Tamar Avishai

Lucy Lippard, Art Writer

Tamar Avishai
Lucy Lippard, Art Writer
I intensely dislike the word ‘critic,’ because it puts you in an antagonistic position to artists. I’ve learned everything that I know about art from artists.
— Lucy R. Lippard

Since her arrival on the art scene in the 1960s, legendary art writer Lucy Lippard’s work - searing, novelistic, crisp, and endlessly curious - as well as her insights, activism, entrenchment in the art world, and friendships have secured her role as one of the most important minds in art criticism of her generation.

Now, at 86 years old, all of the stuff that she’s collected along the way – photographs, drawings, relationships, grandchildren – is the subject of her new memoir, or, actually, what she calls “Stuff (Instead of a Memoir).”  She joined me to talk about the book, but also more than 60 years of writing about art in the way that centered life.  After all, “art,” she often quotes, “is what makes life more interesting than art.”  Art is the artists, the world they inhabit, their shared cultural references, their shared understanding of the art world and art history.  Their human experiences rendered in paint.  The stuff they leave behind.



Music Used:

The Blue Dot Sessions, “Lacquer Groove,” “Hardwood Lullaby”