ArtReview

58th Carnegie Internatio­nal Is it morning for you yet? Various venues, Pittsburgh 24 September – 2 April

- Evan Mo„tt

An exhibition is a living body, a curator once told me. If that’s true, biennials have lately needed some resuscitat­ion. In response to this year’s Documenta, The New York Times declared, ‘The dream of a global art world has died’. I’m not so sure, but I’ve lost track of all the glorified group shows that have buried market trends beneath woke discourse and inscrutabl­e poetics. To cast the latest edition of the quinquenni­al Carnegie Internatio­nal with the lot would be to ignore the earnest success of curator Sohrab Mohebbi’s endeavour. This capacious and heavily researched exhibition features 142 artists and collective­s from 40 territorie­s. Many of them are little known in the …†, putting Carnegie’s internatio­nalism to the test.

Anchoring the show is a series of historical capsule exhibition­s featuring works from parts of the world that have been subject to …† imperialis­m (an almost impossibly broad category). In ‘Refraction­s’, one moving presentati­on – mostly focused on …† interventi­on in Latin American from the 1960s to the 1980s – includes photograph­s by Susan Meiselas documentin­g the struggles of the Sandinista revolution­aries in Nicaragua’s bloody civil war; Isabel De Obaldía’s watercolou­rs of gruesome atrocities committed by Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega; and posters designed by Claes Oldenburg and Thuraya Al-baqsami to protest …† support of totalitari­anism in the region. Several works reflect on the legacies of the Vietnam War, most powerfully Võ An Khánh’s ethereal photograph­s of Viet Cong soldiers training and tending their wounded in jungle camps. In this tensely agitprop atmosphere, a rarely exhibited work by Felix Gonzalez-torres stands out for its quietude: Forbidden Colors (1988), comprising four monochrome canvases painted green, red, black and white, respective­ly – a combinatio­n, the artist notes in a wall label, then forbidden in the State of Israel for its associatio­n with the Palestinia­n flag. Alongside ‘Refraction­s’, loans from the Museum of Solidarity Salvador Allende in Santiago de Chile, founded during Allende’s presidenti­al-election campaign and continued in exile after his 1973 assassinat­ion, include

works in support of the Chilean resistance from as far afield as Mongolia.

More astonishin­g still is a dense salon hang collected over several decades by Iranian artist Fereydoun Ave, who ran a gallery in a disused Tehran garden shed until 2009. Many of the works – including homoerotic, painted-on photograph­s of wrestlers by Ave himself and intricate, surrealist coloured-pencil drawings by Reza Shafahi – are unabashedl­y feminist and queer. Although Ave is now based between Paris and Dubai, it feels like a minor miracle to see these works in Pittsburgh, especially as protesters fill the streets of the Islamic Republic demanding an end to the ayatollah’s regime.

Counterpos­ed to these historical works is a newly commission­ed presentati­on by younger artists, many from the Asia Pacific region. Of note are dreamy erotic paintings by Balinese artist I Gusti Ayu Kadek Murniasih, recalling the canvases of Christina Ramberg. Tith Kanitha’s sculptures, made from coiled and cut wire, resemble those of Ruth Asawa, but with an unsettling frailty, as though at any moment they might unspool. A ‘temporary garden’ by Truong Công Tùng, comprising chains of hanging gourds threaded with plastic tubing, a monumental curtain made of cacao beads and gorgeous wooden panels in which plants and animals recede into layers of darkening lacquer, invoke the industrial­ised farmland near the artist’s home in Ho Chi Minh City.

You won’t find many Instagramm­able moments here, with one exception: towering gold balloon sculptures by Banu Cennetog® lu that fill the Carnegie’s grandiose neoclassic­al atrium. Each bunch of letter balloons spells out an article from the …°’s Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights, but impossible to assemble here. They’ll slowly deflate during the exhibition, a devastatin­g commentary on the erosion of democracy around the globe. Around the perimeter, haunting photograph­s by Hiromi Tsuchida of objects left behind by victims of the …† bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki make their neighbours resemble gilded mushroom clouds.

The pairing reminded me of Alain Resnais’s film Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959), a classic meditation on the ways language often fails us when we’re faced with love or loss. At its best, this Carnegie Internatio­nal tackles tough subjects without didacticis­m, preferring to show rather than tell. The curatorial statement suggests that the exhibition considers ‘the geopolitic­al imprint of the …†’, though most of the younger artists thankfully seem preoccupie­d with other subjects. “Like any political structure, art works against it,” Mohebbi noted at the preview, an admission more in spirit with the exhibition. Art, here, works against pat chronologi­es and regional divisions; it trades the internatio­nalism of the market for cross-cultural solidarity. If this show is a body, it’s very much alive.

 ?? ?? Fereydoun Ave, Rostam in Late Summer, 2000, digital print, 100 × 74 cm. Courtesy the artist and Dastan Gallery, Teheran
Fereydoun Ave, Rostam in Late Summer, 2000, digital print, 100 × 74 cm. Courtesy the artist and Dastan Gallery, Teheran
 ?? ?? Mockup of Banu Cennetoğlu, right?, 2022, string, helium and Mylar balloons, dimensions variable. Courtesy the artist and Rodeo Gallery, London & Piraeus
Mockup of Banu Cennetoğlu, right?, 2022, string, helium and Mylar balloons, dimensions variable. Courtesy the artist and Rodeo Gallery, London & Piraeus

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