American journalist and writer
Victoria Lautman |
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Education | George Washington University
University of New Mexico
Merton College at Oxford University |
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Occupation(s) | Journalist, writer, and lecturer |
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Victoria Lautman is an American journalist, writer, and lecturer. Her work focuses on Indian art and culture.
Education
Lautman received a master's degree in Art History from George Washington University and a bachelor's degree in Anthropology and Art History from the University of New Mexico.[1] She attended Merton College at Oxford University for archaeological field training.[2][better source needed]
Career
Following graduate school, Lautman was employed by the Smithsonian Institution's Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.[3] Lautman started her career as a weekly arts reviewer in 1984 on WBEZ, a National Public Radio outlet in Chicago. During the next two decades, she founded and published a long-running arts and culture magazine, Artistic License, and then went on to be an interviewer and contributor to the station.[4] In 2004, she moved to WFMT radio and created the Chicago author-interview series, Writers on the Record with Victoria Lautman, with authors.[5] Lautman's interviews with Jonathan Lethem, Lady Antonia Fraser, Amitav Ghosh, and others have also been heard at the Chicago Humanities Festival.[6]
As a print journalist, Lautman has written for a wide array of publications and was formerly the Chicago editor for the magazines Metropolitan Home, Art+Auction, Architectural Record, and House & Garden.[7]
Books
Lautman produced the collection of research culminated in the release of The Vanishing Stepwells of India (with Divay Gupta) by Merrell Publishers in 2017.[8]
Subsequent exhibitions of her stepwell photographs were mounted at the Fowler Museum at UCLA in 2019 and at the RMIT University Gallery in Melbourne in 2018.[9] Lautman has lectured widely on the topic throughout the United States and India.[10][11][12][13][14][15]
Lautman's earlier non-fiction book, The New Tattoo, was published by Abbeville Press in 1994 and included photography by Vicki Berndt.[16]
External links
References