Following Available Light and Space
Powder Room 201 N Braddock Ave, #209, Pittsburgh, United StatesThis exhibition features four artists who address the cultural myths and ecological legacies embedded in relationships to American forests.
This exhibition features four artists who address the cultural myths and ecological legacies embedded in relationships to American forests.
Calling upon the collective memory of our great divas, dikes, faggots and queens, Jamison Edgar's MFA '20 offers up a personal archive that traces, adapts, and builds upon the long history of queer public gathering.
Iglesias’ sculptures and installations investigate how objects mediate social relationships and how objects can be read as having a form of agency.
Working across video, installation, and social events, Jeremy Deller's work often looks to history as a means to initiate dialogue with the public.
Instead of denying the transience of life, MFA Candidate Yejin Lee asks people to accept death with less rigidity and invite it into our living space.
Hamilton and Zachery will highlight the research involved in the making of Dapline! while examining Black gestural practices as a mode of resistance.
Stephanie Dinkins creates platforms for dialog about artificial intelligence as it intersects race, gender, and our future histories.
Entangling abstraction with representational form, Ulrike Müller's work creates a new discourse around gender identity and politics that resists binaries.
"Nathalie Moreno’s Latin Lovers" presents three whimsical Latino men who are vying to win your love.
Thaddeus Mosley's towering, hand-carved, wood sculptures often seem to defy gravity with sensual, cantilevered shapes.