Laurie Anderson among new arts academy inductees
NEW YORK — Like many incoming members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Laurie Anderson didn’t know a lot about the venerable honour society until she was asked to join it.
“I had only a hazy idea of what it was so I was a little mystified,” Anderson says of the academy, which, among other programs, gives out hundreds of thousands of dollars annually in grants and awards.
“Now that I know what it is — and especially what it does — I’m very excited to be part of this group and hope to make a contribution.”
Anderson, the celebrated multimedia artist, is one of 13 new inductees to the academy, founded in 1898. The group began as almost exclusively white and male, and was averse to modernism and other new art forms. But the artists voted in this year reflect an openness to diversity and experimentation that has grown noticeably over the past few decades.