Paul Bernard Holdengräber (born March 15, 1960)[1] is an American interviewer, curator, and writer. He was director of the New York Public Library's public programming and organized literary conversations for the NYPL's public program series, LIVE from the NYPL, which he founded.[2][3][4]
Since February 2012, he has hosted The Paul Holdengräber Show on the Intelligent Channel on YouTube.[5] In 2019, he was the founding executive director of The Onassis Foundation, a center of dialogue in Los Angeles.[6]
Early life
Holdengräber was born in Houston, Texas, to Kurt and Erica (née Hass) Holdengräber.[1] His parents were Austrian Jews with roots in Romania and Poland, who fled Austria to Haiti during World War II. Kurt had been expelled during his second year of medical school, because he was Jewish.[7][8] In Haiti, amid a Jewish community of 107 families, Kurt grew vegetables and worked as a farmer; it was in that country that he met and married Holdengräber's mother.[9] The family moved from Haiti to Mexico City, where Paul's older sister was born.[10] The family then moved from Mexico to Houston, and eventually settled in Brussels, Belgium.[11] Holdengräber spent much of his youth hitchhiking around Europe.[12]
Holdengräber was the founder and director of the Institute for Arts and Culture at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art with the idea "to challenge the perception that museums are nothing more than mausoleums for Old Masters". Under Holdengräber's direction, the institute became an active and lively forum for debate with its ambitious lecture series in which painters, poets, performers, writers and thinkers address critical cultural issues through lively talks, discussions and performances.[13]
New York Public Library
In 2004, the then NYPL President Paul LeClerc hired Holdengräber to create a public program at the New York Public Library.[16] Holdengräber founded LIVE from the NYPL, a conversation series with writers, musicians, filmmakers and artists.[13] As the director of LIVE from the NYPL, Holdengräber interviewed hundreds of public personalities, including Patti Smith, Zadie Smith, Anish Kapoor, and Jay Z.[17][18]
Holdengräber lives in Glendale, California, a suburb of Los Angeles,[24] with his wife, Barbara Holdengräber, a writer, and their two sons.[25] He speaks English, French, German, and Spanish.[11] In Brussels, he spoke French and Flemish.[26]
Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans, Trustee[11]
New York Center for Ballet and the Arts
Selected works and publications
Fluent in four languages, Holdengräber has also written essays and articles for journals in France, Germany, and Spain.[13]
Holdengräber, Paul (1995). Portrait of the Artist As Collector Walter Benjamin and the Collector's Struggle against Dispersion. Princeton University. OCLC174013906.
Holdengräber, Paul (1 January 1992). "Between the Profane and the Redemptive: The Collector as Possessor in Walter Benjamin's "Passagen-Werk"". History and Memory. 4 (2): 96–128. ISSN0935-560X. JSTOR25618636. OCLC5542798812.