Reflecting on Palestinian settlements, artist and architect Saba Innab questions the meaning of architecture in this time of increasing deterritorialization and alienation.
"Paradox: The Body in the Age of AI" explores the primacy of the human body as it’s poised on the precipice of a potential fusion with artificial intelligence.
Memo Akten is an artist working with computation as a medium, exploring the collisions between nature, science, technology, ethics, ritual, tradition and religion.
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.
Alumna Lize Mogel (BFA '92) is an interdisciplinary artist and counter-cartographer, using maps and mappings to bring spatial justice issues to the surface.
Alex Da Corte's theatrical paintings, sculptures, videos, and installations mix personal narratives with glossy commercial aesthetics to creative immersive otherworldly environments that are simultaneously dazzling and terrifying.
Sloan calls himself a “media inventor”: someone “primarily interested in content (words, pictures, ideas) who also experiments with new tools and new formats.”
"Keeping Time" presents video and installation by Tsohil Bhatia that look at alternate methodologies and devices to imagine, observe and document time.
Ingrid Schaffner & Elizabeth Tufts Brown will speak about the Carnegie International: the history, the artists, the research that make this exhibition.