New York Times senior art critic Holland Cotter (second from right) discusses artworks with student-curators during his residency at Dickinson. Photo by Carl Socolow '77.
by MaryAlice Bitts-Jackson
Excitement always runs high as the art & art-history majors prepare for their senior exhibition, and the 2015 show, , more than justifies the hoopla. But theres a little extra sparkle and buzz this year as, just one week before the opening reception, the student-curators previewed their exhibition to one of the most celebrated art critics of our time.
That man was Holland Cotter, the Pulitzer Prize-winning senior critic for The New York Times, and the second distinguished figure this month who visited Dickinson to work with art & art-history students. During his brief residency, the man who has helped shape the New York art scene for more than four decades did more than just deliver a public address. He also visited studio-art majors studios, held a Q&A session with art-history majors and offered an insiders advice to the students behind The Spirit of the Sixties as they prepared for their opening-night reception (Friday, Feb. 27).
The son of a Boston physician, Cotter harbored an early devotion to languageencouraged by his mother, who often read poetry aloud during dinners with her childrenand an appreciation for art, sparked by a childhood picture book about the artworks in the Louvre. After studying with poet Robert Lowell and earning a bachelors degree from Harvard University in 1970, he began work as an art writer and editor for the New York Arts Journal, Art in America and Art News. His poetic style, cultural acumen and discerning eye distinguished him as an eloquent writer and a leading presence in the explosive 1980s art scene.
Cotter also worked as a freelance art critic for the Times for five years before going full-time in 1998. Over the years he earned an M.A. from the City University of New York in American modernism and an M.Phil. in early Indian Buddhist art from Columbia University, where he studied Sanskrit and taught Indian and Islamic art. Although versed in the gamut of art styles, from Renaissance to street art and everything in between, hes perhaps best known for introducing readers to contemporary, non-Western art, a cause dear to his heart.
In 2009, Cotter won the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism for articles that included his coverage of Chinese art. Hes also under contract with Alfred A. Knopf for a book on New York City modernism; other writing projects include a study of contemporary Indian art and a poetry manuscript.
While at Dickinson, Cotter talked about his life and career, his love of literary writing, the current art world(s) and the changes hes seen in New Yorks art scene since he began covering it decades ago.
He inspired studio-art majors like Carley Zarzeka 15 to remain persistent and passionate, and to think broadly and globally about contemporary art. When James George 15, an English major enrolled in an art-history class, mentioned that he was writing a senior thesis on pop art and Frank OHaras writings, Cotter, who knew the legendary critic, suggested an additional angle on the topic and then pointed to salient resources.
But perhaps the most significant conversations arose between Cotter and the senior art-history majors, who had just completed their first exhibition catalog and were eager to hear the critics feedback and learn his views on writing, the changing role of art criticism, the current art market and more.
Kimberly Drexler, who co-curates the show with Kyle Anderson, Aleksa DOrsi, Lindsay Kearney, Callie Marx, Gillian Pinkham and Sebastian Zheng, especially appreciated Cotters behind-the-scenes description of his object-by-object technique. He told us that he tries to create a map of the gallery in his mind in order to understand the curator's vision, Drexler said. Next time I visit a show, I'm going to try to apply Mr. Cotter's approach.
It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, added DOrsi. His insights into the art world are unique and fascinating, and his eclectic tastes inspired me to think out of the box, in terms of art and artists to research.
The senior art-history exhibition The Spirit of the Sixties: Art as an Agent for Change opens with a reception in The Trout Gallery (5-7 p.m.) on Friday, Feb. 27 and runs through April 11. Students will be available at the reception to discuss their research and curatorial processes. Mr. Cotters residency was supported by the Robert H. and Jane L. Weiner Art Endowment Fund.
Published February 25, 2015