Rhinoceros_1

Theater Review: Standing Alone Among the Herd — Yale Rep’s Darkly Hilarious Revival of “Rhinoceros”

Coming Attractions

Coming Attractions: March 15 Through 30 — What Will Light Your Fire

Our expert critics supply a guide to film, visual art, theater, author readings, television, and music. More offerings will be added as they come in.

The Arts Fuse Currents

Music

Concert Review: Virtuosity and Volatility — Tigran Hamasyan’s High-Wire Fusion at Berklee

By Paul Robicheau | March 17, 2026

An evening where music steeped in Armenian culture was too often outweighed by the acrobatic complexities of prog rock and jazz fusion.

Visual Arts

Visual Arts Feature: “Picturing Isabella” — The Art of Staying Elusive

By Hannah Brueske | March 15, 2026

The exhibit suggests that Isabella Stewart Gardner wanted her art curation, intellect, and fashion sense — the areas of her life over which she had the most agency over — to be her legacy, not her image.

Film

Film Review: Echoes of Passion — Arnaud Desplechin’s “Two Pianos” Plays on the Keys of Loss and Love

By Erica Abeel | March 10, 2026

Here’s a drama that explores with uncommon pathos the ways that people confront—with grace or with fury—what they’re compelled to give up.

Books

Book Review: “Of Loss and Lavender” — Sinan Antoon on Exile and Forgetting

By David Mehegan | March 16, 2026

I cannot recall reading a more poignant and persuasive description of the inexorable descent of Alzheimer’s disease, certainly not from inside the sufferer’s mind.

Poetry at The Arts Fuse

Weekly Feature: Poetry at The Arts Fuse

March 12, 2026

The week’s poem: Chad Parenteau’s “Disown”

Dance

Dance Feature: Finding Comedy in Motion: Sara Juli and Alexander Davis Share the Stage

By Debra Cash | March 17, 2026

With autobiographical wryness on the menu, Sara Juli and Alexander David is a match made in performance art heaven.

Theater

Theater Review: Standing Alone Among the Herd — Yale Rep’s Darkly Hilarious Revival of “Rhinoceros”

By Bill Marx | March 17, 2026

“Rhinoceros” is a powerful wake-up call that, whether we like it nor not, we are writhing on the horns of a dilemma.

Television

Television Review: “The ‘Burbs,” A Suburban Snooze — Fangless and Flat

By Sarah Osman | February 16, 2026

Considering its hard-to-fault premise, Peacock’s “The ‘Burbs” should be a lot more fun than it is.

Podcasts

Short Fuse Podcast #86: Cinema Rodrigo — Talking Film

By Elizabeth Howard | March 11, 2026

On the cusp of the Academy Awards and the Oscars ceremony, host Elizabeth Howard talks with Aldo Juraidini, design director at Studio Rodrigo, who also directs and curates films for Cinema Rodrigo.

Short Fuses

March Short Fuses — Materia Critica

By Arts Fuse Editor | March 1, 2026

Each month, our arts critics — music, book, theater, dance, television, film, and visual arts — fire off a few brief reviews.

Spotlight

Arts Commentary: These Goose Steps Don’t Lie — Shakira in El Salvador and the “New Security” Aesthetic

By Jeremy Ray Jewell | March 13, 2026

The artist is a glitzy ribbon that ties together incompatible images—the mega-prison and the megastar.

About the Arts Fuse

The Arts Fuse was established in June, 2007 as a curated, independent online arts magazine dedicated to publishing in-depth criticism, along with high quality previews, interviews, and commentaries. The publication's over 70 freelance critics (many of them with decades of experience) cover dance, film, food, literature, music, television, theater, video games, and visual arts. Support arts coverage that believes that culture matters.

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