2019 Venice Biennale: The pick of the pavilions
The 58th Venice Biennale Art Exhibition, which runs from 11 May to 24 November, promises to be the greatest show on Planet Art. Lee Marshall previews highlights from the 90 national pavilions at the Giardini, at the Arsenale and elsewhere
United States of AmericaMartin Puryear: Liberty
Martin Puryear (b. 1941), (left) Big Phrygian, 2010-14. Painted red cedar. Dimensions: 58 x 40 x 76 in. Glenstone Museum, Potomac, Maryland; (right) Liberty/Libertà, La Biennale di Venezia, U.S. Pavilion, Venice, Italy, 2019. Photo: Joshua White – JWPictures.com
Martin Puryear, Big Bling, 2016. Installation view in Madison Square Park, New York. Pressure-treated laminated timbers, plywood, chain- link fencing, fibreglass, and gold leaf. 40 x 10 x 38 feet. Collection of the artist. © Martin Puryear, courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery Photograoh by Yasunori Matsui
Puryear also follows on from painter Mark Bradford as an African-American artist engaging elliptically with some of the big issues that affect his country.
Martin Puryear (b. 1941), Cloister-Redoubt or Cloistered Doubt?, 2019. American hemlock, eastern white pine, tulip poplar, red cedar. Dimensions: 99 1/2 x 96 x 53 in. Photo: Joshua White – JWPictures.com
Martin Puryear, new sculpture for the 2019 US Pavilion, in process, 2019. Photograph by Yasunori Matsui. Courtesy Madison Square Park Conservancy
This time round, in a series of new sculptures inside a pavilion laid out by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects, and in a monumental installation outside, Puryear will, the organisers say, ‘meditate on liberty as an essential human theme’ while ‘representing his country both as an artist and a citizen’.
United KingdomCathy Wilkes
Cathy Wilkes, Untitled, 2019 (detail). Mixed Media. Dimensions variable. Installation view, Cathy Wilkes, British Pavilion, Biennale Arte, Venice, 2019.
Melanie Keen, director of the International Institute of Visual Arts, believes that Wilkes will ‘present us with a fascinating reflection of what British identity might be in 2019’, while fellow selection committee member Fiona Bradley of The Fruitmarket Gallery in Edinburgh sees the pavilion as potentially offering ‘a moment of stillness and quietness’ amid the ‘visual noise’ of Venice.
Italy Neither the Other nor This. The Challenge to the Labyrinth
Neither Nor: The challenge to the Labyrinth. Italian Pavilion at the Biennale Arte 2019. Photography Delfino Sisto Legnani and Marco Cappelletti. Courtesy DGAAP-MiBAC
Chiara Fumai, This last line cannot be translated, 2017. Courtesy The Church of Chiara Fumai. Photograph by Oto Gillen
What will distinguish Farronato’s pavilion is the layout: rather than being assigned separate spaces in the Arsenale warehouse of Tese delle Vergini, the three artists’ works will be intermixed along a route inspired by an Italo Calvino essay on labyrinths. The layout will, says Farronato, ‘enact the impossibility of reducing life to a series of clean, predictable trajectories’.
Né altra Né questa: La sfida al Labirinto, Padiglione Italia alla Biennale Arte 2019. Photo: Delfino Sisto Legnani e Marco Cappelletti. Courtesy DGAAP-MiBAC
Enrico David, Ultra Paste, 2007. Installation. 540 x 560 x 300 cm. Courtesy Collection Nicoletta Fiorucci, London
He is interested in the differences as much as the similarities between his three chosen artists — for example, the contrast between Moro’s ‘precise, minimalist’ work and the ‘visceral’ quality of David’s sculpture. But all three, he adds, demonstrate ‘a marriage of authenticity and autobiography’, something he believes will be amply present in a work by Chiara Fumai.
FranceLaure Prouvost: Deep See Blue Surrounding You
Deep See Blue Surrounding You, film still, 2019. Courtesy Laure Prouvost, Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Carlier Gebauer and Lisson Gallery
The film that Prouvost has made for the French pavilion is entitled Deep See Blue Surrounding You. It is a poetic, semi-fictional account of a road trip that begins in the grimy suburbs of Paris, moves to the region of northern France where Prouvost grew up, then proceeds via Marseille to Venice. Along the way, we meet ‘a dancer, a magician, a priest, a rapper, a retired teacher, a gymnast, a terrible flautist, my grandmother…’
It’s a kind of woozy picaresque tale, a series of encounters en route to art’s island mecca. And there is a recurrent leitmotif — one that is hard not to call surreal — in the form of an octopus. It is a limp presence in mise-en-scènes from Nanterre to Murano. What does it mean? ‘I don’t know how the octopus became so dominant,’ says Prouvost, ‘but I think the metaphor is asking: how can we connect directly? The brain of an octopus is in its tentacles; it thinks through touch. And it doesn’t have memory, so it has to think and feel without reference to what it has thought and felt before. That is something quite attractive — to be right in the moment like that.’
TurkeyInci Eviner: We, Elsewhere
Inci Eviner, photograhed by Muammer Yanmaz
Titled We, Elsewhere, it is a kind of architectural installation through which visitors will move along ramps, across internal courtyards and around sharp corners. Along the way they will encounter strange noises, scraps of video, unexpected characters and objects. The effect will be baffling, disorienting, as it is clearly meant to be.
A sketch from We, Elsewhere by Inci Eviner
‘I am building a halfway house to cope with the world’s grave problems,’ says Eviner. And she casts the people inside this space — presumably including visitors to the pavilion — as ‘perpetrators of thought-crime, soldiers on duty, civilians and displaced persons’. In other words, the structure will function as a kind of sub-Orwellian way station, where mundane human misery collides with equally mundane man-made bureaucracy.
But this is not a museum diorama, or a pious attempt to immerse viewers in the refugee experience; it is more allusive and poetic than that. Everywhere inside the work there are glimpses of other spaces, and this feature is perhaps the ‘elsewhere’ of the title, a metaphor built into the structure of the piece. You can slip through the cracks — both in the sense of passing through a barrier to a better place, and that of becoming invisible to the bigger system.
IndiaOur Time for a Future Caring
Jitish Kallat, Covering Letter, 2012. FogScreen Projection. Installation dimensions variable. Image courtesy Philadelphia Museum of Art. Collection: Artist
But there is contemporary work, too, including the video installation Covering Letter by Jitish Kallat, which projects onto a curtain of cascading fog Gandhi’s letter to Hitler, written six weeks before the outbreak of the Second World War. ‘Dear friend,’ it begins. ‘Friends have been asking me to write to you for the sake of humanity…’
As the artist says, ‘It’s a seven-line plea for the sake of humanity, something that urges the reader to rethink what he or she can conceive of to change the world or rethink the way they live their life.’
MongoliaA Temporality
Jantsankhorol Erdenebayar, photographed by Qiu Yang
Co-funded by the Goethe-Institut, A Temporality aims to adapt this ancient vocal art form to modern times — so performers will interact with elements of the urban, man-made world rather than the animistic, natural environment of the steppes, where throat singers often travel miles in search of the right resonance and backdrop.
RussiaLc.15: 11–32
Lc. 15: 11-32 is at the Russian Pavilion of the 58th Venice Biennale, 11 May – 24 November 2019, ruspavilion.com.
And in another large-scale, immersive work downstairs, the artist and stage designer Alexander Shishkin-Hokusai draws inspiration from the Dutch Golden Age and from mechanical curiosities such as the Peacock Clock, a life-size gilded automaton of a peacock displaying its tail feathers, along with an owl and a crowing cock, made in Britain in the 1770s.
AustraliaAngelica Mesiti: Assembly
Angelica Mesiti, photographed by Zan Wimberley
Non-verbal communication is Mesiti’s abiding theme — she has explored everything from signing to the whistle language of certain remote rural communities — and her new multiscreen installation for the Australian pavilion, curated by Juliana Engberg, will continue to mine the seam.
Angelica Mesiti, ASSEMBLY, 2019 (production still). Three-channel video installation in architectural amphitheatre. HD video projections, colour, six-channel mono sound. 25 mins. Dimensions variable. Commissioned by the Australia Council for the Arts on the occasion of the 58th International Art Exhibition — La Biennale di Venezia. Courtesy of the artist and Anna Schwartz Gallery, Australia and Galerie Allen, Paris. © Photography: Bonnie Elliot
The fourth female artist in succession to represent Australia at the Biennale, Mesiti will, she says, use ‘polyphony, cacophony, dissonance and harmony’ in the Venice work ‘as metaphors for the range of dynamics within a democratic system’.
BrazilSwinguerra
Artists Barbara Wagner and Benjamin de Burca. Photograph by Chico Barros
Mixing documentary realism and fictional tropes, the film, says curator Gabriel Pérez-Barreiro, ‘presents a profound and empathetic panorama of contemporary Brazilian culture, at a moment of significant political and social tension’, but also invites ‘multiple readings and interpretations’.
A still from Swinguerra by Wagner & de Burca
Barreiro, who directed the 2018 São Paulo Biennial, believes Wagner and de Burca ‘are among the most promising artists in Brazil today, exploring media, representation, race and identity in a new way’.
SwitzerlandMoving Backwards
Pauline Boudry and Renate Lorenz, photographed by by Bernadette Paassen
Lorenz and Boudry are building a reputation as queer artists whose works are immersed in the history of what they term ‘the other’ in ‘official’ and underground culture.
Germany Natascha Süder Happelmann
Natascha Süder Happelmann, Ankersentrum, German Pavilion 2019. Photo: Jasper Kettner
More details of the pavilion emerged subsequently, including a video in which a rock-headed figure is seen walking in a part of northern Puglia associated with recent protests by underpaid agricultural migrant workers; and it was announced that the artist’s presentation will be supported by audio input created by six international composers and musicians.
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GhanaGhana Freedom
El Anatsui, Crucifix, 1974
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye. Radical Trysts. 2018. Oil on linen. Courtesy Corvi-Mora, London and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York. Photo © Marcus Leith
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, Just Amongst Ourselves (2019). Series of paintings, oil on linen and canvas. Dimensions variable. Courtesy the artist; Corvi-Mora, London; and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York. Photo: David Levene
Fielding six artists — El Anatsui, Ibrahim Mahama, Felicia Abban, Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, John Akomfrah and Selasi Awusi Sosu — the pavilion intends, says curator Nana Oforiatta Ayim, to chart the artistic energies of a country ‘finally moving out of the “postcolonial” moment into one we have yet to envision’.
Felicia Abban, Untitled (Portraits and Self-Portraits), circa 1960–70s. Digital images generated from original prints. 50 × 40 cm. Courtesy the artist. Photo: David Levene
KoreaHistory Has Failed Us, But No Matter
Hwayeon Nam, Dancer from the Peninsula, 2019. Multi-channel video installation, dimensions variable. Photograph by Gim Ikhyun © Hwayeon Nam
Video artist Hwayeon Nam unveils an installation dedicated to a controversial dancer and choreographer who died in mysterious circumstances in North Korea, while Jane Jin Kaisen debuts a film that reworks the myth of Princess Bari, a shamanic goddess held up for centuries as a model of filial self-sacrifice.
MaltaMaleth/Haven/Port – Heterotopias of Evocation
Trevor Borg, photographed by Claudine Borg
Those youthful impressions inspired Cave of Darkness — Port of No Return, one of a trio of linked pieces by different artists featured in Malta’s pavilion. Borg’s is a kind of walk-through cabinet of curiosities displaying some 400 objects, including bones, pottery, weapons and jewellery. ‘Like a huge find,’ he says. ‘And it’s all going to be painted white. Because this is a re-imagination, it’s a white lie.’
Trevor Borg, Cave of Darkness – Port of No Return, 2018-2019. Mixed media installation. Photograph by Trevor Borg. © Trevor Borg
While touching on autobiography, Borg’s work connects with a larger narrative of displacement and sanctuary in the Mediterranean, a theme shared by Vince Briffa’s film installation and a sculpture and video piece by the Cypriot artist Klitsa Antoniou. Collectively they create an immersive experience.
Applied Arts Pavilion Special ProjectMarysia Lewandowska: It’s About Time
Marysia Lewandowska Museum at Work. Film still positive, 16mm rushes, 1978, BBC. Photo: Marysia Lewandowska. Design: Luke Gould
It’s About Time reimagines the circumstances in which La Biennale came into being, setting up new conditions from which the ‘unheard voices’ of women can emerge, while offering an alternative history of the event. The resulting sound and film installation questions the political and social mechanisms responsible for shaping the cultural spaces of the exhibition and the museum, by attending to omissions and silences.