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Fresh Air

Writer, Critic & Curator Hilton Als Looks For The Silences

01 Apr 2025

Description

As a longtime staff writer at The New Yorker, Hilton Als's essays and profiles of figures like Toni Morrison, Joan Didion, and Richard Pryor have redefined cultural criticism, blending autobiography with literary and social commentary. Als is also a curator. His latest gallery exhibition is The Writing's on the Wall: Language and Silence in the Visual Arts, at the Hill Art Foundation in New York. The exhibit brings together the works of 32 artists across a range of media to examine how artists embrace silence. The show asked a powerful question: What do words — and their absence — look like? The Pulitzer Prize-winning writer spoke with Tonya Mosley. Also, Ken Tucker reviews new music from Lucy Dacus and Jeffrey Lewis.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Full Episode

0.109 - 17.808 Jeff Probst

This message comes from CBS. Survivor 48 is here, and alongside it is a new season of On Fire with Jeff Probst, the official Survivor podcast. It's the only podcast that gives you inside access to Survivor. New episodes are available every Wednesday, wherever you get your podcasts.

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18.697 - 30.868 Tanya Mosley

This is Fresh Air. I'm Tanya Mosley. And my guest today, Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Hilton Als, has spent decades examining how we create meaning through words, images, and the spaces in between.

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31.708 - 49.582 Tanya Mosley

As a longtime staff writer at The New Yorker, his essays and profiles on figures like Toni Morrison, Joan Didion, and Richard Pryor have redefined cultural criticism, blending autobiography with literary and social commentary. In addition to being a writer, Al's is also a curator.

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50.282 - 72.326 Tanya Mosley

Recently, he explored language in a new gallery exhibition, The Writings on the Wall, Language and Silence in the Visual Arts, at the Hill Art Foundation in New York. The exhibit brings together the works of 32 artists across a range of media to examine how artists embrace silence. The show asks a powerful question. What do words in their absence look like?

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73.166 - 93.058 Tanya Mosley

Hilton Owls has been a staff writer at The New Yorker for over 30 years. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 2017 for his work as a theater critic, and he's the author of several books, including The Women, White Girls, and My Pinup, a genre-bending memoir essay that examines the music, persona, and cultural impact of Prince.

93.899 - 100.943 Tanya Mosley

He's curated several art installations, including a show on the late Joan Didion. Hilton Owls, welcome to Fresh Air.

101.96 - 104.101 Hilton Als

Thank you so much for having me. It's an honor.

105.362 - 110.945 Tanya Mosley

Your exhibit made me think about something that writer Samuel Delaney said.

111.525 - 112.505 Hilton Als

Wonderful writer.

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