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Will it be this week? Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Will it be this week? Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Will it be this week? Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Will it be this week? Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Will it be this week? Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Will it be this week? Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Peace in the Eye of the Storm: Venice Biennale 2026

Despite the many loud protests and political tensions that marked the opening week of the 2026 Venice Biennale, the exhibition itself often unfolded in a far quieter register. In many ways, it remained faithful to its title, In Minor Keys, with numerous pavilions and collateral events favouring introspection, meditation and emotional subtlety over spectacle or overt confrontation.


Text by: Angie Afifi


While much of the conversation around La Biennale di Venezia 2026 has focused on political tensions and institutional scandals, what stayed with me most after visiting the exhibitions was not the controversy, but the art itself. More specifically, the way contemporary artists today translate political, social and emotional realities into space, atmosphere and perception rather than direct statements.


This year’s Biennale, curated by Koyo Kouoh (1967-2025) under the title ‘In Minor Keys’, feels quieter and more introspective than many previous editions. The political themes are still there — migration, censorship, war, identity, ecology, postcolonial memory — but they rarely appear in an illustrative or openly activist way. Instead, many artists approach these subjects through immersive installations, fragmented narratives, sound, materiality and emotional tension.


What becomes clear after moving through the pavilions is that many artists today are less interested in giving answers than in creating experiences. Experiences of uncertainty, disorientation, vulnerability or even awe.


One of the most striking pavilions for me was the Japanese Pavilion by Ei Arakawa-Nash (b.1977). Filled with childlike figures, playful gestures and moments of interaction, the space initially feels almost surreal — somewhere between performance, game and collective ritual. But the longer you stay inside, the more emotionally complex it becomes. Beneath the apparent lightness emerges something much more fragile: a reflection on care, vulnerability and the strange emotional weight of responsibility. What I found especially powerful was the way the pavilion avoided direct explanation and instead created a feeling — tender, slightly absurd and quietly unsettling at the same time.


A very different but equally powerful experience emerged in the Greek Pavilion by Andreas Angelidakis (b.1968). Escape Room transforms the space into something between a nightclub, a digital ruin and Plato’s cave. Red light, chains, broken architectural forms and immersive sound create an environment that feels both seductive and unsettling. The pavilion speaks about identity, ideology and digital reality, but not in a literal way. You feel these ideas physically before you fully understand them intellectually.


This is something that many of the strongest projects at the Biennale have in common: they work through sensation first.


Walking through Venice this year, I kept noticing how many artists were focused on unstable perception. Mirrors, shadows, distorted reflections, fragmented spaces and labyrinth-like environments appeared again and again throughout the pavilions. Reality itself often felt uncertain. In many exhibitions, the viewer was placed in situations where orientation became unstable, physically, emotionally or psychologically.


At times this created genuinely powerful experiences. At others, it also revealed some of the limitations of contemporary art today. After several days at the Biennale, certain aesthetic strategies began repeating themselves: dark rooms, immersive soundscapes, monumental installations, fragmented archives, slow-moving video works. There were moments when I started wondering whether contemporary art has developed its own recognizable aesthetic of seriousness — one that risks becoming predictable despite its ambition to challenge perception.


And yet, the strongest works managed to move beyond this repetition because they created something emotionally convincing rather than simply visually impressive.


This became especially visible in the Austrian Pavilion, which sharply divided audiences. Some visitors considered it one of the strongest presentations at the Biennale because of its theatrical intensity and symbolic force. Others criticized it as overly spectacular, almost “Disneyland-like” in its attempt to provoke reaction through visual excess and performative drama. Personally, I found this tension fascinating in itself. It reflects a larger question surrounding contemporary art today: where is the line between meaningful immersion and spectacle designed primarily for attention?


In an age shaped by social media, image circulation and constant visual overstimulation, this question feels impossible to ignore. Many contemporary installations are now experienced simultaneously as physical environments and as images destined to circulate online. Some artists seem deeply aware of this dynamic and actively work with it, while others appear trapped by it.


What interested me most at this year’s Biennale was not whether a work was “political” or not, but whether it was capable of producing a genuine emotional or perceptual shift. Some of the most powerful installations did this through monumental scale, while others achieved it through extreme subtlety.


The Brazilian Pavilion, for example, carried a strong sense of historical and emotional density. Built around the dialogue between Rosana Paulino (b.1967) and Adriana Varejão (b.1964), the exhibition explored colonial memory, identity and resilience through layered surfaces, fragmented bodies and tactile materiality. There was something simultaneously beautiful and unsettling in the way the pavilion connected themes of violence, protection and cultural memory without ever turning them into direct statements. Rather than presenting history as something distant or completed, the space made it feel physically present — embedded within textures, wounds and architectural forms themselves.


The Italian Pavilion created an entirely different experience. In a Biennale dominated by noise, scale and sensory overload, its restraint felt almost radical. The space unfolded slowly through ceramics, fragile architectural rhythms and quiet human gestures, encouraging visitors not simply to observe but to remain present inside the environment. There was something unexpectedly moving about the way the pavilion resisted urgency. Rather than overwhelming the viewer with information or spectacle, it created a temporary pause — a space where slowness itself became emotionally charged. At times it felt less like an exhibition and more like an attempt to protect a fragile form of attention from the speed and fragmentation of contemporary life.


While many pavilions this year focused on emotional density and physical immersion, the Chinese Pavilion approached uncertainty through distance, control and mediation.


The Chinese Pavilion approached perception through movement, illusion and constantly shifting visual environments. Kinetic objects, reflective surfaces and carefully choreographed spatial compositions created a pavilion that often felt playful and mesmerizing at first glance, drawing viewers into a world of motion and visual transformation. But beneath this almost hypnotic visual energy there was also a quieter psychological tension. The works seemed deeply concerned with mediation, perception and the instability of contemporary reality — the feeling that our experience of the world is increasingly filtered through systems, images and technological interfaces. Rather than presenting these ideas directly, the pavilion allowed them to emerge gradually through atmosphere and sensory experience, balancing visual fascination with a more subtle sense of emotional distance and disorientation.


Meanwhile, the Egyptian Pavilion, at least in my perception, carried one of the most meditative atmospheres at the Biennale. Built around monumental granite sculptures and an almost ascetic visual language, the space felt deeply quiet without ever feeling empty. Rather than using spectacle or dense narrative, the pavilion worked through stillness, weight and presence. There was something striking in the way the sculptures seemed simultaneously heavy and restrained, as though the material itself contained a kind of compressed emotional energy. The exhibition approached silence not as absence, but as a psychological condition — a space for attention, reflection and slowed perception. Walking through it felt less like moving through a traditional exhibition and more like entering a suspended state somewhere between contemplation and isolation.


In many ways, La Biennale di Venezia 2026 felt emotionally very different from many previous editions. Instead of visual excess, technological optimism or the constant need to overwhelm the viewer, this year’s exhibitions often moved in a far more restrained and, in many ways, emotionally dramatic yet deeply human direction. Across many pavilions there was a noticeable atmosphere of fragility, emotional exhaustion, melancholy and psychological tension. What made this especially striking was how consistently this atmosphere appeared throughout the Biennale as a whole. Many artists seemed less interested in producing grand statements than in reflecting the psychological reality of the present moment — a world marked by exhaustion, instability and emotional overload. Instead of relying on direct explanation, many of the exhibitions worked through mood, spatial tension and sensory experience. And perhaps this is what made Biennale 2026 feel so distinctive overall: its ability to capture the fragile and deeply human emotional landscape of contemporary life with unusual sensitivity and restraint.

Следите за новостями. Скоро на Vickery.art появится кое-что новое.

Следите за новостями. Скоро на Vickery.art появится кое-что новое.

Следите за новостями. Скоро на Vickery.art появится кое-что новое.

Следите за новостями. Скоро на Vickery.art появится кое-что новое.

Следите за новостями. Скоро на Vickery.art появится кое-что новое.

Следите за новостями. Скоро на Vickery.art появится кое-что новое.

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