The behemoth that is the Biennale d’Arte di Venezia has commenced its 60th edition, with its annual themed title—“Foreigners Everywhere”—drawn from a series of works made by Fulvia Carnevale and James Thornhill’s Paris/Palermo collective, Claire Fontaine. The expression also references an anti-racism and anti-xenophobia collective from Turin circa the early 2000s: Stranieri Ovunque.
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The 2024 Venice Biennale gathers eighty-eight participating countries, four of which are participating for the first time: the Republic of Benin, Ethiopia, the United Republic of Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste. The Republic of Panama and Senegal each have their own pavilions for the first time. Across the Giardini della Biennale with its thirty permanent pavilions and at venues around the city, artists have interpreted the Biennale’s theme in a host of ways.
Archie Moore’s exhibition “kith and kin” at the Australia Pavilion was awarded the Golden Lion for Best National Participation, described by the jury as “quietly powerful” and lauded for “its invocation of shared loss for occluded pasts.” It is the first time an Australian artist has received this high-profile recognition in Venice, and Moore had been working in the pavilion for about two months ahead of the opening. Moore’s sweeping genealogical chart of the Kamilaroi and Bigambul, hand-drawn in chalk, spans no less than 65,000 years: a First Nations family tree unscrolling on dark walls and on the ceiling. These constellations encircle a huge table—sitting in a pool of still water—in the center of the room stacked with government documents, all relating to the deaths of Indigenous Australians in police custody, rendering an archive tangible.
The American pavilion, too, celebrates Indigenous history—artist Jeffrey Gibson is of Choctaw and Cherokee descent—as well as queer joy. Using beadwork and tribal aesthetics, his riotously bright color palette flips off “the chromophobia of contemporary art” and his psychedelic hues are meant to be “radically inclusive” in contrast with the ideals of the founding documents of the United States (cited: 1866 Civil Rights Act, 1924 Indian Citizenship Act). Gibson’s nearly three-minute brightly kaleidoscopic nine-channel video—pulsating with energy, vivacity, pride and movement—is perhaps one of the most effervescent moments in the Biennale.
At the Austrian pavilion, the artist Anna Jermolaewa, who was a political refugee from the USSR and moved to Vienna in the late ‘80s, created multiple groupings in the space. In one, bouquets of fresh flowers in various types of vases represent popular uprisings, either by color or plant genus; elsewhere, she alludes to non-violent resistance, notably........