The Angolan pavilion, representing the nation of Angola, has participated in the Venice Biennale since 2013. As one of the biennial international art exhibition's national pavilions, Angola mounts a show in a Venetian palazzo outside Venice's Giardini. The first Angolan pavilion, which featured the photography of Edson Chagas, became the first African national pavilion to receive the biennial's top prize, the Golden Lion for best national pavilion. Chagas displayed poster-sized photographs of resituated, abandoned objects and weathered architecture in the Angolan capital of Luanda. Reviewers praised the interplay between the photographed subject matter and the Italian Renaissance artwork that adorned the hosting palazzo's walls. The 2015 Biennale hosted a group show of five Angolan artists on themes of intergenerational dialogue.
The Venice Biennale is an international art biennial exhibition held in Venice, Italy. Often described as "the Olympics of the art world", the Biennale is a prestigious event for contemporary artists known for propelling career visibility. The festival has become a constellation of shows: a central exhibition curated by that year's artistic director, national pavilions hosted by individual nations, and independent exhibitions throughout Venice. The Biennale parent organization also hosts regular festivals in other arts: architecture, dance, film, music, and theater. [1]
Outside of the central, international exhibition, individual nations produce their own shows, known as pavilions, as their national representation. Nations that own their pavilion buildings, such as the 30 housed on the Giardini, are responsible for their own upkeep and construction costs as well. Nations without dedicated buildings, such as Angola, create pavilions in venues throughout the city. [1]
Prior to the pavilion's establishment, Angolan artists participated in the 2007 Venice Biennale's "African Pavilion", curated by Fernando Alvim and Simon Njami. [2]
For the 55th Venice Biennale, in 2013, Angola joined nine other countries as first-time participants. [3] The Angolan pavilion exhibition, Luanda, Encyclopedic City, was held in the Palazzo Cini near Venice's Ponte dell'Accademia and featured Angolan artist Edson Chagas's photograph series of abandoned objects and weathered architecture in Angola's capital of Luanda. Chagas displayed his photographs as 4,000 poster-sized prints stacked atop 23 crates throughout the opulent room, lined with opulent paintings and crafts from the early Italian Renaissance. Visitors were invited to take the photo poster prints with the artist's intention that the exhibition would end when the prints ran out. [3] [4] [5] such as Sassetta and Botticelli. [6] The Palazzo Cini had been closed for the previous two decades, but reopened for Angola with the proviso that Chagas could not modify the fragile building or move anything inside. [5] The exhibition's title refers to the Angolan capital, Luanda, and the Biennale's central exhibition, The Encyclopedic Palace. [7] The pavilion was curated by Paula Nascimento and Stefano Rabolli Pansera. [4] Elsewhere in the building, as part of the pavilion, "Angola in Movement" curated works from the collection of the National Insurance Company of Angola. [2]
The photographs on display came from Chagas's larger series, "Found Not Taken". [8] This series included conceptually similar photographs from cities besides Luanda. [9] By request of the pavilion's curators, Chagas solely used the Luanda photographs. The artist found the request agreeable because the smaller set of photographs did not take the series out of context. [8] The cities he photographed—London, Luanda, and Newport—each were preparing to host major events and, to Chagas, demonstrated a "sense of renewal" and rehabilitation in its culture. Coming from Luanda, where most resources and objects were reused, Chagas noted how consumer habits have evolved over time. He photographed each object in spaces where it interacted with its environment. Some objects were shot in nearly the same space as they were found, while others had to be moved. Through this method, Chagas felt that he learned the city's rhythm. He planned to continue the series. [8]
The pavilion was the biennial's "breakout star". [3] It was a surprise winner of the Biennale's top prize, the Golden Lion for best national pavilion. The jury commended Chagas in expressing the "irreconcilability and complexity of site". [3] The New York Times and Frieze too acknowledged the pavilion's understanding of spatial relations in the juxtaposition of Chagas's photographs against the building's Catholic decorations, [3] [10] reflected in aspects such as the monetary value differences between the weary, discarded objects in the photographs and the aged relics on the palazzo's walls. [10] Frieze added that, compared to other African national pavilions, Angola's was responsive to its context yet unconcerned with "reifying otherness". [4] While artwork has long been used to recontextualize space, Frieze's Amy Sherlock appreciated how the cheaply produced, unwieldy posters would likely end up as street or canal debris, another step in the cycle of consumerism. She resisted the urge of taking a poster, considering the wealth of other items she had collected at the Biennale, but when she gave in, she felt "that this inevitability was an essential part of the piece". [10] Art – Das Kunstmagazin , however, questioned the jury's choice and partiality—a stance, in turn, criticized by a writer for OkayAfrica . [11] The award made Angola the first African nation to win the Biennale's top honors. [12] Artsy 's Giles Peppiatt later named Chagas's series as a recommended purchase at the 2014 1:54 contemporary African art fair. [13]
At the next Biennale, Angola presented five artists in On Ways of Traveling. Based on the idea of an intergenerational dialogue, the exhibition focuses on how a younger generation of artists and citizens in an independent Angola further the legacies and cultural fusions of past generations. [14] Francisco Vidal showed Utopia Luanda Machine, a mixed-media work that folds into crates and includes images of Zadie Smith, Kanye West, and cotton plants painted on machetes. The artist hoped to create a new African Industrial Revolution that would combine art, craft, and design. Other works included Binelde Hyrcan's humorous short video of four boys on an imaginary road trip, Délio Jasse's layered images floating in a basin of colored water, Nelo Teixiera's mask sculptures, and António Ole's assemblage of plastic tubs. [15] Ole also served as the exhibition's curator. [15] [16] The show mounted in Venice's Palazzo Pisani a San Stefano. [15] The pavilion's commissioner, RitaGT, said that the Angolan Ministry of Culture had been a strong supporter of participation in the Biennale for its impact both on the country and in bringing its contemporary art to an international stage. [14]
Ole returned to represent Angola in the 2017 Biennale. [17] He showed five short films [18] from his Lisbon Gulbenkian Museum 50-year career retrospective. [19] The documentaries and narrative films traced Angola's history and Ole's career. [20] [21] The scenes focus on Angola's post-colonial independence, e.g., women singing at a carnival, the first Angolan president, and the forced migration of the Nambuangongo people. The films were projected onto the white walls of a two-story room. [18]
The country did not participate in the 2019 Biennale. [22]
# | Year | Title | Artist(s) | Curator(s) | Location | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
58th | 2019 | Did not participate | – | – | – | [22] |
57th | 2017 | Magnetic Memory/Historical Resonance | António Ole | Maria da Silva de Oliveira e Silva, Paulo Kussy Correia Fernandes, Antonio Ole | Venice Art Space, Fondamenta degli Incurabili | [17] |
56th | 2015 | On Ways of Traveling | Francisco Vidal, António Ole, Binelde Hyrcan, Délio Jasse, Nelo Teixiera | António Ole | Palazzo Pisani a San Stefano | [15] |
55th | 2013 | Luanda, Encyclopedic City | Edson Chagas | Paula Nascimento, Stefano Rabolli Pansera | Palazzo Cini | [4] |
The Venice Biennale is an international cultural exhibition hosted annually in Venice, Italy, by the Biennale Foundation. It focuses on contemporary art, and includes events for art, contemporary dance, architecture, cinema, and theatre. Two main components of the festival are known as the Art Biennale and the Architecture Biennale, which are held in alternating years. The others – Biennale Musica, Biennale Teatro, Venice Film Festival, and Venice Dance Biennale – are held annually. The main exhibition held in Castello alternates between art and architecture, and there are around 30 permanent pavilions built by different countries.
In the art world, a Biennale, Italian for "biennial" or "every other year", is a large-scale international contemporary art exhibition. The term was popularised by the Venice Biennale, which was first held in 1895, but the concept of such a large scale, and intentionally international event goes back to at least the 1851 Great Exhibition in London.
Sislej Xhafa is a Kosovar contemporary artist, based in New York.
Simon Njami is a writer and an independent curator, lecturer, art critic and essayist.
Tracey Rose is a South African artist who lives and works in Johannesburg. Rose is best known for her performances, video installations, and photographs.
Beyond Entropy is a London-based non-profit limited company practicing architecture, urbanism, and cultural analysis. The company evolved from trans-disciplinary research at the Architectural Association School of Architecture, in London. The company was founded by Stefano Rabolli Pansera in 2009 as a collaborative practice operating public-private partnerships globally. Beyond Entropy Ltd operates at the threshold between art, architecture, and geopolitics focusing on the notion of energy influencing form. Projects vary from art installations, to architectural master-planning, to public relations.
Paula Nascimento is an Angolan architect and curator who along with Stefano Rabolli Pansera curated the Angolan pavilion at the 55th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia which won the Golden Lion for "best national participation".
Omar Kholeif is an Egyptian-born artist, curator, writer and editor. Kholeif's curatorial practice focuses on art that intersects with the internet, as well as works of art from emerging geographic territories that have yet to be seen in the mainstream.
The 56th Venice Biennale was an international contemporary art exhibition held between May and November 2015. The Venice Biennale takes place biennially in Venice, Italy. Artistic director Okwui Enwezor curated its central exhibition, "All The World's Futures".
Edson Chagas is an Angolan photographer. Trained as a photojournalist, his works explore cities and consumerism. In his "Found Not Taken" series, the artist resituates abandoned objects elsewhere within cities. Another series uses African masks as a trope for understanding consumerism in Luanda, his home city. Chagas represented Angola at the 2013 Venice Biennale, for which he won its Golden Lion for best national pavilion. He has also exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art and Brooklyn Museum.
The 57th Venice Biennale was an international contemporary art exhibition held between May and November 2017. The Venice Biennale takes place biennially in Venice, Italy. Artistic director Christine Macel, the chief curator at the Centre Pompidou, curated its central exhibition, "Viva Arte Viva", as a series of interconnected pavilions designed to reflect art's capacity for expanding humanism. The curator also organized a project, "Unpacking My Library", based on a Walter Benjamin essay, to list artists' favorite books. Macel was the first French director since 1995 and the fourth woman to direct the Biennale. A trend of presenting overlooked, rediscovered, or "emerging dead artists" was a theme of the 57th Biennale.
The 55th Venice Biennale was an international contemporary art exhibition held in 2013. The Venice Biennale takes place biennially in Venice, Italy. Artistic director Massimiliano Gioni curated its central exhibition, "The Encyclopedic Palace".
Banu Cennetoğlu is a visual artist based in Istanbul. She uses photography, installation, and printed matter to explore the classification, appropriation and distribution of data and knowledge. Her work deals with listings, collections, rearrangements, and archives. Cennetoğlu co-represented Turkey at the 53rd International Venice Biennale with Ahmet Öğüt in 2009. Her work has been shown at numerous international institutions such as Musée cantonal des Beaux-arts, Lausanne (2022); Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna (2020); Ständehaus, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfallen, Düsseldorf (2019); SculptureCenter, New York (2019); Liverpool Biennial, Liverpool (2018), Chisenhale Gallery, London (2018); documenta14, Athens and Kassel (2017); Bonner Kunstverein, Bonn (2015); Kunsthalle Basel, Basel (2011); Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju (2014), Manifesta 8, Murcia (2010); Walker Art Center (2007); Istanbul Biennial (2007); and Berlin Biennial (2003). She is the founding director of BAS (2006–ongoing), an Istanbul-based artist-run initiative that collects and displays artists’ books and printed material as artwork. In Turkey, she is "best known as an apostle of the artist’s book."
The 58th Venice Biennale was an international contemporary art exhibition held between May and November 2019. The Venice Biennale takes place biennially in Venice, Italy. Artistic director Ralph Rugoff curated its central exhibition, May You Live in Interesting Times, and 90 countries contributed national pavilions.
The 54th Venice Biennale was an international contemporary art exhibition held in 2011. The Venice Biennale takes place biennially in Venice, Italy. Artistic director Bice Curiger curated its central exhibition, "ILLUMInations".
The national pavilions host each participant nation's official representation during the Venice Biennale, an international art biennial exhibition held in Venice, Italy. Some countries own pavilion buildings in the Giardini della Biennale while others rent buildings throughout the city, but each country controls its own selection process and production costs.
The Serbian pavilion is a national pavilion of the Venice Biennale arts festivals. It houses Serbia's national representation.
Ghana Freedom was a Ghanaian art exhibition at the 2019 Venice Biennale, an international contemporary art biennial in which countries represent themselves through self-organizing national pavilions. The country's debut pavilion, also known as the Ghana pavilion, was highly anticipated and named a highlight of the overall Biennale by multiple journalists. The six participating artists—Felicia Abban, John Akomfrah, El Anatsui, Selasi Awusi Sosu, Ibrahim Mahama, and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye—represented a range of artist age, gender, locations, and prestige, selected by curator Nana Oforiatta Ayim. The show paired young and old artists across sculpture, filmmaking, and portraiture, and emphasized common threads across postcolonial Ghanaian culture in both its current inhabitants and the diaspora. Almost all of the art was commissioned specifically for the pavilion. Architect David Adjaye designed the pavilion with rusty red walls of imported soil to reflect the cylindrical, earthen dwellings of the Gurunsi within the Biennale's Arsenale exhibition space. The project was supported by the Ghana Ministry of Tourism and advised by former Biennale curator Okwui Enwezor. After the show's run, May–November 2019, works from the exhibition were set to display in Accra, Ghana's capital.
António Ole is a multi-medium Angolan artist, among the best known in the country. He represented Angola at the 2017 Venice Biennale.
The 60th Venice Biennale is an international contemporary art exhibition held between April and November 2024. The Venice Biennale takes place every two years in Venice, Italy, with some limited exceptions. Artistic director Adriano Pedrosa curated its central exhibition, Foreigners Everywhere, and 88 countries contributed national pavilions.