Remembering Peter Schjeldahl
It’s 1982: Peter Schjeldahl was writing scintillating criticism for the Village Voice and artists were still climbing the stairs to pick up supplies at Pearl Paint and Eastern Artists.

Remembering Peter Schjeldahl

The Village Voice honors Peter Schjeldahl, a former Voice critic who recently passed away. In addition to publishing one of their favorite pieces of his, the current editor for the paper memorializes him fondly. 


Village Voice Editor’s note: Though I was a big fan, I never met Peter Schjehldahl in person. We only crossed paths on the pages of the Voice, in the 1990s, with him writing the lead, full-page art review most weeks while I was turning out the occasional Jockbeat article. Some years ago, though, after he’d been the New Yorker’s art critic for decades, we connected through our mutual admiration for, and writings about, the photographer Mark Morrisroe, who died of AIDS in 1989. 


Then, in 2018, Schjeldahl wrote an essay about one of the Voice’s periodic deaths, and I pointed out to him that the New Yorker’s vaunted fact-checkers had made an error about the location of the Voice’s offices. His reply, characteristically witty and channeling a bit of William Blake, instantly went into my wish-I’d-written-that folder: “The NYer checkers are as superhumanly anal as ever—on the print side, as very much opposed to the crazy berserk online mill.”


Read more on the Village Voice here. 

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