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Carnegie International 2026, Review: A Powerful Show About Solidarity

ARTnews.com·Alex Greenberger·20 days ago
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By my count, there are at least three flying people included in Pittsburgh’s recently opened Carnegie International . One can be found in Khalil Rabah’s video Critical Interrogations: Renewed Belief (1997), in which one man is launched by another over an olive tree, a symbol of resilience in the artist’s native Palestine. Another can be found—sort of—in Shala Miller’s video installation Flight (2026), a murky abstraction projected onto sinuous screens hung from the ceiling. That video is inspired by Toni Morrison’s novel Song of Solomon , whose titular character is an enslaved man who flew back to Africa. Related Articles The third flying person appears in archival footage projected during Be Holding , a performance Brooke O’Harra conceived with the poet Ross Gay, the composer Tyshawn Sorey, and the musical quartet Yarn/Wire.…

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