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The Biennale Begins Beneath Beautiful Ceilings and Difficult Questions

The Venice Biennale opened without a jury amid disputes surrounding Russian and Israeli participation in the exhibition.

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Ryan Miller

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The Biennale Begins Beneath Beautiful Ceilings and Difficult Questions

Venice has always seemed suspended between water and memory, a city where reflections soften even the hardest edges of history. This week, as visitors crossed narrow bridges toward the opening of the Venice Biennale, the world’s most prestigious contemporary art exhibition began under an atmosphere shaped not only by creativity, but also by geopolitical tension and institutional uncertainty.

Organizers confirmed that this year’s Biennale opened without an official jury, an unusual decision linked to disagreements and controversies surrounding the participation of Russian and Israeli artists amid ongoing international conflicts. The absence of juried awards altered one of the exhibition’s longstanding traditions.

The Venice Biennale has historically positioned itself as a global platform for artistic dialogue beyond political borders. Yet recent years have increasingly tested that principle, as wars and diplomatic disputes reshape cultural institutions across Europe and beyond. Questions over representation, state sponsorship, and artistic independence have become central to debates surrounding major international exhibitions.

Russian participation remained particularly sensitive following years of cultural sanctions and boycotts tied to the war in Ukraine. Several artists and curators connected to Russia have distanced themselves from official state representation, while some pavilions linked to Russian institutions remained inactive or restructured.

At the same time, controversy also emerged around Israeli participation amid continuing conflict in Gaza. Activist groups and some artists called for restrictions or symbolic protest actions, arguing that cultural platforms should not remain detached from humanitarian concerns. Others defended the role of art spaces as places for dialogue rather than exclusion.

Biennale organizers largely avoided direct political statements, emphasizing the exhibition’s broader mission of artistic exchange. Visitors arriving from around the world encountered installations dealing with identity, migration, memory, climate, and conflict—subjects that increasingly mirror the anxieties shaping global society.

Despite the disputes, attendance remained strong during opening events. Curators, collectors, critics, and tourists filled galleries and waterfront spaces throughout Venice, reinforcing the Biennale’s enduring influence within the international art world even during periods of controversy.

As evening settled across the canals, the exhibition moved forward without prizes, but not without meaning. The absence of a jury became part of the story itself—a reminder that art institutions, like the societies surrounding them, are often shaped as much by silence and disagreement as by celebration.

AI Image Disclaimer: Some illustrated visuals connected to this coverage were produced using AI-generated artistic imagery.

Sources: Reuters, ARTnews, The Art Newspaper, The Guardian

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