Michael Fried (born 1939, New York, New York, U.S.) is an American art critic, art historian, literary critic, and poet best known for his theoretical work on minimalist art.
Fried was educated at Princeton and Harvard universities and at the University of Oxford. He was mentored by the influential art critic Clement Greenberg, whom he met in 1958. In the 1960s Fried began writing art criticism as the London correspondent for Arts magazine. He later wrote for Art International and Artforum. At the latter magazine he published “Art and Objecthood” (1967), a controversial and influential attack on minimalist sculpture that revealed him to be a powerful champion of formalist art. Fried’s objection to what he saw as the theatricality of minimalist art was the emphasis on the situation, the event of the exhibition (what he called “the buzz”), rather than the work of art itself. This he found to be at odds with “the concepts of quality and value.” Fried continued to publish art criticism until 1977.
In 1980 he published a detailed elaboration of his views in Absorption and Theatricality: Painting and Beholder in the Age of Diderot. There he identified the first sources of Modernist disinterestedness in the mid-18th-century reaction against the exquisite and decoratively theatrical attributes of Rococo painting. This reaction was typified by the paintings of artists such as Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin and Jean-Baptiste Greuze, who were known for their intimate and meditative still lifes and genre scenes. Fried’s other writings included Minimal Art (1968), Realism, Writing, Disfiguration: On Thomas Eakins and Stephen Crane (1987), Art and Objecthood (1998), Why Photography Matters as Art as Never Before (2008), After Caravaggio (2016), and What Was Literary Impressionism? (2018).