Q: What excites you and energizes you about teaching in MFA programs? What keeps you coming back?
A: What excites me about working with graduate students in several schools is sharing my knowledge about the art and ideas that have mattered to me. An ever-growing list - of artists, works of art, moments and trajectories in art history, and the critical theory that helps us make sense of these things - has been important in my life and in my thoughts for many years. Teaching allows me to try to give other people a sense of the excitement that I feel.
Students, even graduate students, tend not to have much on their own lists yet, and I love being able to help them find the things that will matter to them. I am energized by the proximity to the students' creative impulses, helping them figure out why they need to make things, and how to make those things speak more profoundly and effectively.
Q: What do you enjoy about working with Lesley students?
A: Lesley students seem to have a relaxed but serious approach towards their craft - and the program encourages them to see their practices as craft. At other schools, concerns about marketability or professional strategy sometimes steer the conversation. The program at Lesley has always emphasized personal and material connections with art, and that has created a unique and somewhat idiosyncratic way of working shared by many of the students who have passed through.
Q: Do you have any advice for students looking to enter an MFA program from the perspective of someone who is so immersed in the contemporary art world?
A: My experience in the contemporary art world has taught me that in most cases artists are people who can't stop thinking about art and can't stop making things. For prospective students, I would say that if that sounds like you, an MFA program might be the right place to spend some time.
When I was an undergraduate, I asked my drawing teacher about a career as an artist, and he asked me, "Can you do anything else?" I found that I could have a fulfilling career in art without being an artist, but some people have a much stronger compulsion to think about the world, and speak to it, though objects, images, and extra-verbal ideas. Those are the people who become artists.