Between 2001 and 2004, he was appointed as a curator at the
Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts at the
California College of Arts and Crafts in San
Francisco. In 2009 Higgs curated an exhibition of
Lucas Samaras' work for
Greece's national pavilion at the
53rd Venice Biennale. As of 2004, Higgs is currently director of
White Columns in
New York City. In 2006, he was one of the Turner Prize judges, and was interviewed about the judging process by
Sarah Thornton in Seven Days in the Art World. In 2007 he selected
EASTinternational with Marc Camille Chaimowicz. Higgs is also a member of the
New Art Dealers Alliance. As an artist Higgs had a one-person exhibition,
Not Worth Reading, in 2003 at the Wilkinson Gallery in London. It comprised a wide variety of works, from framed book pages to a wall painted in green emulsion.
Frieze concluded that the work "ultimately relies on his other practices and interests" and "more often than not reveal unexpected nuances that speak as much of the participatory nature of art as of the impossibility of information and interpretation." His work is held in the collection of the
Tate. ==The Matthew Higgs Society==