Month: October 2014
Arts Fuse critics select the best in music, film, visual art, theater, author readings, and dance that’s coming up in the next week.
Read MoreThere’s no debate: The Great Gatsby is the Great American Novel, with Moby Dick and Huckleberry Finn as also-rans.
Read MoreWhile The Bone Clocks is compulsively readable, there are too many parts of this book that can only be called lazy.
Read MoreThe Culinary Arts Museum at Johnson & Wales University reopened in September after a fifteen month hiatus to re-assess its inventory.
Read MoreThe good parts of The Judge make the its missteps more painful to watch.
Read MoreAfter a 35+ year run, writers for the paper learned today that the Providence Phoenix will be shutting its doors after next week’s issue.
Read MoreFiber takes on two key aesthetic ideas — gravity and the grid — and one major sociological one, the way fiber arts were created and exhibited as part of a larger feminist agenda.
Read MoreThe intriguing notion of a down-and-out clown troupe struggling with a classic text propels this superb production.
Read MoreImaginary Beasts is to be congratulated for bringing public attention to the brilliant, idiosyncratic-to–the-max-and-beyond work of Daniil Kharms, a writer silenced by Stalin.
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