Notes related to Venice
MEXICO PRESENTS A SPIRITUAL INVOCATION AT THE 61ST VENICE BIENNALE
Through a ritual ecosystem of materials, sound, and gesture, RojoNegro's proposal for the Mexican Pavilion opens a space of pause and listening in the face of the saturation of the contemporary world.
SURREALIST IVÁN TOVAR RETURNS TO VENICE HALF A CENTURY LATER
The Iván Tovar Foundation presents Le Retour, a collateral event of the 61st Venice Biennale that repositions the Dominican artist within the global history of Surrealism.
THE ERASED COMMUNITIES OF THE PANAMA CANAL ARRIVE AT THE VENICE BIENNALE
In line with the theme of the 61st edition, the duo Messengers of the Sun turns hyperstition into a tool for rewriting an untold story: that of the peoples displaced by a mythologized feat of engineering.
CAROLINA CAYCEDO: BETWEEN VENICE AND SÃO PAULO, RIVERS AND RESISTANCE
The Colombian-British artist participates in the current Venice Biennale and opens Confluences at MASP on July 3.
POLAND OCCUPIES THREE NATIONAL PAVILIONS AT THE VENICE BIENNALE
Polish artists and curators are present at the Polish, Estonian, and Albanian Pavilions, as well as an official collateral event at the Procuratie Vecchie.
VENICE BIENNALE 2026: A CONTEMPORARY LOOK AT MEMORY, ARCHIVE, AND TERRITORY
At the 61st Venice Art Biennale, titled In Minor Keys and conceived by Cameroonian curator Koyo Kouoh, Latin American artists and projects hold a prominent place within an edition shaped by reflections on memory, territory, identity, and community knowledge.
WHAT IS "SEAWORLD VENICE"? THE INSTALLATION AT THE BIENNALE THAT STAGES ECOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL COLLAPSE
Florentina Holzinger represents Austria at the 61st International Art Exhibition with a live installation exploring water, purity and feminist resistance. On view through 22 November at the Giardini della Biennale.
JUNKANOO IN VENICE: ART, MEMORY, AND POSTHUMOUS COLLABORATION AT THE BAHAMAS PAVILION
The 2026 Venice Biennale hosts an exhibition exploring the Bahamian Junkanoo tradition through the work of John Beadle and Lavar Munroe — two generations of artists united by discarded materials and collective memory.
BETWEEN DOG AND WOLF: CANADA BRINGS TWILIGHT TO THE VENICE BIENNALE
With Victoria water lilies as protagonists, Abbas Akhavan transforms the Canadian pavilion into a liminal space that invites to rethink humanity's relationship with the natural world.
US SCULPTURES AMID CONTROVERSY AT THE VENICE BIENNALE
No formal application, no galleries, and uncertain funding: the artist representing the United States in Venice explores the transformation of matter and the American landscape.
SPAIN: ORIOL VILANOVA AND THE ABOLITION OF THE MUSEUM AND THE ARCHIVE
The Spanish Pavilion at the Biennale is transformed into an anti-museum led by the Catalan artist, grounded in the accumulation of postcards, memory, and a critique of the archive.
DENMARK’S PAVILION AT VENICE BIENNALE EXAMINES PORNOGRAPHY, SCIENCE, AND HUMAN REPRODUCTION
For the 61st edition of the world's oldest contemporary art exhibition, Denmark selected Maja Malou Lyse and curator Chus Martínez to represent the country at the Giardini.
ECUADOR UNVEILS “KANUA” IN THE CANALS OF VENICE
In the run-up to the Venice Biennale, the Ecuador Pavilion project offers solar-powered boat tours and intimate conversations about extractivism, rivers, territories, and ways of life in the Amazon.
THE VENICE BIENNALE IN AN EDITION MARKED BY POLITICAL GAMES
By: María Galarza and Álvaro de Benito
The Venice Art Biennale is approaching the inauguration of its 61st edition amid resignations, protests, and controversies. Never indifferent to its time, its launch also converges within an intense context of wars, genocides, and geopolitical crises. From Arte al Día, we ask ourselves: how can we trace the relationships between politics and art?
CHILE AT THE 2026 VENICE BIENNALE: NORTON MAZA PRESENTS "INTER-REALITY"
The proposal selected for the Chilean pavilion brings an immersive experience in Venice that addresses contemporary tensions.
EL SALVADOR MAKES ITS DEBUT AT THE VENICE BIENNALE WITH ITS OWN PAVILION
The Central American country will bring Oscar Molina's work to the Biennale, paying tribute to displaced communities and the global diaspora.
MARGARET WHYTE TURNS FRAGILITY INTO LANGUAGE AT THE 2026 VENICE BIENNALE
The Uruguayan Pavilion in Venice will present Whyte’s work, which combines textiles, obsolete machines, and scraps of waste to demonstrate that disorder does not destroy.
CUBA PRESENTS "FREE MEN" AT THE VENICE BIENNALE
Cuban artist Roberto Diago presents a sculptural installation that turns the scar into an emblem of identity and precariousness into an act of sovereignty.
ARTE LAGUNA PRIZE 2025 ANNOUNCES THE SPECIAL PRIZE WINNERS
The international award expands its network of partners and recognizes 43 artists through prizes that include residencies, exhibitions, creative commissions, and collaborations with cultural institutions and companies from eight countries.

