|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
|
Established in 1996 |
|
Wednesday, November 13, 2024 |
|
At Margaret Atwood's prompting, Canada launches virtual book tours |
|
|
Canadian poet, novelist, literary critic, essayist, inventor, teacher, and environmental activist Margaret Atwood. Photo: Larry D. Moore.
|
OTTAWA (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Margaret Atwood is launching an online series that she hopes will help Canadas writers sell books to a nation of shut-ins. But even she has not been immune to the headaches plaguing many people as they attempt to communicate during the global pandemic.
One came half an hour into a conversation about upcoming books with Adrienne Clarkson, a friend and fellow author, hosted by the National Arts Centre on Facebook Live. Atwoods image froze.
Come back, come back, Clarkson said. Was it anything I said?
After a few minutes, Atwood did reappear, in a different room of her house with a superior internet connection. The two women continued to go through a list of books they acknowledged that, for the most part, they hadnt even seen, let alone read, but were written by authors whose earlier works they enjoyed.
Their chat, which veered into social distancing and gardening, among other subjects, was an extension of a program the arts center started two weeks ago, CanadaPerforms, to provide a paid venue for musicians, actors, comedians and other performers at a time when stages are dark around the world.
Initially funded by a donation from the Canadian subsidiary of Facebook, CanadaPerforms had streamed about 100 performances by Thursday, some of which have been viewed hundreds of thousands of times. The center pays artists 1,000 Canadian dollars (about $700) to stage performances at their homes for the streaming program.
Writers werent initially part of that mix largely because the National Arts Center, like the Kennedy Center in Washington and Lincoln Center in New York, is focused on performing arts. That changed as a result of Atwoods involvement.
She had approached Facebook about creating virtual fundraisers for two other organizations she supports, and in the process, she said, it became apparent that an expanded version of the art centers program for performers might help authors facing canceled book tours.
Theyre really pinched, Atwood said in an interview the day before she launched the authors series. People are scrambling around, improvising and trying to get the word out there.
Atwood has a history of marrying technology and book tours. Sixteen years ago, she developed a device known as the LongPen that allowed authors to capture handwriting digitally and then relay it to a robotic arm at a distant book-signing location. While it didnt take off, she is named in a patent for a secure document system that contains some of its technology.
She is also active on social media, with 1.9 million Twitter followers.
Among the Canadian authors searching for a book-tour replacement is Vivek Shraya, whose second novel, The Subtweet, is scheduled for release next week. Despite being the author of a book in which social media plays a key role, Shraya said her digital appearance will be a personal novelty.
This is my first real foray into the virtual world, she said. I do have that sort of old-fashioned desire to connect in person with people.
The move to homemade online video, said Heather Gibson, who now runs CanadaPerforms but who is usually the centers executive producer of popular music and variety, required some adjustment.
Here we do things with excellence, she said. Then we started this program, and we all had to kind of let go because we have literally no control over the quality of it.
Book programming producers at the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. and staff at the Writers Trust of Canada and literary magazine Quill and Quire are helping the center select the 100 authors. There are just two broad qualifications: They must be Canadian, and they must have a book thats being published this spring or summer.
Atwood acknowledged that the online effort isnt a perfect substitute for what people are missing.
It doesnt replace the fun of an audience, mass audience response, but its better than nothing, she said. I think were in the better-than-nothing era do what you can.
© 2020 The New York Times Company
|
|
Today's News
April 5, 2020
Paintings discovered inside the coffin of a 3,000-year-old Egyptian mummy
New book offers the ultimate overview of the treatment of Van Eyck's The Ghent Altarpiece
Suellen Rocca, founding member of the Hairy Who, dies at 76
David Driskell, artist and scholar, dies at 88
Sotheby's London teams up with Margherita Missoni on this season's 'Contemporary Curated'
Hindman's Essential Jewelry auction delivers top results online
Marc Straus now represents Marie Watt
Ogunquit Museum of American Art announces new Executive Director
Save LACMA files ballot measure initiative with L.A. County Clerk's office
Michael McKinnell, 84, dies; Architect of a monumental city hall
New book presents the many facets of photographer Balthasar Burkhard
Why birds are the world's best engineers
The Rubin Museum of Art launches digital initiatives for navigating change
Parrish Art Museum launches free live-stream workshops direct from the artist's studio
Together In Art we stand: Art Gallery of New South Wales shares a daily boost of art with the world
At Margaret Atwood's prompting, Canada launches virtual book tours
Historic 1858 Proof Liberty Eagle gold coin leads Central States offerings April 23-26
Holabird Western Americana Collections' four-day Big Tent auction will be online-only
60s icon Marianne Faithfull treated for COVID-19
How Bill Withers defined soulful selflessness
Edinburgh comedy club goes online to beat lockdown
For a scientist turned novelist, an experiment pays off
Norval Foundation presents #60SecondArt: Experience culture from the comfort of your home
CCA Wattis Institute launches free online platform for artist videos, lectures, and essays
Join a musical meditation bringing together hundreds worldwide
The Benefits Of Being An Artist - Amateur And Professional
How To Protect Yourself While Painting With Oil Paint
How To Be A More Creative Artists
Tips to Make Your Contest Marketing Successful
Easy ways to know how to put ink in a Printer?
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|