email list
home
about
guidelines
application
grantees
jurors
resources
writing workshop
grantee login
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
all
Grantees
Greg Allen
Myron Beasley
Douglas Crimp
Clare Davies
Natasha Degen
David Deitcher
Tim Griffin
Matthew Jesse Jackson, Andrew Perchuk, and Christopher P. Heuer
Alexander Keefe
Jesse Lerner
Lucy R. Lippard
Leora Maltz-Leca
HG Masters
Ara Osterweil
Raphael Rubinstein
Andrew Russeth
Irene Small
David Spalding
Tom Vanderbilt
Sandra Zalman
Lucy R. Lippard
Undermining (Book)
An unconventional study in contemporary art practices, cultural geography, and landscape,
Undermining
is an idiosyncratic consideration of many interwoven themes: the visual and social connections between mining, restoration, eco-arts, the history of southwest landscape and art, memory, monuments, ruins, walking, the Old and New West, adobe architecture, ruins, dams, water, archaeology, gender, tourism, and environmental politics. Lippard lives alongside Native American pueblos and reservations, and has written extensively on contemporary Native American art. One of her goals is to reintegrate the art with its sources in the “real world”—(as in Carl Andre’s description of the road as the ideal artwork)—not merely by visual inspiration but by a certain fusion of motives. She will present the text in a series of interrelated essays with a parallel visual narrative of approximately 150 illustrations.
Lucy R. Lippard was born in New York City and grew up in Louisiana, Virginia, Maine, and Connecticut. She has been a freelance writer, editor, curator, lecturer, and activist most of her life, focusing on contemporary art and cultural criticism. Her twenty-one books include
Six Years: The Dematerialization of the Art Object from 1966 to 1972
(University of California Press, 1992),
The Lure of the Local: Senses of Place in a Multicentered Society
(New Press, 1998), and
Down Country: The Tano of the Galisteo Basin, 1250–1782
(Museum of New Mexico Press, 2010). Since the 1980s she has focused on the American West’s multicultural landscape and land use in relation to public art, eco-art, and place-specific art. She lives off the grid in a village in rural New Mexico, where she edits the local community newsletter and works on watershed restoration, community planning, and archaeological site protection.