Writer Jackson Arn has been named the’s new art critic.
Arn was born in Arizona and is based in New York. He graduated from Columbia University in 2015 and has written for Artforum, The Drift, The Los Angeles Review of Books, and The Nation, among other publications. He began writing for The New Yorker earlier this year.
Stepping into his new role, he will succeed longtime critic Peter Schjeldahl, who died in October 2022 from lung cancer. They are big shoes to fill: Schjeldahl, a staff writer at the magazine since 1998, is widely regarded as one of the greatest critics of his time or any other, a writer of instantly identifiable prose whose love of language fueled his love of art.
Arn himself eulogized Schjeldahl in a recent Art in America article.
A veteran of “Art in America,” the “Village Voice,” and, most notably, the “New Yorker,” Peter Schjeldahl, who died this past October at the age of 80, leaves behind a legacy of beautifully chiseled prose. https://t.co/lhz2WXt6cG pic.twitter.com/URb61RIRob
— Art in America (@ArtinAmerica) July 12, 2023
“Journalism,” Arn wrote in the piece, “is overflowing with talented people who know better but consider themselves failures because they’re not writing Real Literature. What’s special about Schjeldahl isn’t that he was immune from this kind of self doubt but that he felt it so intensely and carried on anyway.”
“If he was especially strong when wrestling with an artist he both admired and loathed,” Arn continued, “perhaps it’s because he had plenty of practice wrestling with art criticism itself, eventually arriving at a gruff, good humored affection at least as deep as love at first sight.”
Arn shares Schjeldahl’s gift of evocative descriptions written with a strong point of view. In recent New Yorker articles, he called Sarah Sze’s current Guggenheim exhibition the “niftiest migraine you will ever experience” and the sculptures of Yayoi Kusama’s recent David Zwirner show “exactly on brand and resoundingly dull, with neither the trancelike boredom of Minimalism nor the wise-ass boredom of Pop.”
Awaiting you on the top floor of the Guggenheim is “the niftiest migraine you will ever experience,” Jackson Arn writes. Read his review of Sarah Sze’s exhausting and euphoric new show: https://t.co/IeB2OkKwsC pic.twitter.com/9MDREWMibv
— The New Yorker (@NewYorker) August 11, 2023
“I’m thrilled to share the news that Jackson Arn has joined the New Yorker as our art critic,” the magazine’s editor, David Remnick, wrote in a memo to staff this week. “He’s already done some wonderful work for us, including reviews of a Georgia O’Keeffe show at MOMA, a van Gogh exhibit at the Met, and a new book about the mid-century art scene that flourished just around the corner from the office. I’m so pleased that he’s officially joining us in this important role.”