Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Holland Cotter

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Holland Cotter


Role
  
Art critic

Holland Cotter QampA NYT art critic Holland Cotter Art Time Out Shanghai


Books
  
Traveler's Guide to Art Museum Exhibitions 2001: The New York Times, Kay WalkingStick: Paintings, 1974-1990

Education
  
Harvard College, Columbia University

Awards
  
Pulitzer Prize for Criticism

An evening with holland cotter 5 15 2012 part i


Holland Cotter (born April 9, 1947) is an art critic with the New York Times. In 2009, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism.

Contents

Holland Cotter static01nytcomimages20090417timestopics18c

Cotter was born in Connecticut and grew up in Boston, Massachusetts. He earned his A.B. from Harvard College in 1970, where he studied English literature under poet Robert Lowell and was an editor of the Harvard Advocate literary magazine. His first art course was an anthropology course on primitive art, which led to his first of many visits to Harvard's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.

Cotter earned an MA in American modernism from the City University of New York in 1990 and a M. Phil in early Indian Buddhist art from Columbia University in 1992, where he also taught Indian art and Islamic art. He has been a writer and editor for the New York Arts Journal, Art in America, and Art News.

Cotter was a freelance writer for the New York Times from 1992 to 1997 before being hired as a full-time art critic in 1998. Specifically hired for his expertise in Asian art, he is credited with exposing contemporary Indian and Chinese art to a Western audience. Among his Pulitzer-winning pieces were ones written as a result of a trip to China prompted by the 2008 Summer Olympics, including an examination of the Chinese museum scene and an account of art at the Mogao Caves near Dunhuang.

Holland cotter


References

Holland Cotter Wikipedia


Similar Topics