Lynne Tillman: Paying Attention

Author:   Lynne Tillman ,  Elizabeth Schambelan
Publisher:   David Zwirner
ISBN:  

9781644231746


Pages:   480
Publication Date:   19 March 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Lynne Tillman: Paying Attention


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Full Product Details

Author:   Lynne Tillman ,  Elizabeth Schambelan
Publisher:   David Zwirner
Imprint:   David Zwirner
Weight:   0.560kg
ISBN:  

9781644231746


ISBN 10:   1644231743
Pages:   480
Publication Date:   19 March 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Diane Sawyer Gertrude Stein Eggleston and Wittgenstein! Lynne Tillman's collection of essays is a gourmet buffet of your favorite artists and others, the nuts and bolts of material practice alongside personal rumination and analytic flair. Her highways of thought go fast, connecting cultural mile markers with the great art Tillman witnessed firsthand. Lynne sees it all. Running throughout are some key quotes: ""Feelings are facts"" (Yvonne Rainer), ""Any reality is an opinion"" (Timothy Leary), and ""I'm very much a part of my times"" (Andy Warhol). Reading this book you realize Lynne, too, is exactly that. --Rachel Harrison If there is such a thing as an ""artist's artist,"" Lynne Tillman regularly makes the case for the ""artist's writer,"" from consequentially aesthetic plot points in her novels to the nimble provocations and intuitive depths brought to her artist conversations, and the absolutely necessary invention of Madame Realism, the porous critic, the one every artist wants, still capable of being shocked. Whatever the context, Tillman regularly reminds her audience that when it comes to art, there are far more interesting things to want besides wanting to be merely right. --John Pilson Lynne Tillman's writing mimics the movement of her mind. Glancing like light, it's alive with coincidence, rhyme, and (free) association. Her language is both precise and wandering, and her intelligence goes deep and wide, a spotlight searching across the dark sky to illuminate philosophy, psychoanalysis, and the sheer absurdities of being human. The encounter of thought and language is never seamless: It gapes, frays, and tears, and reading her work, we sense the writer in history, connected to the moving world, yet grasping and braiding together divergent and living strands of conscious and unconscious experience. Perpetual and persistent detours provide openings to her inner world, where big ideas bump up against the everyday, and the apparently insignificant resonates like a bass guitar. Tillman created the literary field of ""art writing"" and in doing so, she transformed criticism and critical discourse, inventing new forms to take account of her own complicated, wry apprehension of art and life. Here, as in her other books, she continually pays, and plays out, her attention: lucid, piercing, and generous. --Leslie Dick No one pays attention like Lynne Tillman does. Whether it's at a canvas, a screen, or a page, she looks, lingers, refuses to leap to pontificatory conclusions. Each sentence, scourged of in-crowd bromides, is astute, droll, long-memoried. There's so much generosity here. Inflection and insight. An incurable curiosity. --Sukhdev Sandhu ""Paying Attention makes you pay attention, often to things you never thought of. Lynne Tillman takes you on a meandering walk through a huge old ramshackle house of our culture. Each chapter opens a door to another room, another cabinet of curiosity, and Tillman's brain is an erudite and delightful companion."" --Marilyn Minter Lynne Tillman writes, ""Close readings aren't popular, but I like doing them."" In Paying Attention, Tillman really does pay attention. In her tonal, rich, accessible voice, describing becomes a kind of thinking. These essays, from 1973 to 2025, focus not about what art is but what it tells us. Paintings, photographs, drawings, sculptures, novels, movies, criticism: Tillman shows us how all these forms are embedded not only in their own categories, but within a grand history of literature, philosophy, science, pop culture, politics, and, not least, psychoanalysis. Each essay, each a stand-alone story, carefully builds momentum until you see how art can tell you almost everything. --Josiah McElheny


This collection of Lynne Tillman's essays on art is a revelation. Like her great fiction, Tillman's writing about photography, painting, sculpture, and more thwarts expectation and disrupts convention; art seems new again. So does looking. Carry this book wherever you go. --Andrew Durbin Diane Sawyer Gertrude Stein Eggleston and Wittgenstein! Lynne Tillman's collection of essays is a gourmet buffet of your favorite artists and others, the nuts and bolts of material practice alongside personal rumination and analytic flair. Her highways of thought go fast, connecting cultural mile markers with the great art Tillman witnessed firsthand. Lynne sees it all. Running throughout are some key quotes: ""Feelings are facts"" (Yvonne Rainer), ""Any reality is an opinion"" (Timothy Leary), and ""I'm very much a part of my times"" (Andy Warhol). Reading this book you realize Lynne, too, is exactly that. --Rachel Harrison If there is such a thing as an ""artist's artist,"" Lynne Tillman regularly makes the case for the ""artist's writer,"" from consequentially aesthetic plot points in her novels to the nimble provocations and intuitive depths brought to her artist conversations, and the absolutely necessary invention of Madame Realism, the porous critic, the one every artist wants, still capable of being shocked. Whatever the context, Tillman regularly reminds her audience that when it comes to art, there are far more interesting things to want besides wanting to be merely right. --John Pilson Lynne Tillman's writing mimics the movement of her mind. Glancing like light, it's alive with coincidence, rhyme, and (free) association. Her language is both precise and wandering, and her intelligence goes deep and wide, a spotlight searching across the dark sky to illuminate philosophy, psychoanalysis, and the sheer absurdities of being human. The encounter of thought and language is never seamless: It gapes, frays, and tears, and reading her work, we sense the writer in history, connected to the moving world, yet grasping and braiding together divergent and living strands of conscious and unconscious experience. Perpetual and persistent detours provide openings to her inner world, where big ideas bump up against the everyday, and the apparently insignificant resonates like a bass guitar. Tillman created the literary field of ""art writing"" and in doing so, she transformed criticism and critical discourse, inventing new forms to take account of her own complicated, wry apprehension of art and life. Here, as in her other books, she continually pays, and plays out, her attention: lucid, piercing, and generous. --Leslie Dick No one pays attention like Lynne Tillman does. Whether it's at a canvas, a screen, or a page, she looks, lingers, refuses to leap to pontificatory conclusions. Each sentence, scourged of in-crowd bromides, is astute, droll, long-memoried. There's so much generosity here. Inflection and insight. An incurable curiosity. --Sukhdev Sandhu ""Paying Attention makes you pay attention, often to things you never thought of. Lynne Tillman takes you on a meandering walk through a huge old ramshackle house of our culture. Each chapter opens a door to another room, another cabinet of curiosity, and Tillman's brain is an erudite and delightful companion."" --Marilyn Minter Lynne Tillman writes, ""Close readings aren't popular, but I like doing them."" In Paying Attention, Tillman really does pay attention. In her tonal, rich, accessible voice, describing becomes a kind of thinking. These essays, from 1973 to 2025, focus not about what art is but what it tells us. Paintings, photographs, drawings, sculptures, novels, movies, criticism: Tillman shows us how all these forms are embedded not only in their own categories, but within a grand history of literature, philosophy, science, pop culture, politics, and, not least, psychoanalysis. Each essay, each a stand-alone story, carefully builds momentum until you see how art can tell you almost everything. --Josiah McElheny


Author Information

Lynne Tillman is a novelist, short story writer, and cultural critic. She has received a Guggenheim Fellowship; a Creative Capital/Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant; and The Katherine Anne Porter Prize awarded by The American Academy of Arts and Letters for contributions to literature. She is a professor and writer in residence in the Department of English at the University at Albany.

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