Spring 2020
Cover Story
Women and femmes, integral in the making of Andy Warhol, take center stage.
Featured Stories
War at a Side-glance
Artist An-My Lê, who lived through the Vietnam War, focuses her lens on the intricacies of armed conflict.
The Brave New World of Botany
Carnegie Museum botanists are using a centuries-old plant collection to provide novel insights into the globe’s most pressing environmental issues.
At Home with Teenie
Pittsburgh and the work of its preeminent photojournalist go prime time in the Scaife Galleries.
Also in this Issue
Sights Unseen: The Armillary Sphere
An exclamation point, of sorts, atop one of the region’s grandest cultural landmarks.
Objects of Our Affection: You Can’t Lay Down Your Memories
Carnegie Museums is home to some of the most significant collections in the world. Here we showcase some of the most compelling objects.
Spreading the Gospel of Warhol
Volunteer leaders help give the public a fresh look at the artist and his museum.

Big Picture
Create your own screen test. For Andy Warhol’s famous Screen Tests, he instructed his subjects to sit still for about three minutes, the length of time it took for a roll of 16mm film to run through his stationary, silent Bolex camera. He then projected the film in slow motion, giving it a dreamlike stillness. Visitors to The Warhol can make their own screen tests using a computer touch screen and some tech help from the museum.