Art should not be overlooked
In response to Colin Dugdale's column ("Wolfgang snoozefest," Monday), I don't expect everyone to like opera. However it is rude and childish to state that what others like and you do not is "not currently palatable" and has "expired." I might achieve the same conclusions should I attend a concert or performance by a group that appeals to Master Dugdale yet doesn't appeal to my taste. If he was so appalled by people in tuxedos, let him not wander near the penguin exhibit at the zoo for everyone's safety.
IU has a marvelous arts community. Students have the opportunity to attend a wide variety of performance and visual arts at a fraction of the costs that professional companies require. That young Master Dugdale noticed that the student performers at the School of Music had "phenomenal pipes" states that he can appreciate the work that an artist does. If it wasn't visually stirring for him, might I suggest that he close his eyes and listen? The beauty just might overwhelm him. College is a time to expand your horizons. The opportunities to do that artistically on this campus are remarkable, even for a large research institution. Let us not discourage people from opening their minds to new art, whatever form they choose.
The staff of the School of Music, Department of Theater and Drama and the IU Art Museum work tirelessly to bring the students of this campus to offer them something to which they may never have as ready access in the future. To allow the work of these departments to be so recklessly dismissed is disheartening, and the support of the editorial staff that published such denigration is distressing. I urge the campus community to look beyond the observations of a youth with a bully pulpit and explore for themselves the cultural opportunities that abound on this campus. Most of them have an intermission.
David Grindle
Production manager, Department of Theater and Drama