Advertisement
Advertisement
Art
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
The installation by Canadian artist Tau Lewis at the 59th Venice Biennale. Photo: EPA-EFE

Female artists dominate the Venice Biennale for first time in 127 years

  • This year’s biennale puts the spotlight on artists who have long been overlooked, while investigating themes such as gender norms, colonialism and climate change
  • ‘Some of the best artists today are women... the preponderance of male artists in previous [Biennales] has been astonishing’ curator Cecilia Alemani said
Art

For the first time in the 127-year history of the Venice Biennale, the world’s oldest and most important contemporary art fair features a majority of female and gender nonconforming artists, under the curatorial direction of Cecilia Alemani.

The result is a Biennale that puts the spotlight on artists who have been long overlooked despite prolific careers, while also investigating themes including gender norms, colonialism and climate change.

Alemani’s main show, titled The Milk of Dreams, alongside 80 national pavilions opened on Saturday after a one-year pandemic delay. The art fair runs through to November 27. It is only the fourth of the Biennale’s 59 editions under female curation.

The predominance of women among the more than 200 artists that Alemani chose for the main show “was not a choice, but a process,’’ the New York-based Italian curator, said.

Third gender artist Yuki Kihara poses next to her installation ‘Paradise Camp’ during the Venice Biennale. Photo: AP

“I think some of the best artists today are women artists,’’ she said. “But also, let’s not forget, that in the long history of the Venice Biennale, the preponderance of male artists in previous editions has been astonishing.”

“Unfortunately, we still have not solved many issues that pertain to gender,” Alemani said.

Conceived during the coronavirus pandemic and opening as war rages in Europe, Alemani acknowledged that art in such times may seem “superficial.” But she also asserted the Biennale’s role over the decades as a “sort of seismographer of history … to absorb and record also the traumas and the crises that go well beyond the contemporary art world.”

In a potent reminder, the Russian pavilion remains locked this year, after the artists withdrew following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Nearby, sandbags have been erected in the centre of the Giardini by the curators of the Ukrainian Pavilion, and surrounded by stylised posters of fresh artwork by Ukrainian artists representing the horrors of the two-month-old war.

Hong Kong artist makes last-minute preparations for Venice Biennale

Among the women getting long-overdue recognition this Biennale is US sculptor Simone Leigh, who in mid-career is both headlining the US pavilion and setting the tone at the main exhibit with a towering bust of a Black woman that Alemani originally commissioned for the High Line urban park in New York City.

Fusun Onur, a pioneer of conceptual art in Turkey, at age 85 has filled the Turkish pavilion with wiry cats and mice set up in storyboard tableaus that confront modern-day threats like the pandemic and climate change. While proud of her role representing Turkey and the work she produced during the pandemic in her home overlooking the Bosphorus, she acknowledged that the honour was late in coming.

“Why it is so I don’t know,” Fusan said by phone from Istanbul. “Women artists are working hard, but they are not always recognised. It is always men first.”

The installation ‘We Walked the Earth’ by Danish artist Uffe Isolotto at the 59th Venice Biennale. Photo: AP

New Zealand is represented by third gender artist Yuki Kihara, whose installation Paradise Camp, tells the story of Samoa’s Fa’afafine community of people who don’t accept the gender they were assigned at birth.

The exhibition features photos of the Fa’afafine mimicking paintings of Pacific islanders by post-Impressionist French artist Paul Gaugin, reclaiming the images in a process the artist refers to as “upcycling.”

“Paradise Camp is really about imagining a Fa’afafine utopia, where it shutters colonial hetero-normality to make way for an Indigenous world view that is inclusive and sensitive to the changes in the environment,’’ Kihara said.

Artist Angela Su to represent Hong Kong at 2022 Venice Biennale

The image of a hyperrealistic sculpture of a futuristic female satyr giving birth opposite her satyr partner, who has hanged himself, sets a grim post-apocalyptic tone at the Danish Pavilion, created by Uffe Isolotto.

The Nordic Pavilion offers a more hopeful path out of the apocalypse, with artwork and performances depicting the struggle against colonialism by the Sami people, who inhabit a broad swathe of northern Norway, Sweden and Finland into the Murmansk Oblast of Russia, while also celebrating their traditions.

“We have in a way discovered how to live within the apocalyptic world and do it while, you know, maintaining our spirits and our beliefs and systems of value,’’ said co-curator Liisa-Ravna Finbog.

Cecilia Alemani, curator and artistic director of the 59th Venice Biennale, which has a predominance of women among the more than 200 artists. Photo: AP

This year’s Golden Lion for lifetime achievement awards go to German artist Katherina Fritsch, whose lifelike Elephant sculpture stands in the rotunda of the main exhibit building in the Giardini, and Chilean poet, artist and filmmaker Cecilia Vicuna, whose portrait of her mother’s eyes graces the Biennale catalogue cover.

Vicuna painted the portrait while the family was in exile after the violent military coup in Chile against President Salvador Allende. Now 97, her mother accompanied her to the Biennale.

“You see that her spirit is still present, so in a way that painting is like a triumph of love against dictatorship, against repression, against hatred,’’ Vicuna said.

Post