Lecture Series: Malik Gaines
Kresge Theatre 4919 Frew Street, Pittsburgh, PA, United StatesArtist and writer Malik Gaines is an assistant professor of Performance Studies in New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts.
Artist and writer Malik Gaines is an assistant professor of Performance Studies in New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts.
The School of Art’s Kraus Distinguished Visiting Professor of Art, Erin Cosgrove, creates narrative satiric art that is packed with historical and esoteric content and spread across multiple media.
Angela Dufresne’s work articulates porous ways of being in a world fraught by fear and possession.
"We have a future, perhaps." is a collection of seeking origins and creating, documenting, archiving moments of the artist's own queer existence and queer desire to prolong them, find representation, take herself into the future.
Suffering in a medical context as a woman has historically been dismissed and looked over; one recognizable form is in the history of breast cancer.
Sarah Oppenheimer is an artist operating on the boundary conditions of spatial and temporal adjacency.
Upon coming across a home video that presents both his pregnant mother and the artist as a newborn, Gray Swartzel performs a slapstick drag persona of his mother in order to queer his existence prior to birth.
The School of Art at Carnegie Mellon University is hosting OPEN STUDIOS on December 8th from 5-9pm featuring work of Juniors and Seniors.
Allison Smith takes an expansive view of sculpture, combining social practice, performance, and traditional crafts to examine how American history has been constructed and how it may be revised, retold, and reinterpreted.
Cristóbal Martínez's work seeks to reveal the vexing nature of our complex memories, amnesias, behaviors, beliefs, assumptions, choices, and relationships to create experiences that move beyond the human instinct to simplify.