On 'In Minor Keys' (2026)
Victor Sternweiler on the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia – titled by Koyo Kouoh. Visited and reviewed in mid May, 2026. _________________________________________________________________________________________________
Dear fellow porcile.org contributor Beniamino,
thank you for your quick recommendations for La Biennale di Venezia. I arrived with only a few opening-weekend posts as reference, and now, from Nice, with a little distance after days at the Cannes Film Festival, I am sending you my takes—or rather, what remained in my memory, as a psychoanalytic exercise.
Think of these notes as an appetizer—or a way to compare impressions once you see it yourself.
Giardini - national pavilions
I was greeted by origami steel deer by the Ukrainian Pavilion, otherwise located at the Arsenale.
At the Belgian Pavilion I saw Miet Warlop’s crew. I had recently seen her performance at HAU, One Song from 2022, which was very impressive—a hard to describe piece about the essence of theatricality, about acting, tempo, and what it means to be in sync in a collective performance. I also met her briefly there, and she told me she would stay in Venice until November and also perform herself, too. However, the HAU performance simply raised the bar too high for me.
At the Dutch Pavilion, there was an massive garage gate installed in front of the entrance. The pavilion seemed to operate according to a performance cycle every two hours or so, but I never managed to catch it properly. Once I finally did, it was postponed because somebody was sick. I am not sure whether this is the right thing to do at the Biennale: to open for five minutes every two hours, lock people in for twenty minutes, and then close again. It sounds cool, but perhaps it is a little too cool for school.
The Danish Pavilion a huge video installation by Maja Malou Lyse featured very high-profile porn stars, which was intriguing, though the installation itself felt oddly unresolved. Between the 360-degree projection and the ceiling, there was this awkward gap that looked quite ugly. The smaller second room felt like an afterthought, filled with smaller objects by the same artist. It had the strange feeling of walking from the “main exhibition” directly into the museum shop, as though one had just seen the major installation and was now being invited to buy the memorabilia. I am speaking, of course, as a collector.
The Russian Pavilion: a projection on a transparent surface covering the door, thus making the pavilion inaccessible. What a missed opportunity to create a buzz.
The Japanese Pavilion by Ei Arakawa-Nash left me rather cold. Being there, I did not understand the fuss around the plastic babies that you are supposed to hold in your arms. The supposed emotional charge of the gesture did not quite reach me, as I grew up in a large family where there are constantly new babies to hold. I remained unimpressed.
The German Pavilion, with its temporary GDR Berlin façade by Sung Tieu, and especially Henrike Naumann’s art, was really good. Naumann’s green room is probably her magnum opus. It was everything she had done before, but brought to a more reflexive and complex level. She was no longer simply arranging objects in a room; she was dissecting them, opening them up.
I liked the Canadian Pavilion. Abbas Akhavan, whose art I tend to like, managed to work with the complicated architecture of the pavilion very well and installed a pool. It was inviting in that sense, as, like me, many people really wanted to stay around. As for the Nordic Countries Pavilion, the oversized (and perhaps disfigured?) sculptures by Tori Wrånes had an immense presence in their interplay with gravity. Most importantly, I liked the fact that the artist created dedicated clothing items that were equally original and, in my humble opinion, worthy of an haute couture show in themselves.
The Austrian Pavilion by Florentina Holzinger, on the other hand, was very impressive. During the opening weekend, from what I got from Instagram stories, the artist climbed up by rope to a bell, and the body became the gong. This time around her frequent collaborator climbed up, almost naked in the cold, performed with a physical intensity that was genuinely striking. Inside, there were further installations and machines processing feces, and other forms of theatrical gimmickry that were, as always, handled very convincingly. There was even someone performatively cleaning the space. Still, I cannot help feeling that she cannot shake off autobiographical references (Christianity, or Freud in A Year Without Summer) where similar motifs appeared. But despite all of that, the pavilion was absolutely worth seeing. The Spanish, Swiss, Czech, French, Hungarian, British (which always has excellent sound), Australian, Finish, Brazilian, Venetian, and Polish pavilions have mostly already slipped from my mind. The Greek Pavilion surprised me, though not entirely in a good way. It tried to reproduce something like an escape-room atmosphere, but it was so direct, so literal, that I could not detect much of an artistic gesture beyond the staging itself. It had potential, but it felt disappointing.
Giardini – central pavilion
Curated by Koyo Kouoh, on the right, it started with a reproduction of Duchamp’s Museum in a Box. More prominently, actually, there was Celia Vásquez Yui’s podium of fictional animals in clay, with geometrical patterns. I was also happy to see Tammy Nguyen’s art. She is one of the people behind Martha’s Quarterly, New York, which, in my opinion, is one of the hottest artist-publication collectives around. There were large-scale paintings by her, but the books felt underrepresented, to my very personal taste. I also discovered the art of Sabian Baumann, and especially liked the small clay sculptures. I saw Raed Yassin’s ‘Warhol of Arabia’.
Arsenale – main section
At the entrance to the Arsenale, the large 360-degree video installation, with its barely moving images, reminded me of the Pergamon Panorama in Berlin. It was a nice start to the tour, throwing you into darkness and making you find your way forward. I was surprised to see Nick Cave’s art, which seemed like art expensive to produce. I ran into Raed Yassin’s art again. I liked the art of the artist Nicholas Hlobo, which was a rubber-and-leather-sewn gigantic BDSM monster siren—that’s what fashion for sirens looks like. Next to it, by Rajni Perrera + Marigold Santos, there was that amazing clay sculpture of human-like, yet deformed, proportions, which had a clay mask. It was mounted on a 20 cm high platform and was surrounded by so many smaller objects. I thought it was very cool.
I was completely in love with Alfredo Jaar’s room-in-a-room. A great idea by the artist, and chapeau to the curators for making it happen. Carsten Höller (what a superstar!) you get it when you “see” it. His art can also be seen at Palazzo Diedo. Eric Baudelaire dissected his film Une fleur à la bouche from 2022, premiered at Berlinale #pirandello. I remember attending the premiere and Q&A, which was excellent. I’m still in awe of his film The Ugly One. But here he seemed simply to have broken up parts of the film into a five-channel installation of a section circling around. I thought: yes, fine, moving on.
Arsenale – Artiglierie
Among the national pavilions, I remember the Filipino Pavilion very well, with its cool silver-metal look by Jon Cuyson. The Slovenian Pavilion by Nomument Group, with its film-set-like ruins, also sticks in my mind and could be a great fit for the Architecture Biennale too. The Latvian Pavilion, by MAREUNROL'S, in dialogue with the 'Untamed Fashion Assemblies' archive of fashion designer Bruno Birmanis, gave me a very peculiar feeling: like the beforemath or aftermath of a fashion show, with hangers lying around and the sense that people had just been there. I have to admit that, for a second, I was like, “Is it art or is it the staff break room?” I think it is the quality of great art to make you, on the first encounter, doubt your senses.
Uzbekistan had a solid pavilion. I liked the eerie kinetic pieces by Hanoi-based artist Nguyen Phuong Linh. I appreciated the fact that they brought some non-diaspora artists from Asia.
The Indian Pavilion slipped my memory, although it was huge, as did the Italian and Chinese pavilions, and all the others in between, such as Ireland, Malta, etc.
Arsenale – Gaggiandre
Near the Italian Pavilion, I saw Tsai Ming-liang’s beautiful video Sand from 2018, from his Walker series, by the water. It was an outdoor projection. Next to it was the fantastic art by Alice Maher, her orange resin heads from 1996 looking out of the water—uncanny. And also the amazing sphinx-pose, pitch-black siren sculpture on a copper-colored mesh pedestal by Wangechi Mutu.
Arsenale – Sale d’armi
The Argentinian Pavilion by Matías Duville was very beautiful: ephemeral, delicate, with salt spread across the space and black elements drawn into it. The whole notion of ephemerality was strongly present. In fact, perhaps the entire Biennale should be something like that, #sustainability, considering how much is produced only to be disposed of later.
I also liked the atmosphere in the Saudi Pavilion showing Dana Awartani: perfect light, a huge about 50 cm raised floor occupying most of the room, and a spatial arrangement of floor tiles that forced you to walk around rather than through it. It had an effect (perhaps theatrical, perhaps architectural) and it worked for me.
I saw the Ukrainian Pavilion with documentation videos about the travelling deer, which also appeared near the Giardini.
I saw Aline Bouvy’s new book La Merde, also the title of the exhibition, and her video piece, which was to be viewed within a dedicated installation. Pretty much next to it was the Albanian Pavilion by Genti Korini: a three-channel installation on massive 16:9 displays, mixing moving images of archaic life with a very modern narrator who walked out of a Rick Owens catwalk. In that regard, and in combination with the Danish Pavilion, I was very happy to see a turn to more acting-oriented video installation with professional cast and videography, as opposed to the video-editing orgies of found footage of the last few years.
The Singaporean, Turkish, Mexican, and UAE pavilions really escaped my memory.
The Israeli Pavilion, relocated next to the Arsenale’s cafeteria, had this plastic waterfall installation. I wonder why the artist Belu-Simion Fainaru voiced his protest regarding the call for the exclusion of the Israeli and US pavilions; the concept did not seem prize-worthy to me.
Off-site – from the fraction that I could catch
Close to the Giardini, I saw the Estonian Pavilion by Merike Estna, which had a charming, process-based quality, where the artist was continuously painting on her canvases laid on the floor and creating a kind of tableau of about 10 x 2 panels/canvases. The idea seemed to be that the final piece would only be completed by the end of the Biennale.
On Via Garibaldi, the Cuban Pavilion by Juan Roberto Diago Durruthy was a very pleasant surprise: as if Easter Island monolithic human heads were reproduced by El Anatsui, to give you some coordinates :). The small space was completely packed with objects. Many curators would have shown half of them, or even a third, but here the density was suffocating, in a good way.
Then I went to Palazzo Marin and saw Shirin Neshat’s videos, in chapters, following her protagonist of multiple personas across different contexts and locations. Formally decent, but I didn’t see anything that one can’t anticipate with her art.
Opposite that, I saw a prominently promoted exhibition by Dale Chihuly, a Jeff Koons for Murano aficionados whom I had never heard of.
Next, at Palazzo Franchetti, which never disappoints, I catched a glimpse of a video, or two, by Saodat Ismailova. I also saw objects by the glass artist Martin Janecký, who creates faces and figures in glass, not by blowing but by shaping the hot glass from the inside. He makes busts by manipulating the material while it is still hot. This was actually very cool—another Murano star. I also saw art by Eva & Franco Mattes, which I really liked a lot, in this more domestic and thus quasi-private setting. Later I learned that the latter was co-curated by my friend Lu Haustein.
Across the bridge at the Accademia, I saw Marina Abramović’s vast exhibition. Crystals, wood, no pictures, and you are supposed to wear earplugs to experience it in silence. The execution was brilliant, but the ideas felt like something brainstormed in a café in New York: I imagine Marina saying, “Yes, we could do this, we could do that,” and everyone around her was impressed because Marina said it. Then, of course, it gets implemented and feels neat but underwhelming.
I skipped Peggy Guggenheim and went towards Punta della Dogana. Near the Basilica, there was also a Saudi mini-palazzo, promoted everywhere #maps, even at the train station. There were some nice pieces, but overall it felt like the kind of thing one does when one has infinite money. It was sad, because I actually liked the Saudi Pavilion in the Arsenale. Apparently that was not enough for them.
At Punta della Dogana, Pinault Collection, there was Lorna Simpson and Paulo Nazareth, whose art I did not know. He did videos, documentary material, participatory elements, ritualistic gestures, drawings, things to step on, things to do, a bit of Yoko Ono-style “draw your mother.” He was doing every technique that is offered at an art school. He may be the nicest person in the world, but the art was underwhelming. His work felt like protocol art before I had even read around the term.
At Punta della Dogana as a whole, you could feel the crisis of the art world. It had the atmosphere of an exhibition with low installation costs, in comparison to last time: take something from storage in Switzerland, install it quickly, no busy installation design, no extra lighting, no drama. That said, Lorna Simpson’s huge paintings were nonetheless impressive. I stood in front of them, in their scale and perfect light, and I was genuinely in awe.
Then I took the vaporetto to Fondazione Prada. I had initially been surprised by the pairing of Arthur Jafa and Richard Prince, but it turned out to be a very good curatorial idea. The pieces chosen fit together much better than anticipated. It was much quieter than Christoph Büchel’s bombastic show, which I really, really liked (I know you disagree) but as a curatorial gesture, it was probably one of the best things I saw.
I also saw THE “protocol art” exhibition you suggested. Given the sophistication of the text, and what you had told me about it, I was expecting more. In reality, it felt thin: high-profile names, familiar objects, little surprise. There was nothing particularly special about it. The highlight was a “piece” by Carsten Höller and, honestly, finding a card game in the bookshop and buying it.
On my way back, I missed the other Palazzo Grassi because it closes at five. I was curious about the art of Amar Kanwar.
I ended up in the Biennale office, Ca’ Giustinian, at Canal Grande, and saw a Man Ray exhibition—a re-installation from a display in Venice in 1976. It was so beautiful: many portraits, many historical figures (I didn’t know that the famous Schönberg portrait was made by him) and some very cool pre-digital photomontages. Honestly, this was one of the highlights of the trip.
Greetings from Nice, May 20, 2026, Victor
PS: Don't miss the gigantic lion sculptures and the Joseph Kosuth facade word installation(s) at Campo Santa Maria Formosa.












