What is Art?
By Mel Laytner
What is art?
Journalist Bianca Bosker tackled this question head-on, or more accurately, head-first, diving deep and emerging with "Get the Picture," a rollicking expose of New York’s contemporary art scene.
With sharp humor and sharper insights, Bosker shared her experiences in a wide-ranging conversation with the Silurians own Betsy Ashton, herself a successful artist, at the club’s Feb. 19 luncheon, catered, perhaps ironically, by the National Art Club.
“For most of my adult life, art and I were not on speaking terms,” Bosker said. Wandering through galleries and museums, she recalled she felt “at least two tattoos and a master’s degree away from figuring out” what she was seeing.
This led her to withdraw from art entirely, a retreat she now calls “the coward’s way out.”
A turning point came in the family attic with the discovery of paintings of “dancing carrots” by her late grandmother, a Holocaust survivor, created for children in a displaced persons camp after the war.
Bosker’s book – the full title is "Get the Picture: A Mind-Bending Journey among the Inspired Artists and Obsessive Art Fiends Who Taught Me How to See" was a New York Times instant bestseller and named one of the Best Books of 2024 by NPR, Time, and The Economist.
A combination of new political threats to press freedom, collapsing business models and rapidly advancing AI is jeopardizing the essential elements of fearless reporting that have made America's news media the envy of the world.
Our March 19 luncheon will feature three of the most incisive observers of the news media today — Brian Stelter, Oliver Darcy and Sewell Chan who hopefully will help find answers to a key question: What can we do about it?
Brian Stelter is the chief media analyst for CNN Worldwide and the lead author of the Reliable Sources newsletter.
He is also host of Vanity Fair’s weekly podcast, Inside the Hive, and author of three books, most recently “Network of Lies,” which examined Dominion’s blockbuster defamation case against Fox News.
The Wall Street Journal has declared Oliver Darcy's new independent newsletter, Status, a "must-read" for anyone who wants insight into what's happening inside the news media.
Status prides itself for its "scoop-driven reporting and sharp-edged analysis." Darcy covers everything from Silicon Valley to presidential politics, aiming to connect the dots in a fragmented and fast moving media landscape.
Sewell Chan is the new executive editor of the Columbia Journalism Review. Previously, Chan was editor in chief of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit newsroom based in Austin.
During his tenure the Tribune won the National Magazine Award and the Collier Prize for State Government Accountability and was a Pulitzer Prize finalist.
Owner of The Clarksdale Press Register plans to challenge judge’s order against an editorial that criticized city officials.
The AP says case about an unconstitutional effort to control speech — in this case not changing its style from the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America."
YouGov poll (2/21) found 67% of U.S. respondents said that they don’t have “very much” or any trust that news outlets can state facts fairly, accurately and fully while covering Trump’s second term.
Dispute rooted in Pulitzer Prize to NY Times and Wash Post for reporting about alleged Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Owner of The Clarksdale Press Register plans to challenge judge’s order against an editorial that criticized city officials.
The AP says case about an unconstitutional effort to control speech — in this case not changing its style from the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America."
"...While Trump has always made life difficult for journalists, this time they find themselves divided, squabbling, and unsure whether they even want to present a united front."
AP askes a federal judge for a second time to immediately restore its access to presidential events, arguing that the Trump White House has doubled down on retaliating against the news outlet for its refusal to follow the president’s executive order that renamed the Gulf of Mexico.
Lawyers for the Des Moines Register and Gannett argued that “there is no legal basis for President Trump to obtain the relief he seeks; indeed, such relief would violate free speech principles.”
A Mississippi judge on Wednesday vacated her order that a newspaper remove its editorial criticizing local officials.
The judge’s order had been widely condemned by free speech advocates as a clear violation of the paper’s First Amendment rights.
By Mel Laytner
AG Sulzberger, the publisher of The New York Times, issued a stark warning about the dangers that the incoming Trump administration could pose to press independence, describing methods used by authoritarian leaders worldwide to illustrate the risks.
Speaking to packed audience at the Silurians Press Club on Jan. 15, Sulzberger didn’t mince words.
“We’re in a period of prolonged and fairly intense democratic erosion,” he began, setting the stage for a critical conversation about the fragile state of press freedom.
By Roberta Hershenson
Photo by Betsy Kissam
Chester Higgins, Jr., flanked by his two pieces in the Met’s “Flight Into Egypt” exhibit: “My two images help celebrate the African presence in the ancient Egyptian civilization.”
By David A. Andelman
Two of the great names of the NY Post’s Page Six, Susan Mulcahy and Frank DiGiacomo, reminisced about the paper’s heyday and their book, "Paper of Wreckage." But it’s the subtitle—“The Rogues, Renegades, Wiseguys, Wankers, and Relentless Reporters Who Redefined American Media”—that says it all.
By Clyde Haberman
[Excerpt from NY Times Obituary, March 4, 2025]
Selwyn Raab, an investigative reporter for The New York Times and other news organizations who in exacting detail explored the Mafia’s many tentacles, and whose doggedness helped lead to the exoneration of men wrongly convicted of notorious 1960s killings, died on Tuesday in Manhattan. He was 90.
His son-in-law, Matthew Goldstein, a Times reporter, said the cause of his death, at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, was intestinal complications.
By David A. Andelman
Two of the great names of the NY Post’s Page Six, Susan Mulcahy and Frank DiGiacomo, reminisced about the paper’s heyday and their book, "Paper of Wreckage." But it’s the subtitle—“The Rogues, Renegades, Wiseguys, Wankers, and Relentless Reporters Who Redefined American Media”—that says it all.