and hardworking artist.  He is a champion equestrian,  18-time Paralymbics Gold medalist, and a medical doctor.  Tynan is the embodyment of a happy fusion of art and science.

Boston University Baroque Orchestra

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Professor Martin Pearlman. Image from Bostonbaroque.org

I then ran to Marsh Chapel to hear the Boston University Baroque Orchestra conducted by Professor Martin Pearlman, music director of the acclaimed Boston Baroque.  It was a marvelous evening.

Medical Students Improve Diagnostic Ability By Looking at Art

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Public Domain Image by Louis Schanker from Wikimedia Commons

McLean's, the Canadian current affairs magazine, has an interesting article on the value of art history courses for medical students.  One study showed a 38% improvement in diagnostic ability for a group of Harvard medical students who had completed an art history course.

"Out of the Hospital and Into the Museum"

Harold Reddicliffe: Shock of the Real

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Three Decades of Paintings

I wanted to remind everyone about Professor Harold Reddicliffe's opening on Thursday, November 18, at 6:00 p.m.  More than 80 pieces of his work dating from 1981 will be up from November 19 -- January 16, in the Faye, Jo., and James Stone Gallery, 855 Commonwealth Avenue.

Professor Reddicliffe, a highly valued School of Visual Arts faculty member,  is a 2010 recipient of a Massachusetts Cultural Council Artist Fellowship in Painting.

“My recent paintings explore the transformation that occurs when ordinary objects are subjected to extraordinary scrutiny.”  -- Harold Reddicliffe

Science Must Embrace Art Says John Maeda

John Maeda, best known for his work on the computer game Second Life as well as his book, The Laws of Simplicity, makes the case for a smaller distinction between science and art in this November 14, article from The Guardian.

John Maeda: Innovation is born when art meets science

Artistic Success: Inspiration or Perspiration?

Talent without effort yields nothing but what happens when exhaustive effort is applied without benefit of talent?

The Wall Street Journal takes a look at this age-old question.  (In the meantime, keep working.)

No You Can't: Is Genius a Simple Matter of Hard Work? Not a Chance

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Public-Domain-Image.com Photographer Unlisted

BU’s Boston Center For American Performance Opens 2010/11 Season With C.P. Taylor’s “Good”

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One of the more discomfiting features of evil is how ordinary it is.  How did so many "good" people acquiesce to Hitler's savagery? British playwright C.P. Taylor bravely addresses this question in his 1981 play, "Good."

I attended the opening of "Good" last Saturday, staged by our own  Boston Center for American Performance, and directed by its artistic founder and BU School of Theatre director, Jim Petosa.   It was a vibrant production of a great play and an example of what a student/faculty collaboration can achieve.  Don't miss it.

Good runs through November 21, Wednesdays and Thursdays at 7:30 p.m.;
 Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., and Sundays at 2 p.m., at the Boston University Theatre, Stewart F. Lane and Bonnie Comley Studio 210, 264 Huntington Ave., Boston. (By
 T, Green Line E trolley, Symphony stop, or Orange Line, Mass Ave stop). Tickets are available by calling 617-933-8600 or here.

This Just In

I am at this moment visiting the new Art of the America's Wing at the Museum of Fine Arts.   The building is magnificent.  Famed Architect Lord Norman Foster's characteristic eye for detail is evident throughout.  This is a huge achievement for the Museum and for the City of Boston.

In his remarks, Congressman Michael Capuano hailed the new Wing as a symbol of welcome to all.  He noted that growing up as the son and grandson of shoemakers, he did not always feel welcome at the MFA.  He expressed the hope that all New Englanders will come to view the museum as their own.

The good intentions of the Wing are clear.  Bridging the cultures in this hemisphere of strangers is a worthy and overdue endeavor.  To an observer of my background, the exhibition's suggestion of equivalence between the 18th century art and culture of Mexico and South America and that of the fledgling 13 American colonies is a little out of balance.  But hometown pride is understandable especially in this splendid  moment of achievement.

The Quai Branly museum (of world cultures) in Paris, unwittingly tells us more about how the locals  --in this case the French --  see "other" world cultures than it does about the cultures themselves.  While there is some of that here, the long history of genuine interest in world cultures in New England encourages me to view the Wing as the opening of a friendly conversation that will further open Boston to the world and the world to Boston.

Full-time BU students are admitted free with ID.

View museum director Malcolm Rogers' remarks on the opening.

HD Technology and Movie Theatre Broadcasts Deliver Concerts In New Way

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Image from Public-Domain-Image.com. Photographer: Rosendahl.

Aside from moving indoors, we experience musical and theatrical productions in mostly the same way the Romans did. How productions are delivered is a hot topic as movie broadcasts of operas and concerts sprout up  around the country in cineplexes and even on outdoor screens.

On November 8, the New York Times examined this trend.

Leipzig Philharmonic Orchestra

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Leipzig Philharmonic Orchestra Image

I attended a concert  by the Leipzig Philharmonic Orchestra at the Tsai Center here at BU last night.  The German student orchestra delivered a rich and colorful performance.  It was also interesting to see the (BU) debut of Yamaha’s new grand piano.

Photographic Resource Center’s 35th Anniversary Gala

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PRC Image

Yesterday, I attended a gala celebrating the 35th anniversary of the Photographic Resource Center (PRC).  Work by photographers such as Abilardo Morell and Ansel Adams was offered for sale in support of the PRC. Everyone who is interested in photography on our campus and around Boston should know about this institution which resides just across the street from CFA.  Panel discussions, exhibitions, workshops, portfolio reviews, youth programs and much more is offered there.  We are lucky to have the PRC here at Boston University and I hope more of us get involved with it.