Why I Teach: Art's Power to Connect

6-pix.jpg

Ultimately art affirms our humanity by connecting us to the lives of other human beings. Art can touch us through an immediate visceral or emotional experience, but it can also stir us to reflect upon the lives of artists and the social and personal worlds they inhabit.    

Taking the example of the still lifes shown here – by Pieter Claesz, Paula Modersohn-Becker, Carrie Mae Weems, Yayoi Kusama, Juan Sánchez Cotán, and Paul Cézanne - which represent 350 years of Western art – we realize that the study of art can be approached in many ways, from the formal to the biographical, the social/historical to the theoretical. Artists are individuals, but they also represent a continuum of human endeavor and dialogue. They strive to express, innovate, and perfect; they inspire one another, compete with one another, and pay homage to one another. Artists live and feel deeply; when they create, they manifest a vision that is both unique and contextual. When we look at a work of art, we know that some man or woman made it – it is their toil, their idea, their aspiration, their necessity. Regardless of an artist’s place in time, their stories, their works, and the relations between them continue to move and fascinate us.  

I have found that looking closely at art and discussing it with others can be a touching, funny, provocative, even profound experience… it can be something that goes beyond words. It can offer us a sense of community that many feel is missing from today's world. The purpose of my work is to help make meaningful connections – between individuals and art (history) and between individuals and their own humanity.

My goal is to make people feel, to make them laugh, to get them to think and share, and to help them experience art deeply. To this end, I want to use this website not only to create new venues for my own professional projects, but to share information, exchange ideas, and let people know about possibilities and upcoming events that provide access to learning, engagement, and enjoyment through visual culture.  Let’s find connection together!

larissa bailiff

As an independent Art Historian and Educator with twenty years in the field, Larissa Bailiff has lectured at such institutions as The Art Institute of Chicago, The National Academy of Design, the Brooklyn Museum, The Bruce Museum, The Morgan Library & Museum, and The Museum of Modern Art. Specializing in the art and culture of Europe and America during the 19th and 20th centuries, her interests and expertise extend far beyond this. Larissa has fulfilled several roles in museum education and academia, teaching undergraduate courses at Pratt Institute and the Fashion Institute of Technology, and engaging audiences through a variety of tours, lectures, courses, and other programs, primarily at The Museum of Modern Art and The Morgan Library. She has also been active in the planning and implementation of several museum-related programs and trainings.