If you correct people for using “font” instead of “type,” this is a must-read.
From NPR: In addition to Typography 101 terms — including serif versus sans serif, a serif being “a finishing stroke” at the “feet or tips of letters … often appearing to ground the letter on the page” — Just My Type offers profiles of the eponymous (and often eccentric) graphic designers who created such classics as Baskerville, Gill Sans and Johnston Sans. It is also stuffed with fascinating bits of information. Who knew, for example, that the backward P printer’s mark that denotes a paragraph break is called a pilcrow or that the only letters formed in a clockwise direction are m, n, h, k, b, p and r? A single character combining a question mark and an exclamation — called an interrobang — didn’t catch on because it doesn’t read well in small sizes and never made it to standard keyboards, while, thanks to email addresses, the @, also known as an amphora, has become ubiquitous. Type designers show off their entire alphabets with pangrams, and the most famous, “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog,” has spawned a video with more than 300,000 views on YouTube. What may be the worst typo of all time appeared in Christopher Barker’s Bible of 1631, which included the commandment, “Thou shalt commit adultery.”
Read the whole article here: http://www.npr.org/2011/09/01/140039760/fond-of-font-check-out-just-my-type?sc=fb&cc=fp
From NPR.org: Artist, Social Critic Ai Weiwei Breaks Silence, Attacks Chinese Government
The dissident artist Ai Weiwei has struggled with the Chinese  government for years. Earlier this year, the conflict came to a head,  when Ai was detained by the government for about 80 days. He was let go  under the condition that he would not talk to the press.
Ai,  known for his spectacular conceptual art, including China’s Bird Nest  stadium, didn’t stay quiet for long. Last night, Newsweek published a stunning piece from Ai in which he describes Beijing as “a constant nightmare.” It’s a  stream-of-counciousness piece, but it’s clear that Ai is unhappy with  an oppressive government that he says has sucked the life and joy out of  the people of Beijing.
Continue reading here: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2011/08/29/140042430/artist-social-critic-ai-weiwei-breaks-silence-attacks-chinese-government?sc=fb&cc=fp
Missing a Rembrandt? Check out your local priest’s office- apparently, some art thieves like to stash their stolen goods there.
From NPR: “…the drawing was found by Father Michael Cooper, an assistant priest  at St. Nicholas of Myra Episcopal Church in Encino. He opened the door  to his office Monday night and noticed the framed drawing just inside. At  first he thought it was a donation, but upon closer inspection, it hit  him: It was the “The Judgment,” the 1655 work that had been plastered  all over the news after it was stolen from the Ritz-Carlton in Marina  del Rey.”
Read the whole article here: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2011/08/17/139703773/stolen-rembrandt-found-in-a-church
One of the many, many great things about art: cultural diplomacy.
NPR’s Morning Edition ran a story about a funding model for arts management used by the United States that is, well, a little unheard of in countries like Cambodia and Zanzibar. As Kennedy Center President Michael Kaiser explains, the United States “developed this private philanthropy model because of a separation of  art and state that really emerged from the Puritans who thought that  music and dance were evil.”
Representatives from the global art world have been meeting in D.C. for this exact type of training. What propels these meetings beyond simple marketing strategies- which they do discuss- is how to make these tools applicable in countries that are dealing with things like social unrest, violence, and political turmoil.
From the article: “Patrick Jude-Oteh runs a theater company in Jos, Nigeria.  He says he  had his doubts when he first heard Michael Kaiser teach.  “I thought,  ‘This cannot work in my environment.  The environment is too volatile,’”  Jude-Oteh says.
But now that he’s just  completed his third summer as a Kennedy Center fellow, Jude-Oteh has  changed his tune.  He says one of the most important things he’s learned  is to communicate directly with his audience.
“You  get them involved in what you are doing,” he says. “The more people get  excited, the more people are happy to be associated with you and that’s  what has happened.”
Another fellow, Reem  Kassem from Alexandria, Egypt recently did the unthinkable.  Last  February, a month after thousands of protesters clashed violently with  police, Kassem organized an outdoor arts festival with dancers,  musicians and workshops for children.
“It  wouldn’t have gone without the new political situation in the country,”  Kassem says.  Under the old regime, she says, collective gatherings on  the streets were prohibited.
During her summer at the Kennedy Center, Kassem  was able to share the story with — and get help from — other fellows  from all over the world.  The director of a dance organization in the  U.K., for example, suggested she ask wealthy Egyptians living in London  or New York for support.
Kassem says she’ll  return to Egypt equipped with a strategic plan to make the outdoor  festival — called “Start With Yourself” — an annual event.  “And I will  come back [to Washington] next year with more questions,” she says.”
Read the entire article here: http://www.npr.org/2011/08/11/139240605/world-art-managers-find-new-funding-models-in-d-c
From NPR: The Best of the Louvre, on a Single Canvas
Author David McCullough discusses Samuel F. B. Morse’s Gallery of the Louvre (1831-1833) in his book, The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris. As of 2 days ago, this painting is being exhibited in the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C.
McCullough describes Morse’s undertaking:
“It was an extremely ambitious undertaking because many of the paintings that he was copying were hung very high up. And so he had to build a movable platform, or scaffold, that he wheeled about the galleries of the Louvre to reach his subjects. And he and the movable scaffold became a tourist attraction themselves,” McCullough says with a laugh. “His ambition was very great and he felt strongly that this painting would make the mark, would make him known everywhere. And in a way, it did. It’s certainly his masterpiece.”
Read the whole article: http://www.npr.org/2011/07/03/137472386/the-best-of-the-louvre-on-a-single-canvas
From NPR.org: Museum of Bad Art, A Home for Forlorn Paintings

The head of a museum like MOMA probably doesn’t look for its next big find at garage sales or thrift stores — or drive extra slowly on trash night. But, as the head of the Museum of Bad Art, Michael Frank is a rare bird: He’s the arbiter of the atrocious.
You might wonder: What makes a piece of art bad? Frank uses the same criteria a judge once famously applied to obscenity: He knows it when he sees it.
“What we look for are pieces of work that are produced in an attempt to make some sort of artistic statement — but clearly something has gone wrong,” he says. “There has to be something about it that makes you stop, and very often wonder why the artist continued down the path to produce what he or she did.”
Read more and listen to the entire article here: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128724062

Døg — artist unknown. Acrylic on canvas. Donated by Elizabeth and Sorn Poeckle, Copenhagen, Denmark.
From All Things Considered on NPR: ‘The Art Detective’
“Philip Mould is a renowned expert on portrait paintings, and a host of the British version of Antiques Roadshow. His new book, The Art Detective, tells the stories of six paintings that were either authenticated as masterworks or unmasked as forgeries. Host Guy Raz talks to Mould about some of his major finds, and how he goes about distinguishing fakes from the real thing.”
Listen to the interview: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128305649
From NPR.com: “‘Last Supper’ Gets Supersized With Time”
“Let’s pretend Jesus were alive today. Would he have to watch his weight? If art imitates life, yes. Analysis of 52 notable versions ofThe Last Supper painted over the last 1,000 years shows that problems with ballooning portions began way before McDonald’s.

According to a study published in this week’s International Journal of Obesity, Last Supper entree sizes grew by 69 percent over the past millennium. Average bread-size grew too — by about 23 percent.”
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2010/03/last_supper_gets_supersized_wi.html?sc=fb&cc=fp
Updates from NPR photographers in Haiti
http://www.npr.org/blogs/pictureshow/2010/01/updates_from_npr_photographers.html?sc=fb&cc=fp
10 Best Rap Mixtapes of the Decade!
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=122319397&sc=fb&cc=fp
athensmusicandarts:

Help Hope for Agoldensummer play the NPR showcase at SXSW!
Love these people. Here is their request … spread it far and wide:
We’re touring all over the country in this new year and most especially want to play the NPR showcase at SXSW (South By SouthWest) in Austin, TX this year.  We frickin’ adore NPR!Won’t you please head on over to the following link and leave a comment about what a loverly addition we’d make to their showcase?
Click hereto vote for them.