
Five pavilions where light and space do the talking
Five national pavilions stand out with light and space and offer some of the Biennale’s most quietly arresting work this year.

Five national pavilions stand out with light and space and offer some of the Biennale’s most quietly arresting work this year.

Artist Rita Sabo wins new special prize for installation connecting 15 world cultures through cosmic imagery and thread.

The Venice Biennale opened with its jury resigned, Russia’s participation contested, and protests.

No Golden Lion, no jury. The Biennale opens amid political tensions, leaving visitors to shape its symbolic verdict.

Venice’s “La Galleria” turns 25 with a landmark exhibition uniting artists and a second opening at a historic church.

Inside Casa dei Tre Oci, where Žižek, Agamben and the world’s biggest thinkers come to discuss the future.

At the Biennale, the Arsenale turns art into political testimony, with sound, smell, and materials drawn from conflict zones.

Artists from India, the UK and Germany explore what home means when it is lost, rebuilt or remembered across borders.

The Central Pavilion brings artists together under the curator Kouoh’s final vision, a show shaped by remembrance and restraint.

Eight million people, 23 countries, glowing tapestries and a Pugliese luminaria on show at Procuratie Vecchie.
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