Presented by MFA Art Writing

Michael Brenson: Writing an Artist's Life

Nov 14, 2013; 12:00 am
A man sitting on a green couch, gazing into the distance.  The background is slightly out of focus.
David Smith
Credit: Image courtesy of Dan Budnik

In a lecture presented by the MFA Art Criticism and Writing Department, critic, historian and MFA Art Criticism and Writing faculty member Michael Brenson addresses the following questions in relation to his biographical research on artist David Smith: What are we talking about when we talk about biography? What does it mean to write about an artist's life? It is possible to grasp and communicate the transmutation from life into art? What is the place of biography in the writing and teaching of art?


Brenson received an MA in creative writing and a Ph.D in art history from Johns Hopkins University and wrote about art for The New York Times from 1982 to 1991. He is a Getty scholar and a Guggenheim fellow and has been a curator, editor and consultant for Harry N. Abrams Publishers and the Rockefeller Foundation. He teaches in MFA programs at Bard College, the University of Pennsylvania, and the School of Visual Arts. His biography of David Smith will be published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.


Free and open to the public