- Exhibition
- Heinz Galleries
- Exhibition
- Scaife Galleries
…Modern World showcases approximately 200 examples of the most extraordinary works of furniture, metalwork, glass, ceramics, textiles, and jewelry produced by leading international artists and firms, including Lalique, Sèvres, and…
Since its inception, photography has helped perpetuate myths about the American landscape that obscure more complex experiences. To get a sense of how these myths influence our relationship to land today, science writer William L. Fox traces connections between mythmaking and human cognition throughout history, while artists Sam Contis, Mark Armijo McKnight, and Raven Chacon discuss how their work counters and breaks these myths by reframing the protagonists and narratives we typically see enacted in the landscape.
In this episode, photographer Clinton Wright talks about what it was like to move to and photograph Las Vegas in the 1960s and 70s, a time when many casinos were still segregated. Aaron Mayes and Claytee White, who work with Wright’s archive at the UNLV Libraries Special Collection help situate these photographs within the historical context of Civil Rights activism in Las Vegas.
Tomorrow Was Yesterday is an animation informed by Torkwase Dyson’s ongoing research into oil and gas drilling in the Caribbean seabed. This program immerses viewers in an underwater environment conceptualized…
A film by Kivu Ruhorahoza Kivu Ruhorahoza, an African filmmaker intrigued by Brexit, travels to London to make Europa: Based on a True Story (Rwanda) offering an outsider’s view of…
Films by Kumjana Novakova and Kaori Oda Foča is a municipality in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina where women were raped and abused on a large scale during the Bosnian war….
A film by by Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection (Lesotho, South Africa) centers on Mantoa, an elderly woman in a remote Lesotho village who…
A film by Lizzie Borden Born in Flames (United States of America) takes place ten years after a socialist revolution in New York City, where equality has been promised but…
A film by Rubaiyat Hossain Made in Bangladesh (Bangladesh) follows Shimu, a young garment factory worker in Dhaka struggling with long hours, low wages, and unsafe conditions. After a deadly…
…the installation at Carnegie Museum of Art—comprised of drawings, paintings, sculptural objects, and a video—evokes the artist’s studio as a site of inquiry and envisioning. “When I’m making work to…
…designs include cameras, radios, cocktail coolers, power tools, and refrigerators; and total environments for gas stations, international expositions, and mass-transit vehicles. PMMA’s contributions to public projects like the famous Unisphere…
…merely eye-catching structures that happen to be situated by the water, but that also embody a rethinking of the character and form of the surrounding landscape. The projects–Yokahama’s International Port…
Cutting-edge spaces designed by ten international architectural practices lead by some of the most innovative minds working in architecture today…….
Korean Liberation Day (Gwangbokjeol) commemorates the liberation from Japan’s colonial rule of 35 years. To celebrate Korean Liberation Day, we will host an ice cream party in the garden. The…
Photographic archives offer a powerful means to narrate history and produce knowledge, but how can they be used in a recuperative way to confront the past? Episode 2 brings together artist A.K. Burns and poet Natalie Diaz to reflect on lost landscapes and cultural erasure, while geologist Marcia Bjornerud invites listeners to view the earth itself as an archive of geologic and human history that can be read and understood as it evolves over time.
The smell of perilla floated through the village https://carnegieart.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/SmellPerilla_Compr_full-previewMp3.mp3 Prologue Ginger, it’s been a while.1 I see you’re researching what happened in former Manchuria. I went there once with my…