Over the last decade, the term 'lecture-performance' has come to circulate widely in contemporary art discourses, as the practice has become increasingly popular with artists and within institutions. There is, however, a dearth of available texts which trace this specific subgenre of pedagogical performance art. This research paper examines the history of the artist as speaker and teacher, in an attempt to understand the provenance of this practice. Focusing on current practices that incorporate the lecture form into artistic output, it aims to identify the emergence of key terms, and the parameters that define the public speech of artists as a medium or art form. Utilising diagrammatic representations, the research samples a cross section ...