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Join us for an in-person & virtual
Live Talks Los Angeles event:
Sunday, January 15, 2023, 3pm PT/6pm ET
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This event was taped with an audience on January 9, 2022

Jerry Saltz
in conversation with Irwin Miller

discussing his book, 
Art Is Life: Icons and Iconoclasts, Visionaries and Vigilantes,
and Flashes of Hope in the Night
 
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PURCHASE TICKETS to the virtual event only on January 15 at 3pm PT/6pm ET
$40 Virtual Admission + Signed book
(Us orders only. Books ship one week after the event)
* the event is available to watch on video-on-demand for five days after it airs, so thru Jan 20.
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From the Pulitzer Prize winner and bestselling author of How to Be an Artist: a deliciously readable survey of the art world in turbulent times.
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Jerry Saltz
 is the senior art critic at New York magazine and its entertainment site Vulture, and the author of the New York Times bestseller How to Be an Artist. In 2018 he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism. A frequent guest lecturer at major universities and museums, he has lectured at Harvard University, the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and many others, and has taught at Columbia University, Yale University, the Rhode Island School of Design, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and elsewhere.
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Irwin Miller is an award-winning designer, artist and thought leader who has worked in the design industry for over 25 years with a focus of architecture and interior design. Irwin has been a Principal and Design Director with Gensler for over 20 years working on projects of every scope and scale around the world. Before that, he worked with a variety of international architects throughout Europe after receiving degrees from RISD and Harvard Graduate School of Design. Irwin has also worked in stop-motion animation and film – creating music videos and commercials over the past decade..
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“A critic of the people, bringing art to a broader audience.” —Architectural Digest.
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Now, in Art Is Life, Jerry Saltz draws on two decades of work to offer a real-time survey of contemporary art as a barometer of our times. Chronicling a period punctuated by dramatic turning points—from the cultural reset of 9/11 to the rolling social crises of today—Saltz traces how visionary artists have both documented and challenged the culture. Art Is Life offers Saltz’s eye-opening appraisals of trailblazers like Kara Walker, David Wojnarowicz, Hilma af Klint, and Jasper Johns; provocateurs like Jeff Koons, Richard Prince, and Marina Abramović; and visionaries like Jackson Pollock, Bill Traylor, and Willem de Kooning. Saltz celebrates landmarks like the Obama portraits by Kehinde Wiley and Amy Sherald, writes searchingly about disturbing moments such as the Ankara gallery assassination, and offers surprising takes on figures from Thomas Kinkade to Kim Kardashian. And he shares stories of his own haunted childhood, his time as a “failed artist,” and his epiphanies upon beholding work by Botticelli, Delacroix, and the cave painters of Niaux. 
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With his signature blend of candor and conviction, Jerry Saltz argues in Art Is Life for the importance of the fearless artist—reminding us that art is a kind of channeled voice of human experience, a necessary window onto our times. The result is an openhearted and irresistibly readable appraisal by one of our most important cultural observers.