Rappahannock News

From SoHo to Rappahanno­ck County, an artist finds comfort in the countrysid­e

Andy Grundberg will discuss his new photograph­y book next week

- By Beverly Jones Special to the Rappahanno­ck News

Throughout his life, Andy Grundberg has pursued two passions: outdoor activities in rural areas, and cutting-edge art events in urban settings.

Grundberg told me that he is often outside — hiking, biking, fixing things or caring for the land — at the Slate Mills home he shares with his wife, photograph­y curator Merry Foresta. “I have always cared about the aesthetics and efficient function of my environmen­t,” he said.

At the same time, for decades Grundberg has been a well-known author and commentato­r about events featuring photograph­y and the visual arts. He is a former art critic and photograph­y columnist at The New York Times, and his essays and reviews continue to appear in numerous publicatio­ns.

Grundberg may be best known locally as an educator and arts manager. He was dean of undergradu­ate studies and a member of the faculty at the Corcoran College of Art and Design, which is now part of George Washington University, where Grundberg is professor emeritus.

He also was curator of two of the most popular exhibition­s ever launched at the Smithsonia­n’s American Art Museum: “Annie Leibovitz: Pilgrimage” in 2012, and “Ansel Adams, A Legacy” in 1998.

Grundberg will share stories about his years in the arts at 7 p.m. on Friday, May 13, at the RAAC Community Theatre in Little Washington. The focus will be his recent book, “How Photograph­y Became Contempora­ry Art.”

The program will feature a conversati­on between Grundberg and Philip Kennicott, the Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng Art and Architectu­re Critic of The Washington Post. Kennicott is also a distinguis­hed author and a frequent participan­t in national and internatio­nal symposia. He splits his time between Washington, DC, and a home near the town of Washington.

The conversati­on is likely to be lively and somewhat personal. What I enjoyed most about Grundberg’s book is that it is not an academic treatise. Rather, it tells the story of how, for several decades, his career was intertwine­d with the avant-garde New York art scene.

Grundberg writes that when he landed in Manhattan in 1971, with a brand-new Masters of Fine Arts, “something remarkable was happening downtown.” Once a dying commercial neighborho­od, Soho was becoming a thriving center for contempora­ry art.

He explains that, at the same time, something new was happening with photograph­y. Performanc­e art and fleeting outdoor exhibition­s required documentat­ion so that audiences could see the work of artists like Gordon Matta-Clark, whose radical projects included carving sections from existing buildings.

College friends like Matta-Clark helped introduce Grundberg to the burgeoning art scene, where he observed “as a poet who was carrying around a camera.”

According to Grundberg, many artists were struggling to pay rent, and their burst of artistic energy in Soho “was taking place at one of the worst times for New York City.” Crime and homelessne­ss were widespread, “the streets were grimy and potholed, and trash blew into pedestrian­s’ eyes whenever the wind came barreling across the Hudson from New Jersey.”

Grundberg told me he took a mix of jobs in order to “buy tuna sh.” He worked as a copy editor, took pictures and wrote essays. Occasional­ly, when he was between creative gigs, he did day labor at constructi­on sites.

Soon he “graduated” to full time work writing for publicatio­ns like Modern Photograph­y and the Soho Weekly News. As he became an establishe­d critic of books and exhibition­s, he did not always know what to make of what he saw. He says he learned to notice without judgment and forced himself to overcome the “ ght or ight” defense mechanism in his psyche.

In his humble way, Grundberg writes about how he came “to recognize this feeling of being at sea with my own experience as something not to be ignored. If anything, it is an infallible indicator that one may be experienci­ng real art…or at least real contempora­ry art.”

In 1981, Grundberg began writing for The New York Times. For a decade, his post as a leading critic gave him an extraordin­ary view of the art world, including the intense debates about photograph­y “and what kind of an art it is.”

In the May 2021 issue of photograph­y magazine Blind,

Miss Rosen describes Grundberg’s considerab­le impact. In her review of his book, she says, “As a photograph­y critic at The New York Times from 19811991, Andy Grundberg played a pivotal role in the elevation of photograph­y within the art world.”

She says his book is “a veritable who’s who of contempora­ry ne art, weaving together a majestic tapestry” that “continues through the raging Culture Wars of the late 1980s.”

There is sure to be much to talk about when Kennicott interviews Grundberg about his book on May

13. I’m looking forward to stories and questions about topics ranging from how photograph­y evolved as art, to the challenges of critiquing art, and perhaps even the joy of escaping to the Virginia countrysid­e.

This event is free and is part of a series of RAAC Talks sponsored by the Rappahanno­ck Associatio­n for Arts and Community, in its new venue at the Little Washington Theatre, 291 Gay St.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTOS ?? Noted arts commentato­r, educator and manager Andy Grundberg will chat with fellow Rappahanno­ck resident and Pulitzer-winning critic Philip Kennicott, right, at RAAC talk next Friday (May 13).
COURTESY PHOTOS Noted arts commentato­r, educator and manager Andy Grundberg will chat with fellow Rappahanno­ck resident and Pulitzer-winning critic Philip Kennicott, right, at RAAC talk next Friday (May 13).
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States