Family Meeting
Pittsburgh Center for the Arts 6300 Fifth Ave, Pittsburgh, PA, United States"Family Meeting" includes recent work by current advanced Print Media students from Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Art.
"Family Meeting" includes recent work by current advanced Print Media students from Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Art.
Senior BFA and Interdisciplinary Art Degree students present their final projects spanning many media including painting, video, interactive works, sculpture, and installation. "Dot Gov" spans all three floors of the Miller Gallery.
Join the School of Art for the 2018 commencement ceremony at the Philip Chosky Theater in the Purnell Center for the Arts. The ceremony will be followed by the closing reception for the 2018 senior art exhibition "Dot Gov" at the Miller Gallery.
Taking its name form the surrealist game, exquisite corpse, "EXQUISITE" is a week long collaboration exhibition featuring eight artist from the Carnegie Mellon and Pittsburgh community.
Work by CMU alumna Carrie Schneider ushers in the 2018/19 academic year at the Miller Institute for Contemporary Art. The exhibition, "Reading Women," explores the power of reading, studying, and being absorbed by knowledge.
Produced by Profs. Suzie Silver and Scott Andrew with Joseph Hall, TQ Live! Presents an evening of performances by members of Pittsburgh’s LGBTQIA communities.
Rachel Rose's immersive video installations bring together seemingly unrelated footage, images, and audio to address some of society's most pressing problems.
Miguel Gutierrez works across dance, performance, music, and poetry around recurring themes of mortality and the desire for meaning, how identity relates to content and form, and the commingling of the mundane with the sublime.
Reflecting on Palestinian settlements, artist and architect Saba Innab questions the meaning of architecture in this time of increasing deterritorialization and alienation.
Zoe Leonard's work in photography and sculpture uses repetition, subtle changes in perspective, and shifts in scale to reengage viewers with the process of seeing.