Art
das Kunstmagazin
THIERRY GEOFFROY "Always
on the run"
by Clemens Bomsdorf nov 2011

PORTRÄT
Der "Critical Run" während der Venedig Biennale 2011. "Was sind
die Notfälle von heute?" war die Frage (Courtesy Thierry Geoffroy
/ Colonel)
ALWAYS ON THE RUN
Thierry Geoffroys geht rund um die Welt Joggen mit Kritikern, um
während dem Laufen essentielle Fragen zu diskutieren. Dieses Jahr
stellte der in Dänemark lebende Franzose gleich in zwei
großen deutschen Institutionen aus: dem Sprengelmuseum in
Hannover und dem Karlsruher ZKM. Clemens Bomsdorf hat Geoffroy in
Kopenhagen, Breslau und Venedig getroffen.
// CLEMENS BOMSDORF
Mit unverkennbarem französischem Akzent, unterbrochen von den beim
Jogging üblichen hastenden Atemzügen, malträtiert
Thierry Geoffroy seine Laufpartner, mit denen er eine Runde vor der
Breslauer Jahrhunderthalle dreht, mit Fragen. "Critical Run" nennt der
50-jährige Künstler das Format, bei dem er zu Anfang der
Joggingtour Fragen stellt wie "Are biennales dangerous?", "Can
photography be trusted?" oder "Is the contemporary already too late?"
Wie bei anderen Aktionen stellt er damit ironisch den intellektuellen
Anspruch und die Ernsthaftigkeit von Ausstellungen, Podiumsdiskussionen
und Biennalen in Frage, gleichzeitig geht es ihm auch darum, darauf
aufmerksam zu machen, dass es wirklich wichtige Fragen gibt, die
oftmals nur nicht hartnäckig genug gestellt werden.
Diesmal ist der kritische Lauf schon nach wenigen Minuten zu Ende. Doch
Colonel – wie sich Geoffroy in Erinnerung an seinen Vater, der beim
Militär tätig war, auch nennt – hat schon erheblich
längere "Critical Runs" mit erheblich mehr Teilnehmern organisiert
und auch an bekannteren Institutionen als jetzt dem Europäischen
Kulturkongress in Breslau. Geoffroy und alle die seinem Aufruf folgten,
liefen schon vor dem PS 1 in New York, dem Moderna Museet in Stockholm
sowie in Hanoi, Sydney und diversen anderen Städten in 20
Ländern. "Das ist ein Format, das global expandieren und
aufgenommen werden soll. Ich muss nicht immer selber dabei sein, wenn
ein Critical Run stattfindet", so Geoffroy. Aktion und Inhalt sollen im
Vordergrund stehen, nicht Ästhetik oder Künstler, und immer
geht es ihm um kritische und zugleich unterhaltsame und lehrreiche
Auseinandersetzung.
Dieses Jahr stellt Geoffroy gleich in zwei deutschen Institutionen aus.
Im ZKM in Karlsruhe nimmt er an der Ausstellung "The Global
Contemporary" in den Museumsräumen teil und bespielte den
örtlichen Projektraum. Außerdem stellte er im
Sprengel-Museum in Hannover im Projektraum zur Ausstellung "Photography
Calling" aus.
In Karlsruhe dokumentiert Geoffroy die Eingriffe, die er im Format
"Biennalist" seit 1989 in diverse internationale Biennalen vorgenommen
hat. Mit simplen Handzetteln, Mini-Demos und Performances oder – wie
bei der diesjährigen Venedig-Biennale – auch einfach durch das
Ablegen von einem beschriebenen Tuch und ein paar Gurken mitten auf dem
Giardini-Gelände hat er immer wieder die Ansprüche der
Kunstausstellungen in Frage gestellt und aktuelle Politik thematisiert.
Ausgangspunkt ist stets die Pressemitteilung zur jeweiligen Biennale.
"In Venedig ging es dabei um Nationen, und die Gurke legte ich vor dem
spanischen Pavillon ab, weil zu der Zeit Russland ein Importverbot
für spanische Gurken verhängt hatte", so Colonel. Er zettelte
auch im russischen Pavillon einen Schaukampf an, während dem er
diskutieren ließ, wie es sein könne, dass Russland am
Eurovision Song Contest teilnimmt, obwohl es die Einfuhr spanischer
Gurken verbietet. Das Format des klassischen, intellektuell geordneten
Diskurses möchte er aufbrechen – lässt die Teilnehmer deshalb
während des Laufens, bei einer lockeren Schlägerei oder beim
Slow Dance diskutieren.
In Venedig war er mit Tropenhelm und Armbinde, auf der mit roter
Schrift "Biennalist" geschrieben war, auf dem Giardini-Gelände zu
sehen, meist war Geoffroy umringt von einer kleinen Gruppe
jüngerer freiwilliger "Biennalist"-Aktivisten. Mit dabei auch
stets ein Kameramann, der mit Handkamera fast alle Aktionen von Thierry
dokumentiert, um sie auf Website und anderen Ausstellungen zu zeigen.
"There is not a good Biennale without Biennalist," lautet sein Motto.
In Hannover bespielt er den Projektraum der Ausstellung "Photography
Calling" und bat die Mitglieder der Reiterstaffel sowie Hannoveraner
Bürger, ihm für die Ausstellung täglich Bildmaterial
ihrer Mobiltelefone oder Kameras zur Verfügung zu stellen –
privates wie berufliches. Die Bilder der Privatpersonen darf nur sehen,
wer selber beim Betreten der Ausstellungen Bildmaterial abliefert. "Mir
geht es darum, das Recht am eigenen Bild und dessen schnelle Aufgabe im
Zeitalter sozialer Netze zu thematisieren", so Geoffroy. "Soziale Netze
üben Zensur aus, das Museum ist heute der letzte Ort der
Meinungsfreiheit", sagt der Künstler. Als er selber einmal ein
Facebook-Profil mit einem Foto einrichtete, auf dem sich Gaddafi und
Sarkozy küssten, wurde das Profil sofort blockiert, erzählt
er.
Und dann sagt er noch in der ihm üblichen schnellen Sprechweise,
bei der das Tempo vor allem aus den rasch ausgestoßenen Worten
kommt, die aber ab und an durch kurze Pausen unterbrochen werden:
"Ähnliche Bildertauschaktionen habe ich bereits vor 20 Jahren
gemacht hat und die Teilnehmer damals Friends genannt. Im Grunde habe
ich damit Facebook erfunden bevor es Zuckerberg getan hat.
BIENNALIST @
Venice Biennale
http://www.emergencyrooms.org/biennalist.html
by www.colonel.dk
Venice Biennale from wikipedia
:
The Venice Biennale
(/ˌbiːɛˈnɑːleɪ, -li/; Italian: La Biennale di
Venezia [la bi.enˈnaːle di veˈnɛttsja]; in English also called the
"Venice Biennial") refers to an arts organization based in Venice
The Art Biennale, a
contemporary visual art exhibition and so called
because it is held biennially (in odd-numbered years), is the original
biennale on which others in the world have been modeled.
venice biennale Biennale di
VeneziaVenedig biennalen
Bienal_de_VeneciaBiennale de VeniseVenecia Bienalo Bienal de Venecia
Biënnale VenetiëBienal de Veneza Μπιενάλε της Βενετίας
Biennale Venesia
ヴェネツィア・ビエンナーレ 威尼斯双年展 Venedik Bienali Venedik Bienali
Venetsian
biennaali Biennale w Wenecji Biennale di Venezia
*
curators previous
* 1948 –
Rodolfo Pallucchini
* 1950 –
Rodolfo Pallucchini
* 1952 –
Rodolfo Pallucchini
* 1954 –
Rodolfo Pallucchini
* 1956 –
Rodolfo Pallucchini
* 1958 –
Gian Alberto Dell'Acqua
* 1960 –
Gian Alberto Dell'Acqua
* 1962 –
Gian Alberto Dell'Acqua
* 1964 –
Gian Alberto Dell'Acqua
* 1966 –
Gian Alberto Dell'Acqua
* 1968 –
Maurizio Calvesi and Guido Ballo
* 1970 –
Umbro Apollonio
* 1972 –
Mario Penelope
* 1974 –
Vittorio Gregotti
* 1976 –
Vittorio Gregotti
* 1978 –
Luigi Scarpa
* 1980 –
Luigi Carluccio
* 1982 –
Sisto Dalla Palma
* 1984 –
Maurizio Calvesi
* 1986 –
Maurizio Calvesi
* 1988 –
Giovanni Carandente
* 1990 –
Giovanni Carandente
* 1993 –
Achille Bonito Oliva
* 1995 –
Jean Clair
* 1997 –
Germano Celant
* 1999 –
Harald Szeemann
* 2001 –
Harald Szeemann
* 2003 –
Francesco Bonami
* 2005 –
María de Corral and Rosa Martinez
* 2007 –
Robert Storr
* 2009 –
Daniel Birnbaum
* 2011 –
Bice Curiger
* 2013 –
Massimiliano Gioni
* 2015 –
Okwui Enwezor
* 2017 –
Christine Macel[19]
* 2019 –
Ralph Rugoff[20]
In 2011, the countries were
Albania, Andorra, Argentina, Australia,
Austria, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Belarus, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria,
Canada, Chile, China, Congo, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech
and Slovak Republics, Denmark, Egypt, Estonia, Finland, France,
Georgia, Germany, Greece, Haiti, Hungary, Iceland, India, Iran, Iraq,
Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg,
Macedonia, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Netherlands, New Zealand,
Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, San Marino, Saudi Arabia,
Serbia, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland,
Syrian Arab Republic, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, Ukraine, United Arab
Emirates, United Kingdom, United States of America, Uruguay, Venezuela,
Wales and Zimbabwe. In addition to this there are two collective
pavilions: Central Asia Pavilion and Istituto Italo-Latino Americano.
In 2013, ten new participant countries developed national pavilions for
the Biennale: Angola, the Bahamas, Bahrain, the Ivory Coast, Kosovo,
Kuwait, the Maldives, Paraguay, Tuvalu, and the Holy See. In 2015, five
new participant countries developed pavilions for the Biennale: Grenada
[4], Republic of Mozambique, Republic of Seychelles, Mauritius and
Mongolia. In 2017, three countries participated in the Art Biennale for
the first time: Antigua & Barbuda, Kiribati, and Nigeria.[29]
In 1901, Argentina was the
first Latin American nation to participate
in the Biennale. In 2011, it was granted a pavilion in the Sale d'Armi,
which it will restore.[30]
List of exhibitors in the
Argentine Pavilion:
* 1903 —
Pío Collivadino
* 1905 —
Pío Collivadino
* 1907 —
Pío Collivadino
* 1954 —
Lucio Fontana
* 1958 —
Lucio Fontana, Juan del Prete, Raquel Forner
* 1962 —
Antonio Berni
* 1966 —
Lucio Fontana, Julio Le Parc
* 1968 —
Lucio Fontana, Nicolás García Uriburu
* 1970 —
Luis Fernando Benedit
* 1972 —
Lucio Fontana
* 1978 —
Lucio Fontana
* 1980 —
Sergio de Castro, Fabriciano
* 1982 —
Marino di Teana
* 1984 —
Antonio Seguí
* 1986 —
Marta Minujin
* 1995 —
Jorge Orta
* 1997 —
Ana Eckell
* 1999 —
Jaques Bedel, Luis Benedit, Oscar Bony
* 2001 —
Leandro Erlich, Graciela Sacco (Curator: Irma Arestizábal)
* 2003 —
Charly Nijensohn
* 2005 —
Jorge Macchi, Edgardo Rudnitzky
* 2007 —
Guillermo Kuitca, Jorge Macchi, Edgardo Rudnitzky (Commissioner:
Adriana Rosenberg)
* 2009 —
Luis Felipe Noé (Curator: Fabián Lebenglik)
* 2011 —
Adrián Villar Rojas (Curator: Rodrigo Alonso)
* 2013 —
Nicola Costantino (Curator: Fernando Farina)
* 2015 —
Juan Carlos Distéfano (Curator: María Teresa
Constantín)
* 2017 —
Claudia Fontes (Curator: Christine Macel)
Australia[edit]
The original Australian
Pavilion, designed by Philip Cox to be a
temporary structure of fiber cement and steel,[31] was opened in 1988
at the western edge of the Giardini.[32] Italian-born Australian
industrialist Franco Belgiorno-Nettis had previously lobbied so
successfully that in 1988 Australia beat 16 other countries to the last
site on which to build a permanent pavilion in the Giardini.[33] Cox
and other generous donors gifted the pavilion to the Commonwealth
Government.[34] The pavilion was not heritage protected because of its
temporary status.[35] A new, permanent pavilion was designed by
architectural practice Denton Corker Marshall and completed in
2015.[36] Built from concrete and steel, the two-story structure
contains 240 square meters of exhibition space and the exterior is
covered in black granite from Zimbabwe.[37] Australia's participation
at the Venice Biennale is managed by the Australia Council for the
Arts. However, all of the A$6 million ($6.04 million) originally needed
for the new building were to be raised from the private sector.[36]
Eventually, the pavilion cost $7.5 million to build, $1 million of
which was funded by the Australia Council for the Arts; the rest was
donated by 82 private Australian donors, including actress Cate
Blanchett[37] and producer Santo Cilauro.[38]
List of exhibitors in the
Australian Pavilion:
* 1954 —
Sidney Nolan, Russell Drysdale, William Dobell
* 1956 —
Albert Tucker
* 1958 —
Arthur Streeton, Arthur Boyd
* 1978 —
Ken Unsworth, John Davis, Robert Owen
* 1980 —
Mike Parr, Tony Coleing, Kevin Mortensen
* 1982 —
Peter Booth, Rosalie Gascoigne
* 1984 — no
participation
* 1986 —
Imants Tillers
* 1988 —
Arthur Boyd (Australian Pavilion opens)
* 1990 —
Trevor Nickolls, Rover Thomas
* 1993 —
Jenny Watson
* 1995 —
Bill Henson
* 1997 —
Judy Watson, Yvonne Koolmatrie, Emily Kngwarreye
* 1999 —
Howard Arkley
* 2001 —
Lyndal Jones
* 2003 —
Patricia Piccinini
* 2005 —
Ricky Swallow
* 2007 —
Callum Morton, Susan Norrie, Daniel von Sturmer
* 2009 —
Shaun Gladwell, Vernon Ah Kee, Ken Yonetani, Claire Healy & Sean
Cordeiro (Curator: Felicity Fenner)
* 2011 —
Hany Armanious (Curator: Anne Ellegood)
* 2013 —
Simryn Gill (Curator: Catherine de Zegher)
* 2015 —
Fiona Margaret Hall (Curator: Linda Michael)
* 2017 —
Tracey Moffatt (Curator: Natalie King)[39]
* 2019 –
Angelica Mesiti (Curator: Juliana Engberg)
Austria[edit]
Designed by Joseph Hoffmann
with the collaboration of Robert
Kramreiter, 1934 (restored by Hans Hollein, 1984).[32] The clear
symmetrical building, conceived as a white cube from the outset, was
the first Venice pavilion to have been designed by a leading Classical
Modern architect. The Hoffmann pavilion was not used following the
annexation of Austria by the Third Reich in 1938, nor in the subsequent
Biennale years of 1940 and 1942. Austrian artists with close ties to
the Nazi regime were shown in the German Pavilion.[40]
List of exhibitors in the
Austrian Pavilion:
* 1978 —
Arnulf Rainer (Commissioner: Hans Hollein)
* 1980 —
Valie Export, Maria Lassnig (Commissioner: Hans Hollein)
* 1982 —
Walter Pichler (Commissioner: Hans Hollein)
* 1984 —
Christian Ludwig Attersee (Commissioner: Hans Hollein)
* 1986 —
Max Peintner, Karl Prantl (Commissioner: Hans Hollein)
* 1988 —
Siegfried Anzinger (Commissioner: Hans Hollein)
* 1990 —
Franz West (Commissioner: Hans Hollein)
* 1993 —
Gerwald Rockenschaub, Andrea Fraser, Christian Philipp Müller
(Commissioner: Peter Weibel)
* 1995 —
Coop Himmelb(l)au, Peter Kogler, Richard Kriesche, Peter
Sandbichler / Constanze Ruhm, Eva Schlegel, Ruth Schnell (Commissioner:
Peter Weibel)
* 1997 —
Die Wiener Gruppe (Friedrich Achleitner, Konrad Bayer, Gerhard
Rühm, Oswald Wiener) (Commissioner: Peter Weibel)
* 1999 —
Peter Friedl, Rainer Ganahl, Christine Hohenbüchler and
Irene Hohenbüchler, Wochenklausur (Commissioner: Peter Weibel)
* 2001 —
Granular Synthesis (Ulf Langheinrich & Kurt Hentschläger),
Gelatin (Commissioner: Elisabeth Schweeger)
* 2003 —
Bruno Gironcoli (Commissioner: Kasper König)
* 2005 —
Hans Schabus (Commissioner: Max Hollein)
* 2007 —
Herbert Brandl (Commissioner: Robert Fleck)
* 2009 —
Elke Krystufek, Dorit Margreiter, Lois & Franziska Weinberger
(Commissioners: Valie Export und Silvia Eiblmayr)
* 2011 —
Markus Schinwald (Commissioner: Eva Schlegel)
* 2013 —
Mathias Poledna (Commissioner: Jasper Sharp)
* 2015 –
Heimo Zobernig (Commissioner: Yilmaz Dziewior)
* 2017 –
Brigitte Kowanz, Erwin Wurm (Commissioner: Christa Steinle)
* 2019 –
Curator: Felicitas Thun-Hohenstein
Azerbaijan[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Azerbaijan Pavilion:
* 2007
.............. (Curators – Leyla Akhundzade and Sabina Shikhlinskaya)
* 2009
............. (Curator – Leyla Akhundzade)
* 2011 —
Mikayil Abdurahmanov and Altai Sadighzadeh (paintings),
Aidan Salakhova and Khanlar Gasimov (sculptures), Zeigam Azizov and Aga
Ousseinov (multidisciplinary installations). Curators: Cinghiz
Farzaliev and Beral Madra[41]
* 2013 —
Rashad Alakbarov, Sanan Aleskerov, Chingiz Babayev,
Butunay Hagverdiyev, Fakhriyya Mammadova, Farid Rasulov (Curator: Herve
Mikaeloff)
* 2015 —
Ashraf Murad, Javad Mirjavadov, Tofik Javadov, Rasim
Babayev, Fazil Najafov, Huseyn Hagverdi, Shamil Najafzada (Curator:
Emin Mammadov)
* 2017 —
HYPNOTICA, Elvin Nabizade (Curators: Emin Mammadov, Martin Roth)
Belgium[edit]
Designed by Leon Sneyers, 1907
(totally restored by Virgilio Vallot, 1948).[32]
List of exhibitors in the
Belgian Pavilion:
* 1948 —
Louis Buisseret, James Ensor, Constant Permeke, Louis Van Lint
* 1958 —
Jules Lismonde (fr) (winner of the Renato Carrain Prize)
* 1964 —
Vic Gentils
* 1997 —
Thierry de Cordier
* 1999 —
Michel François, Ann Veronica Janssens
* 2001 —
Luc Tuymans
* 2005 —
Honoré d'O
* 2007 —
Éric Duyckaerts, Berlinde de Bruyckere
* 2009 —
Jef Geys (Curator: Dirk Snauwaert)
* 2011 —
Angel Vergara, Luc Tuymans
* 2013 —
Berlinde de Bruyckere (Curator: J.M. Coetzee)
* 2015 —
Vincent Meessen and guests (Mathieu K. Abonnenc, Sammy
Baloji, James Beckett, Melle Nieling, Elisabetta Benassi, Patrick
Bernier & Olive Martin, Tamar Guimarães & Kasper
Akhøj, Maryam
Jafri, Adam Pendleton) (Curator: Katerina Gregos)[42]
* 2017 —
Dirk Braeckman (Curator: Eva Wittocx)
Brazil[edit]
Designed by Amerigo Marchesin,
1964.[32]
List of exhibitors in the
Brazilian Pavilion:
* 1950 —
Roberto Burle Marx, Milton Dacosta, Cicero Dias, Emiliano
Di Cavalcanti, Flavio de Carvalho, Candido Portinari, José
Pancetti,
Bruno Giorgi, Victor Brecheret, Livio Abramo, Oswaldo Goeldi
* 1958 —
Lasar Segall
* 1956 —
Aldemir Martins
* 1960 —
Antonio Bandeira, Danilo Di Prete, Manabu Mabe, Aloisio
Magalhães, Teresa Nicolao, Loio-Pérsio, Mario Cravo
Júnior
* 1962 —
Alfredo Volpi, Anna Letycia Quadros, Fernando Jackson
Ribeiro, Gilvan Samico, Iberê Camargo, Isabel Pons, Ivan Serpa,
Lygia
Clark, Marcelo Grassmann, Rossini Quintas Perez, Rubem Valentim
* 1964 —
Abraham Palatnik, Alfredo Volpi, Almir Mavignier, Franz
Weissmann, Frans Krajcberg, Glauco Rodrigues, Tarsila do Amaral
* 1966 —
Sergio de Camargo
* 1968 —
Lygia Clark
* 1970 —
Mary Vieira, Roberto Burle Marx
* 1972 —
Humberto Espíndola, Paulo Roberto Leal, Franz Weissmann
* 1976 —
Claudio Tozzi, Evandro Carlos Jardim, Regina Vater, Sergio Augusto
Porto, Vera Chaves Barcellos
* 1978 —
Carlos Fajardo, G. T. O. (Geraldo Telles de Oliveira),
Julio Martins da Silva, Luiz Aquila da Rocha Miranda, Maria Auxiliadora
da Silva, Maria Madalena Santos Reinbolt, Paulo Gomes Garcez, Wilma
Marins
* 1980 —
Anna Bella Geiger, Antonio Dias, Carlos Vergara, Paulo Roberto Leal
* 1982 —
Tunga, Sérgio de Camargo
* 1984 —
Eduardo Sued, Luiz Paulo Baravelli
* 1986 —
Gastão Manoel Henrique, Geraldo de Barros, Renina Katz,
Washington Novaes
* 1988 —
José Resende, Juraci Dórea
* 1990 —
Frida Baranek, Daniel Senise, Francisco Brennand, Gilvan Samico, Wesley
Duke Lee
* 1993 —
Angelo Venosa, Carlos Fajardo, Emmanuel Nassar
* 1995 —
Arthur Bispo do Rosário, Nuno Ramos
* 1997 —
Jac Leirner, Waltercio Caldas (Curator: Paulo Herkenhoff)
* 1999 —
Iran do Espírito Santo, Nelson Leirner (Curator: Ivo Mesquita)
* 2001 —
Vik Muniz, Ernesto Neto, Miguel Rio Branco, Tunga, (Curator: Germano
Celant)
* 2003 —
Beatriz Milhazes, Rosângela Rennó (Curator: Alfons Hug)
* 2005 —
Chelpa Ferro, Caio Reisewitz (Curator: Alfons Hug)
* 2007 —
José Damasceno, Detanico & Lain (Curator: Jacopo Crivelli
Visconti)
* 2009 —
Luiz Braga, Delson Uchôa (Curator: Ivo Mesquita)
* 2011 —
Artur Barrio (Curators: Moacir dos Anjos, Agnaldo Farias)
* 2013 —
Hélio Fervenza, Odires Mlászho, Lygia Clark, Max Bill,
Bruno Munari (Curator: Luis Pérez-Oramas)
* 2015 —
André Komatsu, Antonio Manuel, Berna Reale (Curator: Luiz
Camillo Osorio)
* 2017 —
Cinthia Marcelle (Curator: Jochen Volz)
Canada[edit]
The Canadian pavilion was
designed by the Milan-based architecture firm
BBPR (Gian Luigi Banfi, Ludovico Barbiano di Belgiojoso, Enrico
Peressutti, Ernesto Nathan Rogers) and was first used at the 1958
biennale.[32] The nation has been participating in the international
exhibition since 1952.[43] The National Gallery of Canada took over the
Venice selection process from the Canada Council in 2010.
List of exhibitors in the
Canadian Pavilion:
* 1952 —
Emily Carr, David Milne, Goodridge Roberts, Alfred Pellan
* 1954 — B
C Binning, Paul-Émile Borduas, Jean-Paul Riopelle
* 1956 —
Jack Shadbolt, Louis Archambault, Harold Town
* 1958 —
James Wilson Morrice, Jacques de Tonnancour, Anne Kahane, Jack Nichols
* 1960 —
Edmund Alleyn, Graham Coughtry, Jean Paul Lemieux, Frances Loring,
Albert Dumouchel
* 1962 —
Jean-Paul Riopelle
* 1964 —
Harold Town, Elza Mayhew
* 1966 —
Alex Colville, Yves Gaucher, Sorel Etrog
* 1968 —
Ulysse Comtois, Guido Molinari
* 1970 —
Michael Snow
* 1972 —
Gershon Iskowitz, Walter Redinger
* 1976 —
Greg Curnoe
* 1978 —
Ron Martin, Henry Saxe
* 1980 —
Collin Campbell, Pierre Falardeau & Julien Poulin, General Idea,
Tom Sherman, Lisa Steele
* 1982 —
Paterson Ewen
* 1984 —
Ian Carr-Harris, Liz Magor
* 1986 —
Melvin Charney, Krzysztof Wodiczko
* 1988 —
Roland Brener, Michel Goulet
* 1990 —
Geneviève Cadieux
* 1993 —
Robin Collyer
* 1995 —
Edward Poitras
* 1997 —
Rodney Graham (Curator: Loretta Yarlow)[44]
* 1999 —
Tom Dean
* 2001 —
Janet Cardiff & George Bures Miller (Curator: Wayne Baerwaldt)
* 2003 —
Jana Sterbak (Curator: Gilles Godmer)
* 2005 —
Rebecca Belmore
* 2007 —
David Altmejd (Curator: Louise Déry)
* 2009 —
Mark Lewis (Curator: Barbara Fischer)
* 2011 —
Steven Shearer (Curator: Josée Drouin-Brisebois)
* 2013 —
Shary Boyle[45] (Curator: Josée Drouin-Brisebois)
* 2015 —
BGL (Curator: Marie Fraser)
* 2017 —
Geoffrey Farmer (Curator: Kitty Scott)[46]
List of exhibitors in the
Chilean Pavilion:
* 2009 —
Iván Navarro (Curators: Antonio Arévalo, Justo Pastor
Mellado)
* 2011 —
Fernando Prats (Curator: Fernando Castro Flórez)
* 2013 —
Alfredo Jaar (Curator: Madeleine Grynsztejn)
* 2015 —
Paz Errázuriz, Lotty Rosenfeld (Curator: Nelly Richard)
* 2017 —
Bernardo Oyarzún (Curator: Ticio Escobar)
Croatia[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Croatian Pavilion:[47]
* 1993 —
Milivoj Bijelić, Ivo Deković, and Željko Kipke
* 1995 —
Martina Kramer, Goran Petercol, Mirko Zrinščak, Ivan
Faktor, Nina Ivančić, Damir Sokić, Mladen Stilinović, Dean Jokanović
Toumin, Goran Trbuljak, Gorki Žanić
* 1997 —
Dalibor Martinis
* 1999 —
Zlatan Vrkljan
* 2001 —
Julije Knifer
* 2003 —
Boris Cvjetanović and Ana Opalić
* 2010 —
Saša Begović, Marko Dabrović, Igor Franić, Tanja
Grozdanić, Petar Mišković, Silvije Novak, Veljko Oluić, Helena Paver
Njirić, Lea Pelivan, Toma Plejić, Goran Rako, Saša Randić, Turato Idis,
Pero Vuković e Tonči Žarnić
* 2013 —
Kata Mijatović (Curator: Branko Franceschi)
* 2015 —
Damir Očko (Curator: Marc Bembekoff)
* 2017 —
Tina Gverović, Marko Tadić (Curator: Branka Benčić)
Czech Republic and
Slovakia[edit]
Designed by Otakar
Novotný, 1926 (annex built by Boguslav Rychlinch, 1970).[32]
List of exhibitors in the
Czech and Slovak Pavilion:
* 1926 —
Charlotte Schrötter-Radnitz
* 1942 -
Janko Alexy, Miloš Alexander Bazovský, Martin Benka,
Ľudovít Fulla, Jan Hála, Jozef Kollar, Frantisek Kudlac,
Eugen
Lehotský, Gustav Mally, Peter Matejka, Lea Mrazova, Jan Mudroch,
Karol
Ondreička, Štefan Polkoráb, Teodor Tekel, Jaroslav Votruba,
Júlia
Kováciková-Horová, Vojtech Ihrisky, Jan Koniarek,
Jozef Kostka,
Ladislav Majerský, Fraňo Stefunko, Koloman Sokol
* 1956 —
Josef Lada, Adolf Zábranský, Jiří Trnka,
Antonín Pelc,
Cyril Bouda, Václav Karel, Kamil Lhoták, Antonín
Strnadel, Vincenc
Vingler, a.o.
* 1964 —
Vladimír Kompánek
* 1966 —
Jozef Kornucik, Vladimír Kompánek
* 1970 —
Jozef Jankovič
* 1986 —
Ivan Ouhel
* 1993 —
František Skála, Daniel Fischer
* 1995 —
Jozef Jankovič
* 1999 —
(Curators: Petra Hanáková and Alexandra Kusá)
* 2001 —
Jiří Surůvka, Ilona Németh (Curator: Katarína
Rusnáková)
* 2005 —
Stanislav Filko, Jan Mančuška, Boris Ondreička (Curator: Marek
Pokorný)
* 2007 —
Irena Jůzová (Curator: Tomáš Vlček)
* 2009 —
Roman Ondák (Curator: Kathrin Rhomberg)
* 2011 —
Dominik Lang (Curator: Yvona Ferencová)
* 2013 —
Petra Feriancová, Zbyněk Baladrán (Curator: Marek
Pokorný)
* 2015 —
Jiří David (Curator: Katarína Rusnáková)
* 2017 —
Jana Želibská
Denmark[edit]
Designed by Carl Brummer, 1932
(annex designed by Peter Koch, 1958).[32]
The Danish Arts Council
Committee for International Visual Arts serves
as commissioner for the Danish Pavilion at the Biennale, where Denmark
has taken part since 1895.[48]
List of exhibitors in the
Danish Pavilion:
* 1999 —
Jason Rhoades, Peter Bonde
* 2003 —
Olafur Eliasson
* 2005 —
Eva Koch, Joachim Koester, Peter Land, Ann Lislegaard, Gitte Villesen
* 2007 —
Troels Wörsel (Commissioner: Holger Reenberg; Assistant
Commissioner: Stinna Toft Christensen)
* 2009 —
Elmgreen and Dragset
* 2011 —
Taryn Simon and others (Curator: Katerina Gregos)
* 2013 —
Jesper Just
* 2015 —
Danh Vo[49] (Curators: Marianne Torp, Tine Vindfeld
* 2017 —
Kirstine Roepstorff[50]
Egypt[edit]
Egypt was assigned a pavilion
in 1952.
List of exhibitors in the
Egyptian Pavilion:
* 1960 —
Kamal Amin
* 1976 —
Kamal Amin
* 1995 —
Akram El Magdoub — Hamdi Attia — Medhat Shafik — Khaled Shokry
* 2009 —
Adel El Siwi, Ahmad Askalany (Curator: Adel El Siwi)
* 2011 —
Ahmed Basiony (Curators: Aida Eltorie, Shady El Noshokaty)
* 2013 —
Mohamed Banawy, Khaled Zaki
* 2015 —
Ahmed Abdel Fatah, Gamal Elkheshen, Maher Dawoud
* 2017 —
Moataz Nasr[51]
Estonia[edit]
The expositions at the
Estonian Pavilion are regularly commissioned by the Center for
Contemporary Arts, Estonia.
List of exhibitors in the
Estonian Pavilion:
* 2003 —
Kaido Ole
* 2005 —
Mark Raidpere (Curator: Hanno Soans)
* 2007 —
Marko Mäetamm (Curator: Mika Hannula)
* 2009 —
Kristina Norman (Curator: Marko Laimre)
* 2011 —
Liina Siib
* 2013 —
Dénes Farkas
* 2015 —
Jaanus Samma (Curator: Eugenio Viola)
* 2017 —
Katja Novitskova (Curator: Kati Ilves)[52]
* 2019 —
Kris Lemsalu[53]
Finland[edit]
Designed by Alvar Aalto to be
a temporary construction for the
architecture biennale in 1956, the pavilion was later restored by
Fredrik Fogh with the collaboration of Elsa Makiniemi, 1976–1982. Also
used by Iceland.[32] In 2011, a big tree fell on the pavilion in
Venice, effectively interrupting the Finnish exhibition in the 2011
biennale. The pavilion and the works exhibited there were damaged and
the show had to be closed ahead of time. The pavilion was later
restored in 2012 by Gianni Talamini.[54]
* 2005 —
Jaakko Heikkilä
* 2007 —
Maaria Wirkkala
* 2011 —
Vesa-Pekka Rannikko (Curator: Laura Köönikkä)
* 2013 —
Antti Laitinen, Terike Haapoja (Curators: Mika Elo, Marko Karo Harri
Laakso)
* 2015 —
IC-98 – Visa Suonpää, Patrik Söderlund (Curator: Taru
Elfving)
* 2017 —
Erkka Nissinen, Nathaniel Mellors (Curator: Xander Karskens)[55]
France[edit]
The French pavilion was
designed by Faust Finzi in 1912.[43]
List of exhibitors in the
French Pavilion:
* 1962 —
Alfred Manessier, Jean Messagier, Serge Poliakoff, Andrew Marfaing,
James Guitet
* 1976 —
Herve Fisher, Fred Forest, Raymond Hains, Alain Jacquet,
Bertrand Lavier, Jean-Pierre Raynaud, Jean-Michel Sanejouand, Jean-Paul
Thenot (Commissioner: Pierre Restany)
* 1982 —
Simon Hantaï
* 1984 —
Jean Dubuffet
* 1986 —
Daniel Buren
* 1991 —
Jean Nouvel, Christian de Portzamparc, Philippe Starck
* 1993 —
Jean-Pierre Raynaud
* 1995 —
César
* 1997 —
Fabrice Hybert
* 1999 —
Huang Yong Ping, Jean-Pierre Bertrand
* 2001 —
Pierre Huyghe
* 2003 —
Jean-Marc Bustamante
* 2005 —
Annette Messager (Curator: Caroline Ferreira)
* 2007 —
Sophie Calle
* 2009 —
Claude Lévêque (Curator: Christian Bernard)
* 2011 —
Christian Boltanski (Curator: Jean-Hubert Martin)
* 2013 —
Anri Sala (Curator: Christine Macel) [Exhibition was held at the German
pavilion]
* 2015 —
Céleste Boursier-Mougenot, Lili Reynaud-Dewar (Curator: Emma
Lavigne)[56]
* 2017 –
Xavier Veilhan (Curators: Lionel Bovier, Christian Marclay)
Germany[edit]
The commissioner for the
German contribution to Biennial is the German
Foreign Ministry. On the recommendation of an advisory committee of
museum directors and art experts, the ministry appoints a curator
(formerly called a commissioner) responsible for the selection of the
artists and the organisation of the contribution. This appointment is
usually for two years in succession. The Sparkassen-Kulturfonds
(culture fund) of the Deutscher Sparkassen- und Giroverband is the
pavilion's main sponsor. The Goethe-Institut and, since 2013, the ifa
Friends of the German Pavilion are also funders.[25]
From 1982 until 1990 the
German Democratic Republic organized its own
exhibitions in the former Pavilion of Decorative Art. Germany's
pavilion was redesigned by Ernst Haiger and inaugurated in 1938 by the
ruling Nazi government, a fact that has inspired artistic responses
from some presenters.[43] It was originally designed by Daniele Donghi
in 1909.[32]
List of exhibitors in the
German Pavilion:
* 1950 —
Der Blaue Reiter (Curator: Eberhard Hanfstaengl)
* 1952 —
Die Brücke (Curator: Eberhard Hanfstaengl)
* 1954 —
Heinz Battke, Leo Cremer, Edgar Ende, Paul Klee, Karl
Kunz, Oskar Schlemmer, Rudolf Schlichter, Hans Uhlmann, Mac Zimmermann
(Curator: Eberhard Hanfstaengl)
* 1958 —
Karl Otto Götz, Fred Thieler, Julius Bissier, Rolf Cavael,
Werner Gilles, Otto Herbert Hajek, Wassily Kandinsky, Heinrich
Kirchner, Fritz Koenig, Hans Mettel, Otto Pankok, Hans Platschek, E.
Andreas Rauch, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, Johanna Schütz-Wolff, Emil
Schumacher, K. R. H. Sonderborg, Wilhelm Wessel, Hans Wimmer (Curator:
Eberhard Hanfstaengl)
* 1960 —
Willi Baumeister, Julius Bissier, Emil Cimiotti, Karl
Schmidt-Rottluff, Rupert Stöckl, Werner Schreib, Ernst Weiers
(Kurator
Konrad Röthel)
* 1962 —
Werner Gilles, HAP Grieshaber, Erich Heckel, Alfred
Lörcher, Brigitte Meier-Denninghoff, Emil Schumacher (Curator:
Konrad
Röthel)
* 1964 —
Joseph Fassbender, Norbert Kricke (Commissioner: Eduard Trier)
* 1966 —
Horst Antes, Günter Haese, Ferdinand Ris (Commissioner: Eduard
Trier)
* 1968 —
Horst Janssen, Richard Oelze (Commissioner: Alfred Hentzen)
* 1970 —
Kaspar-Thomas Lenk, Heinz Mack, Georg Karl Pfahler, Günther Uecker
(Commissioner: Dieter Honisch)
* 1972 —
Gerhard Richter (Commissioner: Dieter Honisch)
* 1976 —
Joseph Beuys, Jochen Gerz, Reiner Ruthenbeck (Commissioner: Klaus
Gallwitz)
* 1978 —
Dieter Krieg, Ulrich Rückriem (Commissioner: Klaus Gallwitz)
* 1980 —
Georg Baselitz, Anselm Kiefer (Commissioner: Klaus Gallwitz)
* 1982 —
Hanne Darboven, Gotthard Graubner, Wolfgang Laib (Commissioner:
Johannes Cladders)
* 1984 —
Lothar Baumgarten, A. R. Penck (Commissioner: Johannes Cladders)
* 1986 —
Sigmar Polke (Commissioner: Dierk Stemmler)
* 1988 —
Felix Droese (Commissioner: Dierk Stemmler)
* 1990 —
Bernd and Hilla Becher, Reinhard Mucha (Commissioner: Klaus
Bußmann)
* 1993 —
Hans Haacke, Nam June Paik (Commissioner: Klaus Bußmann)
* 1995 —
Katharina Fritsch, Martin Honert, Thomas Ruff (Commissioner:
Jean-Christophe Ammann)
* 1997 —
Gerhard Merz, Katharina Sieverding (Commissioner: Gudrun Inboden)
* 1999 —
Rosemarie Trockel (Commissioner: Gudrun Inboden)
* 2001 —
Gregor Schneider (Commissioner: Udo Kittelmann)
* 2003 —
Candida Höfer, Martin Kippenberger (Curator: Julian Heynen)
* 2005 —
Thomas Scheibitz, Tino Sehgal (Curator: Julian Heynen)
* 2007 —
Isa Genzken (Curator: Nicolaus Schafhausen)
* 2009 —
Liam Gillick (Curator: Nicolaus Schafhausen)
* 2011 —
Christoph Schlingensief (Curator: Susanne Gaensheimer)
* 2013 — Ai
Weiwei, Romuald Karmakar, Santu Mofokeng, Dayanita
Singh (Curator: Susanne Gaensheimer) [Exhibition was held at the French
pavilion]
* 2015 —
Tobias Zielony, Hito Steyerl, Olaf Nicolai, Jasmina Metwaly and Philip
Rizk (Curator: Florian Ebner)[57]
* 2017 —
Anne Imhof (Curator: Susanne Pfeffer)- (Winner of the
Golden Lion for "Best National Participation"),[58][59] Oliver Weber
* 2019 –
Curator: Franciska Zólyom
Great Britain[edit]
British Pavilion
Designed by Edwin Alfred
Rickards, 1909.[32]
Since 1938 the British Council
has been responsible for the British Pavilion in Venice.
List of exhibitors in the
British Pavilion:
* 1948 —
Sculptures by Henry Moore. Paintings by J. M. W. Turner. Works by Ben
Nicholson and John Tunnard.
* 1950 —
Paintings by Matthew Smith and John Constable. Sculptures by Barbara
Hepworth.
* 1952 —
Paintings by Graham Sutherland and Edward Wadsworth.
Sculptures by the New Aspects of British Sculpture group (Robert Adams,
Kenneth Armitage, Reg Butler, Lynn Chadwick, Geoffrey Clarke, Bernard
Meadows, Henry Moore, Eduardo Paolozzi, and William Turnbull).
* 1954 —
Paintings by Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, and Ben
Nicholson. Sculptures by Reg Butler relating to his Unknown Political
Prisoner monument. Lithographs by Allin Brains, Geoffrey Clarke, Henry
Cliffe, Robert Colquhoun, William Gear, Henry Moore, Eduardo Paolozzi,
Ceri Richards, William Scott, and Graham Sutherland.
* 1956 —
Paintings by Ivon Hitchens, John Bratby, Derrick Greaves,
Edward Middleditch, and Jack Smith. Sculptures by Lynn Chadwick.
* 1958 —
Paintings by William Scott and S. W. Hayter. Sculptures by
Kenneth Armitage, Sezione Giovani, Sandra Blow, Anthony Caro, and Alan
Davie.
* 1960 —
Mixed media works by Victor Pasmore. Paintings by Merlyn Evans,
Geoffrey Clarke, Henry Cliffe.
* 1962 —
Paintings by Ceri Richards. Sculptures by Robert Adams and Hubert
Dalwood.
* 1964 —
Mixed media works by Joe Tilson. Paintings by Roger Hilton, Gwyther
Irwin. Sculptures by Bernard Meadows.
* 1966 —
Paintings by Richard Smith, Bernard Cohen, Harold Cohen, and Robyn
Denny. Sculptures by Anthony Caro.
* 1968 —
Paintings by Bridget Riley and Francis Bacon. Sculptures
by Philip King. 'Ways of Contemporary Research' exhibition with works
by Anthony Caro, David Hockney, Ben Nicholson, Eduardo Paolozzi, Victor
Pasmore, Graham Sutherland.
* 1970 —
Paintings by Richard Smith.
* 1972 —
Paintings by John Walker. Sculptures by William G. Tucker.
'Grafica sperimentale per la stampa' exhibition with works by Pentagram
(Alan Fletcher, Colin Forbes, Mervyn Kurlansky), Michael English, John
Gorham, F. H. K. Henrion, Lou Klein, Enzo Ragazzini. 'Il Libro come
luogo di ricerca' exhibition with works by Gilbert and George and
Victor Burgin.
* 1976 —
Works by Richard Long, Richard Hamilton, Victor Pasmore,
David Mackay, Alison and Peter Smithson, James Stirling, John Davies,
Phillip Hyde, Anne Rawcliffe-King, Yolanda Teuten.
* 1978 —
Photography by Mark Boyle. 'Six Stations for Art-Nature.
The Nature of Art' exhibition with works by Gilbert and George, Francis
Bacon, David Hockney, Richard Long, and Malcolm Morley. 'Art and
Cinema' by Anthony McCall.
* 1980 —
Works by Tim Head and Nicholas Pope. 'Art in the
Seventies' exhibition with works by Bruce McLean, Kenneth Martin,
Television Exhibitions, Barry Flanagan, Gilbert and George, Hamish
Fulton, and Richard Long. 'Art in the Seventies. Open 80' exhibition
with works by Roger Ackling, Tony Cragg, and Leonard McComb.
* 1982 —
Works by Barry Flanagan. 'Aperto 82' exhibition with works
by Catherine Blacker, Stephen Cox, Antony Gormley, Tim Head, Shirazeh
Houshiary, Anish Kapoor, Christopher Le Brun, Judy Pfaff, Stephen
Willats, and Bill Woodrow. 'Arte come arte: persistenza dell'opera —
Mostra internazionale' exhibition with works by Frank Auerbach, Lucian
Freud, Ronald Kitaj, and Raymond Mason.
* 1984 —
Works by Howard Hodgkin. 'Arte allo Specchio' exhibition
with works by Peter Greenaway and Christopher Le Brun. 'Arte, Ambiente,
Scena' exhibition with works by Judy Pfaff. 'Aperto 84' exhibition with
works by Terry Atkinson, Helen Chadwick, Rose Garrard, Glenys Johnson,
Paul Richards, Amikam Toren, and Kerry Treng.
* 1986 —
Works by Frank Auerbach (Commissioner: Henry Meyric
Hughes). 'Aperto 86' exhibition with works by Lisa Milroy, John Murphy,
Avis Newman, Jacqueline Poncelet, Boyd Webb, and Richard Wilson. 'Art e
Scienza' exhibition with works by Eric Bainbridge, Alastair Brotchie,
Anthony Caro, Leonora Carrington, Ithell Colquhoun, Stephen Cox, Tony
Cragg, Neil Cummings, Brian Eno, Barry Flanagan, Jeremy Gardiner, Eric
Gidney, Jocelyn Godwin, Anthony Gormley, Paul Hayward, Allen Jones,
Liliane Lijn, Peter Lowe, Kyeran Lyons, Conroy Maddox, Thomas Major,
Kenneth Martin, Mary Martin, Alastair Morton, Hugh O'Donnell, Andrew
Owens, Digital Pictures, Mike Punt, Bridget Riley, Kurt Schwitters,
Peter Sedgley, Jeffrey Steele, Paul Thomas, Philip West, and Alison
Wilding.
* 1988 —
Tony Cragg (Commissioner: Henry Meyric Hughes). 'Aperto
88' exhibition with works by Tony Bevan, Hannah Collins, Grenville
Davey, Andy Goldsworthy, Simon Linke, Peter Nadin, and Thoms William
Puckey. 'Scultori ai Giardini' exhibition with works by Lynn Chadwick,
Anthony Core, Philip King, and Joe Tilson.
* 1990 —
Anish Kapoor (Commissioner: Henry Meyric Hughes). 'Three
Scottish Sculptors' exhibition with works by David Mach, Arthur Watson,
and Kate Whiteford. 'Aperto 90' with works by Eric Bainbridge, David
Leapman, Patrick Joseph McBride, Therese Oulton, Fiona Rae, and Anthony
Wilson. 'Fluxus' exhibition with works by Braco Dimitrijevic, Brion
Gysin, Dick Higgins, and Robin Page.
* 1993 —
Richard Hamilton (Commissioner: Andrea Rose). 'Aperto 93'
exhibition with works by Henry Bond, Christine Borland, Angela Bulloch,
Mat Collishaw, Damien Hirst, Simon Patterson, Vong Phaophanit, Steven
Pippin, Julie Roberts, and Georgina Starr. 'Punti dell'arte' exhibition
with works by Anish Kapoor. 'Slittamenti' exhibition with works by
Peter Greenaway and Derek Jarman. 'Macchine della pace' exhibition with
works by Tony Cragg, Shirazeh Houshiary, and Julian Opie. 'La
coesistenza dell'arte' exhibition with works by Braco Dimitrijevic.
'Art against Aids. Venezia 93' exhibition with works by Gilbert and
George, Frank Auerbach, Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon, Shirazeh Houshiary,
Anish Kapoor, Ronald Kitaj, Malcolm Morley, Ray Smith, and Rachel
Whiteread. 'Tresors de Voyage' exhibition with works by Braco
Dimitrijevic, Shirazeh Houshiary, and Anish Kapoor.
* 1995 —
Works by Leon Kossoff. 'General Release: Young British
Artists' exhibition with works by Fiona Banner, Dinos Chapman, Jake
Chapman, Adam Chodzko, Matthew Dalziel, and Louise Scullion, Cerith Wyn
Evans, Elizabeth Wright, Tacita Dean, Lucy Gunning, Sam Taylor-Wood,
Jane and Louise Wilson, Jaki Irvine, Gary Hume, Douglas Gordan, Tom
Gidley, and Ceal Floyer.
* 1997 —
Rachel Whiteread (Commissioner: Andrea Rose)
* 1999 —
Paintings by Gary Hume (Commissioner: Andrea Rose)
* 2001 —
Mark Wallinger (Commissioner: Andrea Rose; curator: Ann Gallagher)
* 2003 —
Chris Ofili (Commissioner: Andrea Rose; curator: Colin Ledwith)
* 2005 —
Gilbert and George (Commissioner: Andrea Rose; curator: Richard Riley)
* 2007 —
Tracey Emin (Commissioner: Andrea Rose)
* 2009 —
Video installation by Steve McQueen
* 2011 —
Mike Nelson (Commissioner: Andrea Rose; curator: Richard Riley)
* 2013 —
Jeremy Deller (Curator: Emma Gifford-Mead)
* 2015 —
Sarah Lucas (Curator: Richard Riley)
* 2017 —
Phyllida Barlow
* 2017 —
Cathy Wilkes (Curator: Zoe Whitley)[60]
Greece[edit]
Artists:
* 1936 —
Maria Anagnostopoulou, Umberto Argyros, Constantinos Artemis, Nicolas
Asprogerakas (Commissioner: Typaldo Forestis)
* 1936 —
Konstantinos Maleas, Nikolaos Lytras, C. Stefanopoulo
Alessandridi, Umberto Argyros, Aglae Papa (Commissioner: Typaldo
Forestis)
* 1938 —
Constantin Parthenis, Michalis Tombros, Angelos Theodoropoulos
(Commissioners: Antonios Benakis, Typaldo Forestis)
* 1940 —
Aginor Asteriadis, Yannis Mitarakis, Pavlos Rodokanakis,
Dimitris Vitsoris, Bella Raftopoulou, Costis Papachristopoulos, George
Zongolopoulos, Dimitrios Ghianoukakis, Alexandros Korogiannakis,
Efthimios Papadimitriou
* 1950 —
Bouzianis Giorgos
* 1976 —
Michael Michaeledes, Aglaia Liberaki (Commissioner: Sotiris Messinis)
* 1978 —
Yannis Pappas (Commissioner: Sotiris Messinis)
* 1980 —
Pavlos (Dionysopoulos) (Commissioners: Sotiris Messinis, Emmanuel
Mavrommatis)
* 1982 —
Diamantis Diamantopoulos, Costas Coulentianos (Commissioner: Sotiris
Messinis)
* 1984 —
Christos Caras, George Georgiadis (Commissioner: Sotiris Messinis)
* 1986 —
Costas Tsoclis (Commissioners: Nelli Missirli, Sotiris Messinis)
* 1988 —
Vlassis Caniaris, Nikos Kessanlis (Commissioner: Emmanuel Mavrommatis)
* 1990 —
Georges Lappas, Yannis Bouteas (Commissioner: Manos Stefanidis)
* 1993 —
George Zongolopoulos (Commissioner: Efi Andreadi)
* 1995 —
Takis (Commissioner: Maria Marangou)
* 1997 —
Dimitri Alithinos, Stephen Antonakos, Totsikas, Alexandros Psychoulis
(Commissioner: Efi Strousa)
* 1999 —
Costas Varotsos, Danae Stratou, Evanthia Tsantila (Commissioner: Anna
Kafetsi)
* 2001 —
Nikos Navridis, Ilias Papailiakis, Ersi Chatziargyrou (Commissioner:
Lina Tsikouta)
* 2003 —
Athanasia Kyriakakos, Dimitris Rotsios (Commissioner: Marina Fokidis)
* 2005 —
George Hadjimichalis (Commissioner: Katerina Koskina)
* 2007 —
Nikos Alexiou (Commissioner: Yorgos Tzirtzilakis)
* 2009 —
Lucas Samaras (Curator: Matthew Higgs)
* 2011 —
Diohandi (Curator: Maria Marangou)
* 2013 —
Stefanos Tsivopoulos (Curator: Syrago Tsiara)
* 2015 —
Maria Papadimitriou (Curator: Gabi Scardi)
* 2017 —
George Drivas (Curator: Orestis Andreadakis)
Hong Kong[edit]
List of exhibitors in the Hong
Kong Pavilion:
* 2009 —
Pak Sheung Chuen (Curator: Tobias Berger)
* 2011 —
Kwok Mang Ho (known as Frog King)
* 2013 —
Lee Kit (Curators: Lars Nittve, Yung Ma)
* 2015 —
Tsang Kin-wah (Curators: Doryun Chong, Stella Fong)[61]
* 2017 —
Samson Young
* 2019 —
Shirley Tse (Curator: Christina Li)[62]
Hungary[edit]
Designed by Géza Rintel
Maróti, 1909 (restored by Agost Benkhard, 1958).[32]
List of exhibitors in the
Hungarian Pavilion:
* 1968 —
Ignác Kokas, Béla Kondor, Tibor Vilt
* 1982 —
Erzsébet Schaár (Commissioner: Géza Csorba)
* 1984 —
Imre Varga, György Vadász (Commissioner: Géza Csorba)
* 1986 —
Imre Bak, Ákos Birkás, Károly Kelemen,
István Nádler (Commissioner: Katalin Néray)
* 1988 —
Imre Bukta, Sándor Pinczehelyi, Géza Samu (Commissioner:
Katalin Néray)
* 1990 —
László Fehér (Commissioner: Katalin Néray)
* 1993 —
Joseph Kosuth, Viktor Lois (Commissioner: Katalin Keserü)
* 1995 —
György Jovánovics (Commissioner: Márta Kovalovszky)
* 1997 —
Róza El-Hassan, Judit Herskó, Éva Köves
(Commissioner: Katalin Néray)
* 1999 —
Imre Bukta, Emese Benczúr, Attila Csörgö, Gábor
Erdélyi, Mariann Imre (Curator: János Sturcz)
* 2001 —
Antal Lakner, Tamás Komoróczky (Curator: Júlia
Fabényi, Barnabás Bencsik)
* 2003 —
Little Warsaw (András Gálik, Bálint Havas)
(Curator: Zsolt Petrányi)
* 2005 —
Balázs Kicsiny (Curator: Péter Fitz)
* 2007 —
Andreas Fogarasi (Curator: Katalin Timár)
* 2009 —
Péter Forgács (Curator: András Rényi)
* 2011 —
Hajnal Németh (Curator: Miklós Peternák)
* 2013 —
Zsolt Asztalos (Curator: Gabriella Uhl)
* 2015 —
Szilárd Cseke (Curator: Kinga German)
* 2017 —
Gyula Várnai (Curator: Zsolt Petrányi)
Iceland[edit]
In 1984, as Finland had joined
Norway and Sweden in the Nordic
Pavilion, Iceland was given the opportunity to rent the Finnish
pavilion until 2006.[32] The Icelandic Art Center commissions the
Icelandic Pavilion at the Venice Biennale.[63]
List of exhibitors in the
Icelandish Pavilion:[64]
* 1960 —
Jóhannes Sveinsson Kjarval, Ásmundur Sveinsson
* 1972 —
Svavar Guðnason, Þorvaldur Skúlason
* 1980 —
Magnús Pálsson
* 1982 —
Gunnar Árnason, Kristján Guðmundsson
* 1984 —
Kristján Davidsson
* 1986 —
Erró
* 1988 —
Gunnar Örn
* 1990 —
Helgi Þorgils Friðjónsson
* 1995 —
Birgir Andrésson
* 1997 —
Steina Vasulka
* 1999 —
Sigurður Árni Sigurðsson
* 2001 —
Finnbogi Pétursson
* 2003 —
Rúrí
* 2005 —
Gabríela Friðriksdóttir
* 2007 —
Steingrímur Eyfjörð (Curator: Hanna
Styrmisdóttir)
* 2009 —
Ragnar Kjartansson (Curators: Markús Thór
Andrésson, Dorothée Kirch)
* 2011 —
Libia Castro & Ólafur Ólafsson (Curator: Ellen
Blumenstein)
* 2013 —
Katrín Sigurðardóttir (Curators: Mary Ceruti, Ilaria
Bonacossa)
* 2015 —
Christoph Büchel (Curator: Nína Magnúsdóttir)
* 2017 –
Egill Sæbjörnsson (Curator: Stefanie Böttcher)
India[edit]
In 2011, India was represented
for the first time after 116 years, with
the support of the culture ministry and the organizational
participation of the Lalit Kala Akademi.[43] Biennale organizers had
reportedly invited the country in past years, but the government had
declined, a decision attributed to a lack of communication between the
culture ministry and the country's National Gallery of Modern Art.[43]
* 2011 —
Mriganka Madhukaliya, Sonal Jain, Zarina Hashmi, Gigi Scaria, Praneet
Soi (Curator: Ranjit Hoskote)
* 2015 —
Shilpa Gupta, Rashid Rana (Exhibition jointly held with Pakistan)
Iraq[edit]
In 2011, Iraq returned to the
Biennale for the first time after a
35-year absence. The title of the Iraq Pavilion was "Acqua Ferita"
(translated as "Wounded Water"). Six Iraqi artists from two generations
interpreted the theme of water in their works, which made up the
exhibition.
* 2011 —
Adel Abidin, Halim Al Karim, Ahmed Alsoudani, Ali Assaf, Azad Nanakeli,
Walid Siti
* 2015 —
Philippe Van Cauteren
* 2017 —
Sherko Abbas, Sadik Kwaish Alfraji, Francis Alÿs, Ali
Arkady, Luary Fadhil, Shakir Hassan Al Said, Nadine Hattom, Jewad
Selim, Sakar Sleman
Ireland[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Irish Pavilion:
* 1950 —
Norah McGuinness, Nano Reid
* 1956 —
Louis le Brocquy, Hilary Heron
* 1960 —
Patrick Scott
* 1993 —
Dorothy Cross, Willie Doherty
* 1995 —
Kathy Prendergast
* 1997 —
Jaki Irvine, Alistair McLennan
* 1999 —
Anne Tallentire
* 2001 —
Siobhan Hapaska, Grace Weir
* 2003 —
Katie Holten (Commissioner: Valerie Connor)
* 2005 —
Stephen Brandes, Mark Garry, Ronan McCrea, Isabel Nolan,
Sarah Pierce, Walker and Walker (Commissioner: Sarah Glennie)
* 2007 —
Gerard Byrne (Commissioner: Mike Fitzpatrick)
* 2009 —
Sarah Browne, Gareth Kennedy, Kennedy Browne
* 2011 —
Corban Walker (Commissioner: Emily-Jane Kirwan)
* 2013 —
Richard Mosse (Commissioner: Anna O'Sullivan)
* 2015 —
Sean Lynch, The Rubberbandits (Commissioner: Mike Fitzpatrick; curator:
Woodrow Kernohan)[65][66]
* 2017 –
Jesse Jones, Olwen Fouéré (Curator: Tessa Giblin)
Israel[edit]
Designed by Zeev Rechter, 1952
(modified by Fredrik Fogh, 1966).[32]
Somewhat unusual in the Giardini, the pavilion has three exhibition
floors.
Partial list of exhibitors at
the Israeli Pavilion:
* 1982 —
Tamar Getter, Michal Na'aman
* 1986 —
Nubani Ibrahim
* 1988 —
Zadok Ben-David
* 1990 —
Ya'acov Dorchin
* 1993 —
Avital Geva
* 1995 —
Joshua Neustein, Uri Tzaig (Curator: Gideon Ofrat)
* 1997 —
Yossi Berger, Miriam Cabessa, Sigalit Landau
* 2001 —
Uri Katzenstein (Curator: Yigal Zalmona)
* 2003 —
Michal Rovner
* 2005 —
Guy Ben-Ner (Curator: Sergio Edelzstein)
* 2007 —
Yehudit Sasportas (Curator: Suzanne Landau)[67]
* 2009 —
Raffi Lavie (Curator: Doreet LeVitte Harten)
* 2011 —
Sigalit Landau (Curators: Jean de Loisy, Ilan Wizga)
* 2013 —
Gilad Ratman (Curator: Sergio Edelstein)
* 2015 —
Tsibi Geva (Curator: Hadas Maor)
* 2017 –
Gal Weinstein (Curator: Tami Katz-Freiman)[68]
Italy[edit]
"Palazzo Pro Arte": Enrico
Trevisanato, façade by Marius De Maria and
Bartholomeo Bezzi, 1895; new façade by Guido Cirilli, 1914;
"Padiglione
Italia", present façade by Duilio Torres, 1932. The pavilion has
a
sculpture garden by Carlo Scarpa, 1952 and the "Auditorium Pastor" by
Valeriano Pastor, 1977.[32]
Partial list of exhibitors at
the Italian Pavilion:
* 1895 —
Giuseppe Ferrari
* 1905 —
Giuseppe Ferrari
* 1912 —
Aldo Carpi
* 1922 —
Giuseppe Ferrari (posthumus)
* 1934 —
Aldo Carpi, Carlo Martini
* 1936 —
Aldo Carpi, Carlo Martini, Quinto Martini
* 1942 —
Aldo Carpi, Trento Longaretti
* 1948 —
Aldo Carpi, Trento Longaretti, Carlo Martini
* 1950 —
Aldo Carpi, Trento Longaretti, Carlo Martini
* 1966 —
Ferruccio Bortoluzzi, Trento Longaretti
* 1968 —
Maurizio Nannucci, Maurizio Mochetti, Eliseo Mattiacci, Paolo Masi,
Enzo Mari
* 1986 —
Toni Benetton
* 1990 —
Davide Benati, Gino De Dominicis, Nicola De Maria, Luigi
Mainolfi, Giuseppe Maraniello, Carlo Maria Mariani, Claudio Olivieri
(Curators: Laura Cherubini, Flaminio Gualdoni, Lea Vergine)
* 1993 —
Francesco Clemente, Luciano Fabbro, Emilio Isgrò, Sergio
Fermariello, Fabio Mauri, Eugenio Miccini, Hidetoshi Nagasawa, Luisa
Protti, Franco Vaccari (Curator: Achille Bonito Oliva)
* 1995 —
Lorenzo Bonechi, Ida Cadorin Barbarigo, Roberto Capucci,
Francesco Clemente, Amalia Del Ponte, Stefano Di Stasio, Paolo
Gallerani, Paola Gandolfi, Nunzio, Luigi Ontani, Claudio Parmiggiani,
Gianni Pisani, Pier Luigi Pizzi, Angelo Savelli, Ruggero Savino, Ettore
Spalletti, Vito Tongiani, Mino Trafeli, Giuliano Vangi (Curator: Jean
Clair)
* 1997 —
Maurizio Cattelan, Enzo Cucchi, Ettore Spalletti (Curator: Germano
Celant)
* 1999 —
Monica Bonvicini, Bruna Esposito, Luisa Lambri, Paola Pivi, Grazia
Toderi (Curator: Harald Szeemann)
* 2001 —
Alighiero Boetti, Barry McGee, Todd James, Steve Powers (Curators: Pio
Baldi, Paolo Colombo, Sandra Pinto)
* 2003 —
Charles Avery, Avish Khebrehzadeh, Sara Rossi, Carola
Spadoni (Curators: Pio Baldi, Monica Pignatti Morano and Paolo
Colombo). A12, Alessandra Ariatti, Micol Assaël, Diego Perrone,
Patrick
Tuttofuoco, Zimmer Frei (curator: Massimiliano Gioni)
* 2005 —
Carolina Antich, Manfredi Beninati, Loris Cecchini, Lara
Favaretto (Curators: Pio Baldi, Monica Pignatti Morano and Paolo
Colombo)
* 2007 —
Giuseppe Penone, Francesco Vezzoli (Curator: Ida Gianelli)
* 2009 —
Matteo Basilé, Manfredi Beninati, Valerio Berruti,
Bertozzi & Casoni, Nicola Bolla, Sandro Chia, Marco Cingolani,
Giacomo Costa, Aron Demetz, Roberto Floreani, Daniele Galliano, Marco
Lodola, MASBEDO, Gian Marco Montesano, Davide Nido, Luca Pignatelli,
Elisa Sighicelli, Sissi, Nicola Verlato, Silvio Wolf (Curators: Luca
Beatrice and Beatrice Buscaroli)
* 2011 —
L'Arte non è Cosa Nostra, a group show with 250 artists,
including Valerio Adami, Vanessa Beecroft, Agostino Bonalumi, Enzo
Cucchi, Roberto Ferri, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Rabarama and Oliviero
Toscani (Curator: Vittorio Sgarbi)
* 2013 —
Francesco Arena, Massimo Bartolini, Gianfranco Baruchello,
Elisabetta Benassi, Flavio Favelli, Luigi Ghirri, Piero Golia,
Francesca Grilli, Marcello Maloberti, Fabio Mauri, Giulio Paolini,
Marco Tirelli, Luca Vitone, Sislej Xhafa (Curator: Bartolomeo
Pietromarchi)
* 2015 —
Alis/Filliol, Andrea Aquilanti, Francesco Barocco, Vanessa
Beecroft, Antonio Biasiucci, Giuseppe Caccavale, Paolo Gioli, Jannis
Kounellis, Nino Longobardi, Marzia Migliora, Luca Monterastelli, Mimmo
Paladino, Claudio Parmeggiani, Nicola Samorì, Aldo Tambellini
(Curator:
Vincenzo Trione)
* 2017 —
Giorgio Andreotta Calò, Roberto Cuoghi, Adelita Husni-Bey
(Curator: Cecilia Alemani)[69]
Japan[edit]
Designed by Takamasa
Yoshizaka, 1956.[32] Japan has the longest history
at the Venice Biennale compared to any other Asian nation.
List of exhibitors in the
Japanese Pavilion:
* 1952 —
Taikan Yokoyama, Kokei Kobayashi, Kiyotaka Kaburaki,
Heihachirō Fukuda, Kyujin Yamamoto, Kenji Yoshioka, Sotaro Yasui,
Shinsen Tokuoka, Ryuzaburo Umehara, Ichiro Fukuzawa, Kigai Kawaguchi
* 1954 —
Hanjiro Sakamoto, Taro Okamoto
* 1956 —
Kunitaro Suda, Kazu Wakita, Takeo Yamaguchi, Shigeru Ueki, Toyoichi
Yamamoto, Shiko Munakata
* 1958 —
Ichiro Fukuzawa, Kawabata Ryushi, Seison Maeda, Kenzo Okada, Yoshi
Kinouchi, Shindo Tsuji
* 1960 —
Toshimitsu Imai, Yoshishige Saito, Kei Sato, Kaoru
Yamaguchi, Tadahiro Ono, Tomonori Toyofuku, Yoshitatsu Yanagihara, Yozo
Hamaguchi
* 1962 —
Kinuko Emi, Minoru Kawabata, Kumi Sugai, Tadashi Sugimata, Ryokichi
Mukai
* 1964 —
Yoshishige Saito, Toshinobu Onosato, Hisao Domoto, Tomonori Toyofuku
* 1966 —
Toshinobu Onosato, Masuo Ikeda, Morio Shinoda, Ay-O
* 1968 —
Tomio Miki, Kumi Sugai, Jiro Takamatsu, Katsuhiro Yamaguchi
* 1970 —
Nobuo Sekine
* 1972 —
Kenji Usami, Shintaro Tanaka
* 1976 —
Kishin Shinoyama
* 1978 —
Koji Enokura, Kishio Suga
* 1980 —
Koji Enokura, Susumu Koshimizu, Isamu Wakabayashi
* 1982 —
Naoyoshi Hikosaka, Yoshio Kitayama, Tadashi Kawamata
* 1984 —
Kosho Ito, Kyoji Takubo, Kosai Hori
* 1986 —
Isamu Wakabayashi, Masafumi Maita
* 1988 —
Shigeo Toya, Keiji Umematsu, Katsura Funakoshi
* 1990 —
Toshikatsu Endo, Saburo Muraoka
* 1993 —
Yayoi Kusama
* 1995 —
Katsuhiko Hibino, Yoichiro Kawaguchi, Hiroshi Senju, Jae Eun Choi
* 1997 —
Rei Naito
* 2003 —
Yutaka Sone, Motohiko Odani
* 2005 —
Ishiuchi Miyako
* 2007 —
Masao Okabe (Commissioner: Chihiro Minato)
* 2009 —
Miwa Yanagi
* 2011 —
Tabaimo (Curator: Yuka Uematsu)
* 2013 —
Koki Tanaka (Curator: Mike Kuraya)
* 2015 —
Chiharu Shiota (Curator: Hitoshi Nakano)
* 2017 –
Takahiro Iwasaki (Curator: Meruro Washida)[70]
Republic of Kosovo[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Kosovo Pavilion:
* 2013 —
Petrit Halilaj (Curator: Kathrin Rhonberg. Commissioner: Erzen
Shkololli)
* 2015 —
Flaka Haliti (Curator: Nicolaus Schafhausen)
* 2017 –
Sislej Xhafa (Curator: Arta Agani. Commissioner: Valon Ibraj)
Kuwait[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Kuwait Pavilion:
* 2013 —
"National Works" featuring works by Sami Mohammad and
Tarek Al-Ghoussein (Curator: Ala Younis, Commissioner: National Council
for Culture, Arts and Letters)[71]
* 2016 –
"Between East and West: A Gulf" curated by Hamed Bukhamseen and Ali
Karimi[72][73]
Lebanon[edit]
Lebanon was present at the
Biennale for the first time in 2007.[74]
After being absent in 2009 and 2011, it is coming back in 2013.[75]
* 2007 —
Foreword: Fouad Elkoury, Lamia Joreige, Walid Sadek,
Mounira Al Solh and Akram Zaatari (Curators: Saleh Barakat, Sandra
Dagher)
* 2013 —
Akram Zaatari (Curators: Sam Bardaouil, Till Fellrath)
* 2017 —
Zad Moultaka (Curator: Emmanuel Daydé)
Lithuania[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Lithuanian Pavilion:
* 1999 —
Mindaugas Navakas and Eglė Rakauskaitė
* 2001 —
Deimantas Narkevičius
* 2003 —
Svajonė Stanikas and Paulius Stanikas
* 2005 —
Jonas Mekas
* 2007 —
Nomeda Urbonienė and Gediminas Urbonas
* 2009 —
Žilvinas Kempinas
* 2011 —
Darius Mikšys
* 2013 —
Gintaras Didžiapetris, Elena Narbutaitė, Liudvikas Buklys,
Kazys Varnelis, Vytautė Žilinskaitė, Morten Norbye Halvorsen, Jason
Dodge, Gabriel Lester, Dexter Sinister (Curator: Raimundas Malašauskas)
* 2015 —
Dainius Liškevičius
* 2017 —
Žilvinas Landzbergas
* 2019 —
Nida Art Colony
Luxembourg[edit]
The Cà del Duca,
situated on the Canale Grande, has been the permanent
site for Luxembourg's participations in the Venice Biennale since 1999.
List of exhibitors in the
Luxembourg Pavilion:
* 1990 —
Marie-Paule Feiereisen
* 1993 —
Jean-Marie Biwer, Bertrand Ney
* 1995 —
Bert Theis
* 1997 —
Luc Wolf
* 1999 —
Simone Decker
* 2001 —
Doris Drescher
* 2003 —
Su-Mei Tse
* 2007 —
Jill Mercedes
* 2009 —
Gast Bouschet, Nadine Hilbert
* 2011 —
Martine Feipel, Jean Bechameil (Curator: René Kockelkorn)
* 2013 —
Catherine Lorent
* 2015 —
Filip Markiewicz (Curator: Paul Ardenne)
* 2017 —
Mike Bourscheid (Curator: Kevin Muhlen)
* 2019 —
Marco Godinho[76]
* )
Maldives[edit]
The Maldives Pavilion was
introduced in 2013.[77] List of exhibitors in the Maldives Pavilion:
* 2013 —
Mohamed Ali, Sama Alshaibi, Ursula Biemann, Stefano Cagol,
Wael Darwesh, Moomin Fouad, Thierry Geoffrey (aka Colonel), Khaled
Hafez, Heidrun Holzfeind & Christoph Draeger, Hanna Husberg, Laura
McLean & Kalliopi Tsipni-Kolaza, Achilleas Kentonis & Maria
Papacaharalambous, Paul Miller (aka DJ Spooky), Gregory Niemeyer,
Khaled Ramada, Oliver Ressler, Klaus Schafler, Patrizio Travagli,
Wooloo (Sixten Kai Nielsen and Martin Rosengaard), (Curators CPS –
Chamber of Public Secrets: Alfredo Cramerotti, Aida Eltorie, Khaled
Ramadan)
Malta[edit]
The Malta Pavilion returned to
the Venice Biennale in 2017.[78] They
also exhibited in 2000 and 1958. List of exhibitors in the Malta
Pavilion:
* 1958 —
Carmelo Mangion, Antoine Camilleri, Emvin Cremona, Frank Portelli,
Josef Kalleya
* 1999 —
Vince Briffa, Norbert Francis Attard, Ray Pitre (Curator: Adrian
Bartolo)
* 2017 —
Adrian Abela, John Paul Azzopardi, Aaron Bezzina, Pia
Borg, Gilbert Calleja, Austin Camilleri, Roxman Gatt, David Pisani,
Karine Rougier, Joe Sacco, Teresa Sciberras, Darren Tanti and Maurice
Tanti Burlo’ and artefacts from Heritage Malta’s National collection,
Ghaqda tal-Pawlini, private collections and various archives (Curators:
Raphael Vella and Bettina Hutschek)
Mexico[edit]
The Mexican Pavilion was
introduced for the first time in 1950 with the
participation of the Muralists: David Alfaro Siqueiros, Diego Rivera,
José Clemente Orozco and Rufino Tamayo. For this participation,
David
Alfaro Siqueiros was awarded the 1st prize to foreign artists. The
national participation was interrupted until 2007. The exhibitors that
have represented the pavilion are:
* 1950 –
David Alfaro Siqueiros, Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco,
Rufino Tamayo
* 2007 –
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer
* 2009 –
Teresa Margolles
* 2011 –
Melanie Smith
* 2013 –
Ariel Guzik
* 2015 –
Tania Candiani, Luis Felipe Ortega
* 2017 –
Carlos Amorales (Curator: Pablo León De La Barra)
Netherlands[edit]
In 1914, the Swedish Pavilion,
designed by Gustav Ferdninand Boberg,
was handed over to the Netherlands. In 1954 the Dutch pavilion was
demolished and reconstructed on the same site, designed by Gerrit
Thomas Rietveld in 1954.[32]
Since 1995, the Mondriaan
Foundation has been responsible for the Dutch
entry at the Biennale di Venezia, appointing a curator for each entry.
Dutch artists and curators of
previous editions:
* 1956 —
Constant, Bart van der Leck, Piet Mondriaan, André Volten
* 1964 —
Karel Appel, Lucebert, J. Mooy
* 1966 —
Constant Nieuwenhuys with paintings, sculptures, New Babylon objects,
watercolors and drawings
* 1968 —
Carel Visser
* 1982 —
Stanley Brouwn
* 1986 —
Reinier Lucassen
* 1988 —
Henk Visch
* 1990 —
Rob Scholte
* 1993 —
Niek Kemps
* 1995 —
Marlene Dumas, Maria Roosen, Marijke van Warmerdam (Curator: Chris
Dercon)
* 1997 —
Aernout Mik, Willem Oorebeek (Curators: Leontine Coelewij, Arno van
Roosmalen)
* 1999 —
Daan van Golden (Curator: Karel Schampers)
* 2001 —
Liza May Post (Curator: Jaap Guldemond)
* 2003 —
Carlos Amorales, Alicia Framis, Meschac Gaba, Jeanne van Heeswijk, Erik
van Lieshout (Curator: Rein Wolfs)
* 2005 —
Jeroen De Rijke / Willem de Rooij (Curator: Martijn van Nieuwenhuyzen)
* 2007 —
Aernout Mik (Curator Maria Hlavajova)
* 2009 —
Fiona Tan (Curator: Saskia Bos)
* 2011 —
Barbara Visser, Ernst van der Hoeven, Herman Verkerk,
Johannes Schwartz, Joke Robaard, Maureen Mooren, Paul Kuipers, Sanneke
van Hassel, Yannis Kyriakides (Curator: Guus Beumer)
* 2013 —
Mark Manders (Curator: Lorenzo Benedetti)
* 2015 —
Herman de Vries (Curators: Colin Huizing, Cees de Boer)
* 2017 –
Wendelien van Oldenborgh (Curator: Lucy Cotter)[79]
New Zealand[edit]
List of exhibitors in the New
Zealand Pavilion:
* 2001 —
Peter Robinson and Jacqueline Fraser (Curator: Gregory Burke)
* 2003 —
Michael Stevenson (Curators: Robert Leonard and Boris Kremer)
* 2005 — et
al. (Curator: Natasha Conland)
* 2007 —
Brett Graham and Frank Fu
* 2009 —
Judy Millar (Curator: Leonhard Emmerling) and Francis
Upritchard (Curators: Heather Galbraith and Francesco Manacorda)
* 2011 —
Michael Parekowhai
* 2013 —
Bill Culbert (Curator: Justin Paton)
* 2015 —
Simon Denny (Curator: Robert Leonard)
* 2017 —
Lisa Reihana (Curator: Rhana Devenport)
The Nordic Countries[edit]
Designed by Sverre Fehn, 1962
(small annex built by Fredrik Fogh, 1987).[32]
The cooperation between
Finland, Norway and Sweden in Venice was
initiated in 1962 after the completion of the Nordic Pavilion. Until
1984, the representation of each country was organized nationally.[80]
From 1986 to 2009 the pavilion was commissioned as a whole, with the
curatorial responsibility alternating between the collaborating
countries. From 2011 the cooperation has been temporarily discontinued.
In a trial period lasting from 2011 until 2015, the pavilion was used
for a national presentation: Sweden in 2011, Finland in 2013, and
Norway in 2015.[81]
List of exhibitors in the
Nordic Pavilion:[82]
* 1962 —
FINLAND: Ahti Lavonen, Kain Tapper, Esko Tirronen; NORWAY:
Rolf Nesch, Knut Rumohr; SWEDEN: Siri Derkert, Per Olof Ulltvedt
* 1964 —
FINLAND: Ina Colliander, Simo Hannula, Pentti Kaskipuro,
Laila Pullinen; NORWAY: Hannah Ryggen; SWEDEN: Torsten Andersson,
Martin Holmgren, Torsten Renqvist
* 1966 —
FINLAND: Heikki Häiväoja, Harry Kivijärvi, Sam Vanni;
NORWAY: Jakob Weidemann; SWEDEN: Öyvind Fahlström
* 1968 —
FINLAND: Mauno Hartman, Kimmo Kaivanto, Ahti Lavonen;
NORWAY: Gunnar S. Gundersen; SWEDEN: Sivert Lindblom, Arne Jones
* 1970 —
FINLAND: Juhani Linnovaara; NORWAY: Arnold Haukeland; SWEDEN: Did not
participate
* 1972 —
FINLAND: Harry Kivijärvi, Pentti Lumikangas; NORWAY: Arne Ekeland;
SWEDEN: Did not participate
* 1976 —
FINLAND: Mikko Jalavisto, Tapio Junno, Kimmo Kaivanto,
Ulla Rantanen; NORWAY: Boge Berg, Steinar Christensen/Kristian
Kvakland, Arvid Pettersen; SWEDEN: ARARAT (Alternative Research in
Architecture, Resources, Art and Technology)
* 1978 —
FINLAND: Olavi Lanu; NORWAY: Frans Widerberg; SWEDEN: Lars Englund
* 1980 —
FINLAND: Matti Kujasalo; NORWAY: Knut Rose; SWEDEN: Ola Billgren, Jan
Håfström
* 1982 —
FINLAND: Juhana Blomstedt; NORWAY: Synnøve Anker Aurdal; SWEDEN:
Ulrik Samuelson
* 1984 —
FINLAND: Kain Tapper, Carl-Erik Ström; NORWAY: Bendik Riis;
SWEDEN: Curt Asker
* 1986 —
"Techne": Bård Breivik (NO), Marianne Heske (NO), Olli
Lyytikäinen (FI), Kjell Ohlin (SE), Erik H. Olson (SE), Silja
Rantanen
(FI), Carl Fredrik Reuterswärd (SE), Osmo Valtonen (FI) (Curator:
Mats
B.)
* 1988 —
Per Inge Bjørlo (NO), Rolf Hanson (SE), Jukka Mäkelä
(FI) (Curator: Maaretta Jaukkuri, FI)
* 1990 —
"Cavén, Barclay, Håfström": Per Barclay (NO), Kari
Cavén (FI), Jan Håfström (SE) (Curator: Per
Hovdenakk, NO)
* 1993 —
Jussi Niva (FI), Truls Melin (SE), Bente Stokke (NO) (Curator: Lars
Nittve, SE)
* 1995 —
Eva Løfdahl (SE), Per Maning (NO), Nina Roos (FI) (Curator: Timo
Valjakka, FI)
* 1997 —
"Naturally Artificial": Henrik Håkansson (SE), Mark Dion
(US), Marianna Uutininen (FI), Mariko Mori (JP), Sven Påhlsson
(NO)
(Curator: Jon-Ove Steihaug, NO)
* 1999 —
"End of a Story": Annika von Hausswolff (SE), Knut Åsdam
(NO), Eija-Liisa Ahtila (FI). (Curator: John Peter Nilsson, SE)
* 2001 —
"The North is Protected": Leif Elggren (SE), Tommi
Grönlund/Petteri Nisunen (FI), Carl Michael von Hausswolff (SE),
Anders
Tomren (NO) (Curators: Grönlund/Nisunen, FI)
* 2003 —
"Devil-May-Care": Karin Mamma Andersson (SE), Kristina
Bræin (NO), Liisa Luonila (FI) (Curators: Anne Karin Jortveit and
Andrea Kroksnes, NO)
* 2005 —
"Sharing Space Dividing Time": Miriam Bäckström and
Carsten Höller (SE/DE), Matias Faldbakken (NO) (Curator: Åsa
Nacking,
SE)
* 2007 —
"Welfare — Fare Well": Adel Abidin (IQ/FI), Jacob Dahlgren
(SE), Lars Ramberg (NO), Toril Goksøyr & Camilla Martens
(NO),
Sirous Namazi (SE), Maaria Wirkkala FI (Curator: René Block, DE)
* 2009 —
"The Collectors" (in collaboration with the Danish
Pavilion): Elmgreen and Dragset, Klara Lidén (SE), Wolfgang
Tillmans
(DE) and others (Curators: Elmgreen & Dragset, DK/NO)
* 2011 —
SWEDEN: Fia Backström, Andreas Eriksson (Curator: Magnus af
Petersens)
* 2013 —
FINLAND: Terike Haapoja (Curators: Mika Elo, Marko Karo, Harri Laakso)
* 2015 —
NORWAY: Camille Norment (Curator: Katya García-Antón)
* 2017 –
Curator: Mats Stjernstedt
Northern Ireland[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Northern Ireland Pavilion:
* 2005 —
"The Nature of Things", group show with Patrick Bloomer,
Patrick Keogh, Ian Charlesworth, Factotum, Séamus Harahan,
Michael
Hogg, Sandra Johnston, Mary McIntyre, Katrina Moorhead, William
McKeown, Darren Murray, Aisling O'Beirn, Peter Richards and Alistair
Wilson (curator: Hugh Mulholland)
* 2007 —
Willie Doherty (Curator: Hugh Mulholland)
* 2009 —
Susan MacWilliam (Curator: Karen Downey)
Poland[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Polish Pavilion:
* 1970 —
Jozef Szajna, " Reminiscences"
* 1980 —
Magdalena Abakanowicz, "Embryology"
* 1993 —
Mirosław Bałka, "Soap Corridor"
* 1995 —
Roman Opalka
* 1999 —
Katarzyna Kozyra, "Men’s Bathhouse"
* 2003 —
Stanisław Dróżdż, "ALEA IACTA EST" project (Curator: Paweł
Sosnowski)
* 2005 —
Artur Żmijewski, " Repetition"
* 2007 —
Monika Sosnowska, "1:1" (Curator: Sebastian Cichocki)
* 2009 —
Krzysztof Wodiczko, " Guests " (Curator: Bozena Czubak)
* 2011 —
Yael Bartana, "And Europe will be stunned" (Curators: Sebastian
Cichocki, Galit Eilat)
* 2013 —
Konrad Smolenski, "Everything was forever until it was no
more" audio installation (Curators: Agnieszka Pindera, Daniel Muzyczuk)
* 2015 —
Joanna Malinowska and C. T. Jasper, "Halka/Haiti 18°48’05″N
72°23’01″W"(Curator: Magdalena Moskalewicz)
* 2017 —
Sharon Lockhart, "Little Review" (Curator: Barbara Piwowarska)[84]
Russia[edit]
Designed by Alexey Shchusev in
1914. In 1922, 1938—1954, and 1978—1980
pavilion was closed. In both 1926 and 1936 Russian pavilion hosted
exhibition of Italian Futurism curated by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti.
List of exhibitors in the
Russian Pavilion:
* 1914 —
Group exhibition of 68 artists, including Leon Bakst,
Isaak Brodsky, Mikhail Vrubel, Mstislav Dobuzhinsky, Boris Kustodiev
* 1920 —
Group exhibition of 20 artists, including Aleksandr
Arсhipenko, Marianne von Werefkin, Natalia Goncharova, Boris Grigoriev,
Mikhail Larionov, Dmitry Stelletsky, Alexej von Jawlensky
* 1924 —
Group exhibition of 97 artists, including Nathan Altman,
Lev Bruni, Igor Grabar, Boris Kustodiev, Aristarkh Lentulov, Kazimir
Malevich, Mikhail Matyushin, Ilya Mashkov, Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin, Lyubov
Popova, Nadezhda Udaltsova, Robert Falk, Vassily Chekrygin, Sergei
Chekhonin, David Shterenberg, Alexandra Ekster
* 1928 —
Group exhibition of 72 artists, including Nathan Altman,
Abram Arkhipov, Aleksandr Deineka, Petr Kontchalovsky, Elizaveta
Kruglikova, Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin, Yuriy Pimenov, Robert Falk
* 1930 —
Group exhibition of 47 artists, including Aleksandr
Deineka, Aleksandr Labas, Aristarkh Lentulov, Yuriy Pimenov, David
Schterenberg
* 1932 —
Group exhibition of 49 artists, including Isaak Brodsky,
Aleksandr Deineka, Petr Konchalovsky, Aleksandr Labas, Kuzma
Petrov-Vodkin, Yuriy Pimenov, David Schterenberg
* 1934 —
Group exhibition of 23 artists, including Isaak Brodsky, Aleksandr
Deineka, Vera Mukhina, Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin
* 1956 —
Group exhibition of 72 artists, including Igor Grabar,
Aleksandr Deineka, Boris Ioganson, Petr Konchalovsky, Pavel Korin, Ilya
Mashkov, Vera Mukhina, Georgy Nissky, Yuriy Pimenov, Nadezhda
Udaltsova, Semen Chuikov, Kukryniksy
* 1958 —
Group exhibition of 17 artists, including Evgeny
Vuchetich, Sergej Gerasimov, Kukryniksy, Georgy Nissky, Yuriy Pimenov,
Arkady Plastov
* 1960 —
Group exhibition of 22 artists, including Aleksandr
Deineka, Kukryniksy, Dmitry Moor, Vera Mukhina, Andrey Mylnikov, Georgy
Nissky (Commissioner: Irina Antonova)
* 1962 —
Group exhibition of 12 artists, including Mikhail
Anikushin, Sergey Konenkov, Geliy Korzhev, Viktor Popkov, Tair Salakhov
(Commissioner: Larissa Salmina)
* 1964 —
Group exhibition of 42 artists, including Aleksandr
Deineka, Pavel Korin, Evsey Moiseenko, Vladimir Stozharov, Evgeny
Vuchetich
* 1966 —
Group exhibition of 26 artists, including Vladimir Stozharov, Dmitry
Zhilinsky, Misha Brusilovsky
* 1968 —
Group exhibition of 15 artists, including Dmitry Bisti, Arkady Plastov,
Yuri Vasnetsov
* 1970 —
Nikolay Andreev, Aleksandr Deineka
* 1972 —
Group exhibition of 31 artists, including Evsey Moiseenko, Kuzma
Petrov-Vodkin, Nikolay Tomsky
* 1976 —
Group exhibition of 45 artists, including Georgy Nissky, Yuriy Pimenov,
Tair Salakhov, Vladimir Stozharov
* 1977 —
Group exhibition of 99 artists in frames of Biennale of
Dissident, including Erik Bulatov, Ilya Kabakov, Andrey Monastyrsky,
Oskar Rabin, Oleg Vasiliev, Anatoly Zverev
* 1982 —
Group exhibition of 32 artists, including Tatiana Nazarenko, Viktor
Popkov, Dmitry Zhilinsky
* 1984 —
Group exhibition of 6 artists, including Nikolay Akimov, Aleksandr
Tyshler
* 1986 —
Group exhibition of 23 artists, including Dmitry Bisti, Vladimir
Favorsky
* 1988 —
Aristarkh Lentulov
* 1990 —
Group exhibition of 7 artists, including Evgeny Mitta, Robert
Rauschenberg, Aidan Salakhova
* 1993 —
Ilya Kabakov
* 1995 —
Evgeny Ass, Dmitry Gutov, Vadim Fishkin (Commissioner: Victor Misiano)
* 1997 —
Maksim Kantor (Commissioner: Konstantin Bokhorov; curator: Yury Nikich)
* 1999 —
Sergey Bugaev (Afrika), Vitaly Komar & Aleksandr
Melamid (Commissioner: Konstantin Bokhorov; curators: Olesya Turkina,
Joseph Bakshtein)
* 2001 —
Leonid Sokov, Olga Chernyshova, Sergey Shutov (Commissioner: Leonid
Bazhanov; curator: Ekaterina Degot)
* 2003 —
Sergey Bratkov, Aleksandr Vinogradov & Vladimir
Dubossarsky, Konstantin Zvezdochetov, Valery Koshlyakov (Commissioner:
Evgeny Zyablov; curator: Victor Misiano)
* 2005 —
Provmyza group, Program 'Escape' (Commissioner: Evgeny Zyablov;
curators: Olga Lopukhova, Lyubov Saprykina)
* 2007 —
AES+F, Andrey Bartenev, Georgy Frangulian, Arseny
Mescheryarov, Julia Milner, Alexandr Ponomarev (Commissioner: Vassily
Tsereteli; curator: Olga Sviblova)
* 2009 —
Alexei Kallima, Andrei Molodkine, Gosha Ostretsov, Anatoly
Zhuravlev, Sergei Shekhovtsov, Irina Korina, Pavel Peppershtein
(Commissioner: Vassily Tsereteli; curator: Olga Sviblova)
* 2011 —
Andrey Monastyrsky and "Collective Actions" group (Elena
Elagina, Sabina Hensgen, Igor Makarevich, Nikolai Pantikov, Sergei
Romashko and others) (Commissioner: Stella Kesaeva; curator: Boris
Groys)
* 2013 —
Vadim Zakharov (Commissioner: Stella Kesaeva; curator: Udo Kittelmann)
* 2015 —
Irina Nakhova (Commissioner: Stella Kesaeva; curator: Margarita
Tupitsyn)
* 2017 —
Grisha Bruskin, Sasha Pirogova (ru), Georgy Kuznetsov, Andrei Blokhin
(Curator: Semyon Mikhailovsky)[89]
Scotland[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Scottish Pavilion:
* 2003 —
Claire Barclay, Jim Lambie, Simon Starling
* 2005 —
Alex Pollard, Joanne Tatham & Tom O'Sullivan, Cathy Wilkes
* 2007 —
Charles Avery (artist), Henry Coombes, Louise Hopkins, Rosalind
Nashashibi, Lucy Skaer, Tony Swain,
* 2009 —
Martin Boyce
* 2011 —
Karla Black
* 2013 —
Corin Sworn, Duncan Campbell (artist), Hayley Tompkins
* 2015 —
Graham Fagen
* 2017 —
Rachel Maclean[91]
* 2019 —
Charlotte Prodger[92]
Serbia[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Serbian Pavilion:
* 2012
—Marija Mikovic, Marija Strajnic, Olga Lazarevic, Janko
Tadic, Nebojsa Stevanovic, Milos Zivkovic, Aleksandar Ristovic, Nikola
Andonov, Milan Dragic and Marko Marovic [93]
* 2015 —
Ivan Grubanov (Curator: Lidija Merenik)[94]
Seychelles[edit]
The Seychelles Pavilion was
first introduced in 2015, by the proposal
of artist Nitin Shroff,[95] featuring "A Clockwork Sunset".[96] The
Pavilion was commissioned by the Seychelles Art Projects Foundation and
curated by Sarah J. McDonald and Victor Schaub Wong.
List of exhibitors in the
Seychelles Pavilion:
* 2015 –
George Camille, Leon Wilma Lois Radegonde
The 2017 Seychelles Pavilion
featured the work of Group Sez, a collective comprising the following
artists:
* 2017 -
Alyssa Adams, Tristan Adams, George Camille, Christine
Chetty-Payet, Zoe Chong Seng, Daniel Dodin, Charle Dodo, Allen Ernesta,
Christine Harter, Nigel Henri, Alcide Libanotis, Marc Luc, Egbert
Marday, Colbert Nourrice, Leon Radegonde, Danny Sopha.
The Pavilion was commissioned
by the government of the Republic of
Seychelles (commissioner Benjamine Rose) and curated by Martin Kennedy
under the exhibition title 'Slowly, Quietly'.
Singapore[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Singapore Pavilion:
* 2001 —
Chen KeZhan, Salleh Japar, Matthew Ngui, Suzanne Victor
* 2003 —
Heman Chong, Francis Ng, Tan Swie Hian
* 2005 —
Lim Tzay Chuen (Curator: Eugene Tan)[97]
* 2007 —
Tang Da Wu, Vincent Leow, Jason Lim and Zulkifle Mahmod (Curator: Lindy
Poh)
* 2009 —
Ming Wong (Curator: Tang Fu Kuen)
* 2011 — Ho
Tzu Nyen (Curator: June Yap)
* 2015 —
Charles Lim (Curator: Shabbir Hussain Mustafa)
* 2017 —
Zai Kuning (Curator: June Yap)
Slovenia[edit]
List of exhibitors in the
Slovenian Pavilion:
* 2007 —
Tobias Putrih
* 2009 —
Miha Štrukelj
* 2013 —
Jasmina Cibic[98]
* 2015 —
Jaša Mrevlje Pollak (Curators: Michele Drascek, Aurora Fonda)[99]
* 2017 —
Nika Autor (Curator: Andreja Hribernik)[99]
South Africa[edit]
* 1993 –
Jackson Hlungwane, Sandra Kriel, Tommy Matswai (Curator: Christopher
Till)
* 1995 –
Randolph Hartzenberg, Brett Murray (Curator: Malcolm Payne)
* 2011 –
Mary Sibande, Siemon Allen, Lyndi Sales (Curator: Thembinkosi Goniwe)
* 2013 –
Nelisiwe Xaba, Zanele Muholi, Wim Botha, Joanne Bloch,
David Koloane, Gerhard Marx, Maja Marx, Philip Miller, Cameron Platter,
John Muafangejo, Johannes Phokela, Andrew Putter, Alfred Martin
Duggan-Cronin, Penny Siopis, Kay Hassan, Sue Williamson, Donna Kukama,
Athi-Patra Ruga, James Webb, Kemang wa Lehulere, Sam Nhlengethwa
(Curator: Brenton Maart)
* 2015 –
Willem Boshoff, Haroon Gunn-Salie, Angus Gibson, Mark
Lewis, Gerald Machona, Mohau Modisakeng, Nandipha Mntambo, Brett
Murray, Serge Alain Nitegeka, Jo Ractliffe, Robin Rhode, Warrick Sony,
Diane Victor, Jeremy Wafer (Curators: Christopher Till and Jeremy Rose)
* 2017 —
Candice Breitz, Mohau Modisakeng (Curator: Lucy MacGarry)[100]
South Korea[edit]
Designed by Seok Chul Kim and
Franco Mancuso, 1995.[32]
South Korea has participated
in the Venice Biennale since 1995.[101]
List of exhibitors in the
South Korean Pavilion:
* 1995 —
Yoon Hyong Keun, Kwak Hoon, Kim In Kyum, Jheon Soocheon (Commissioner:
Il Lee)
* 1997 —
Hyungwoo Lee, Ik-joong Kang (Curator: Oh Kwang Soo)
* 1999 —
Lee Bul, Noh Sang-Kyoon (Curator: Misook Song)
* 2001 —
Michael Joo, Do-Ho Suh (Commissioner: Kyung-mee Park)
* 2003 —
Whang In Kie, Bahc Yiso, Chung Seoyoung (Commissioner: Kim Hong-Hee)
* 2007 —
Hyungkoo Lee (Commissioner: Soyeon Ahn)
* 2009 —
Haegue Yang (Commissioner: Eungie Joo)
* 2011 —
Lee Yong-baek (Commissioner: Yun Chea-gab)
* 2013 —
Kimsooja (Curator: Seungduk Kim)
* 2015 —
Moon Kyungwon, Jeon Joonho (Curator: Sook-Kyung Lee)
* 2017 —
Cody Choi, Lee Wan (Curator: Lee Daehyung)
Spain[edit]
Designed by Javier de Luque,
1922 (façade restored by Joaquin Vaquero Palacios, 1952).[32]
List of exhibitors in the
Spanish Pavilion:
* 1954 —
Miguel Ortiz Berrocal
* 1958 —
Eduardo Chillida
* 1970 —
Gaston Orellana
* 1984 —
Antoni Clavé
* 1988 —
Susana Solano
* 1993 —
Antoni Tàpies
* 1999 —
Manolo Valdés, Esther Ferrer (Curator: David Pérez)
* 2001 —
Ana Laura Aláez, Javier Pérez (Curator: Estrella de Diego)
* 2003 —
Santiago Sierra (Curator: Rosa Martínez)
* 2005 —
Antoni Muntadas (Curator: Bartomeu Marí)
* 2007 —
Manuel Vilariño, José Luis Guerín, "Los
Torreznos", Rubén Ramos (Curator: Alberto Ruiz de Samaniego)
* 2009 —
Miquel Barceló (Curator: Enrique Juncosa)
* 2011 —
Dora García (Curator: Katya García-Antón)
* 2013 —
Lara Almarcegui (Curator: Octavio Zaya)
* 2015 —
Francesc Ruiz, Pepo Salazar, Cabello/Carceller (Curator: Martí
Manen)
* 2017 —
Jordi Colomer (Curator: Manuel Segade)[102]
Switzerland[edit]
Pavillon designed by Bruno
Giacometti, 1952.[32] Between 1990 and 2009,
Switzerland also used the San Stae church as exhibition venue. From
1932 until 1952 Switzerland had another pavilion, designed by Brenno
Del Giudice on the island Sant'Elena.
As of 2012, Pro Helvetia has
assumed responsibility for the Swiss contributions to the Venice
Biennale.
List of exhibitors in the
Swiss Pavilion:
* 1920 —
Group exhibition
* 1926 —
Group exhibition
* 1932 —
Paul Bodmer, Numa Donzé, Augusto Giacometti, Karl Otto
Hügin, Reinhold Kündig, Martin Lauterburg, Ernst
Morgenthaler, Alfred
Heinrich Pellegrini, Karl Geiser, Hermann Haller, Hermann Hubacher,
Johann Jakob Probst, René Auberjonois, Maurice Barraud, Hans
Berger,
Abraham Hermanjat, Albert Carl Angst
* 1934 —
Cuno Amiet, Hermann Haller
* 1936 —
Aldo Patocchi, Emilio Maria Beretta, Max Uehlinger
* 1938 —
Victor Surbek, Hermann Hubacher, Hans Berger
* 1940 —
Louis René Moilliet, Johann Jakob Probst, Alexandre Blanchet
* 1942 —
Karl Walser, Otto Charles Bänninger, Max Hunziker
* 1948 —
Fritz Pauli, Franz Fischer, René Auberjonois, Albert Schnyder
* 1950 —
Alfred Heinrich Pellegrini, Ernst Suter
* 1952 —
Hans Fischer, Max Gubler, Johann Jakob Probst
* 1954 —
Cuno Amiet, Carl Burckhardt, Paul Speck, Marcel Poncet
* 1956 —
Hans Aeschbacher, Walter Bodmer, Johannes Burla, Eugen
Häfelfinger, Walter Linck, Bernhard Luginbühl, Robert
Müller, Erwin
Rehmann, Sophie Taeuber-Arp, Louis Weber, André Gigon,
Hansjörg
Gisiger, René Monney, Antoine Poncet, Léon
Prébandier, André Ramseyer,
Serge Brignoni
* 1958 —
Max Bill, Richard Paul Lohse, Camille Graeser, Theodor
Bally, Wolf Barth, Walter Bodmer, Theo Eble, Fritz Glarner, Leo Leuppi,
Louis René Moilliet, Wilfrid Moser, Max Rudolf von Mühlenen
* 1960 —
Otto Tschumi, Varlin, Robert Müller
* 1962 —
Albert Schilling, Paul Speck, Louis René Moilliet
* 1964 —
Zoltán Kemény, Bernhard Luginbühl
* 1966 —
Johannes Itten, Walter Linck
* 1968 —
Fritz Glarner, Hans Aeschbacher
* 1970 —
Peter Stämpfli, Walter Vögeli, Jean-Edouard Augsburger
* 1972 —
Richard Paul Lohse, Willy Weber
* 1976 —
Max Altorfer, Claude Loewer
* 1978 —
Raffael Benazzi, Roland Hotz, Jean Lecoultre
* 1980 —
Peter Steiner, Wilfrid Moser, Oscar Wiggli
* 1982 —
Dieter Roth
* 1984 —
Miriam Cahn
* 1986 —
John Armleder, Aldo Walker
* 1988 —
Markus Raetz
* 1990 —
Olivier Mosset
* 1993 —
Christoph Rütimann
* 1995 —
Peter Fischli & David Weiss
* 1997 —
Urs Frei, Helmut Federle
* 1999 —
Roman Signer
* 2001 —
Urs Luthi, Norbert Möslang, Andy Guhl
* 2003 —
Emmanuelle Antille, Gerda Steiner, Jörg Lenzlinger
* 2005 —
Pipilotti Rist, Ingrid Wildi, Gianni Motti, Shahryar Nashat, Marco
Poloni (curator: Stefan Banz)
* 2007 —
Yves Netzhammer, Ugo Rondinone, Urs Fischer, Christine Streuli
(curators: Urs Staub, Andreas Münch)
* 2009 —
Silvia Bächli, Fabrice Gygi (Commissioner: Andreas Münch,
Curator: Urs Staub)
* 2011 —
Thomas Hirschhorn/"Chewing the Scenery" (Curator: Andrea Thal)
* 2013 —
Valentin Carron (Curator: Giovanni Carmine)
* 2015 —
Pamela Rosenkranz (Curator: Susanne Pfeffer)
* 2017 —
Carol Bove, Teresa Hubbard / Alexander Birchler (Curator: Philipp
Kaiser)[103][104]
* 2019 —
Pauline Boudry / Renate Lorenz (Curator: Charlotte Laubard)
Turkey[edit]
In 2013, Turkey signed a
20-year lease for a national pavilion at the
Venice Biennale. The state-funded Istanbul Foundation for Culture and
Arts is the co-ordinator of the Turkish pavilion.[105]
List of exhibitors in the
Turkish Pavilion:
* 1990 —
Kemal Önsoy, Mithat Şen (Curator: Beral Madra)
* 1993 —
Erdağ Aksel, Serhat Kiraz, Jȧrg Geismar, Adem Yilmaz (Curator: Beral
Madra)
* 2001 —
Murat Morova, Butch Morris, Ahmet Öktem, Sermin Sherif,
Xurban.net (Güven Icirlioğlu & Hakan Topal) (Curator: Beral
Madra)
* 2003 —
Nuri Bilge Ceylan, Ergin Çavuşoğlu, Gül Ilgaz, Neriman
Polat, Nazif Topçuoğlu (Curator: Beral Madra)
* 2005 —
Hussein Chalayan (Curator: Beral Madra)
* 2007 —
Hüseyin Alptekin (Curator: Vasif Kortun)
* 2009 —
Banu Cennetoğlu, Ahmet Ögüt (Curator: Basak Senova)
* 2011 —
Ayşe Erkmen (Curator: Fulya Erdemci)
* 2013 —
Ali Kazma (Curator: Emre Baykal)
* 2015 —
Sarkis (Curator: Defne Ayas)[106]
* 2017 —
Cevdet Erek[107]
Ukraine[edit]
The PinchukArtCentre sponsored
Ukraine's pavilions in 2007, 2009 and 2015.[27]
List of exhibitors in the
Ukrainian Pavilion:
* 2005 —
Mykola Babak «Your Children, Ukraine» (Curator: Oleksiy
Tytarenko)
* 2011 —
Oksana Mas «Post-vs-Proto-Renaissance» (Curator: Oleksiy
Rogotchenko)
* 2013 —
Ridnyi Mykola, Zinkovskyi Hamlet, Kadyrova Zhanna (Curators: Soloviov
Oleksandr, Burlaka Victoria)
* 2015 —
Yevgenia Belorusets, Nikita Kadan, Zhanna Kadyrova, Mykola
Ridnyi & Serhiy Zhadan, Artem Volokitin, Anna Zvyagintseva and Open
Group (Curator: Björn Geldhof)
* 2017 —
Boris Mikhailov (Curator: Peter Doroshenko)
United Arab Emirates[edit]
The United Arab Emirates'
Venice pavilion first opened in 2009, but 2015 was the first time an
Emirati has served as curator.
List of exhibitors in the UAE
Pavilion:
* 2009 —
Lamya Gargash (Commissioner: Dr Lamees Hamdan; Curator: Tirdad Zolghadr)
* 2011 —
Abdullah Al Saadi, Sheikha Lateefa bint Maktoum, Reem Al Ghaith
(Curator: Vasif Kortun)
* 2013 —
Mohammed Kazem (Commissioner: Dr. Lamees Hamdan; Curator: Reem Fadda)
* 2015 —
Hassan Sharif, Mohammed Kazem, Abdullah Al Saadi, Ahmed Al
Ansari, Moosa Al Halyan, Mohammed Al Qassab, Abdul Qader Al Rais,
Mohammed Abdullah Bulhiah, Salem Jawhar, Dr. Najat Makki, Abdulraheem
Salim, Obaid Suroor, Dr. Mohamed Yousif, and Abdulrahman Zainal
(Curator: Hoor Al Qasimi)[110]
United States[edit]
The United States Pavilion at
the Venice Biennale was constructed in
1930[111] by the Grand Central Art Galleries, a nonprofit artists'
cooperative established in 1922 by Walter Leighton Clark together with
John Singer Sargent, Edmund Greacen, and others.[112] As stated in the
Galleries' 1934 catalog, the organization's goal was to "give a broader
field to American art; to exhibit in a larger way to a more numerous
audience, not in New York alone but throughout the country, thus
displaying to the world the inherent value which our art undoubtedly
possesses."[113]
In 1930 Walter Leighton Clark
and the Grand Central Art Galleries
spearheaded the creation of the U.S. Pavilion at the Venice
Biennale.[114][115] The pavilion's architects were William Adams
Delano, who also designed the Grand Central Art Galleries, and Chester
Holmes Aldrich. The purchase of the land, design, and construction was
paid for by the galleries and personally supervised by Clark. As he
wrote in the 1934 catalog:
"
The pavilion, owned and
operated by the galleries, opened on May 4,
1930. Approximately 90 paintings and 12 sculptures were selected by
Clark for the opening exhibition. Artists featured included Max Boehm,
Hector Caser, Lillian Westcott Hale, Edward Hopper, Abraham Poole,
Julius Rolshoven, Joseph Pollet, Eugene Savage, Elmer Shofeld, Ofelia
Keelan, and African-American artist Henry Tanner. U.S. Ambassador John
W. Garrett opened the show together with the Duke of Bergamo.[111]
The Grand Central Art
Galleries operated the U.S. Pavilion until 1954,
when it was sold to the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA). Throughout the
1950s and 1960s shows were organized by MOMA, Art Institute of Chicago,
and Baltimore Museum of Art. The Modern withdrew from the Biennale in
1964, and the United States Information Agency ran the Pavilion until
it was sold to the Guggenheim Foundation courtesy of funds provided by
the Peggy Guggenheim Collection.[116]
Since 1986 the Peggy
Guggenheim Collection has worked with the United States
Exhibitors[edit]
Partial list of exhibitors at
the United States Pavilion:[119]
* 1930 —
Edward Hopper, Julius Rolshoven, Eugene Savage, Henry Tanner.[111]
* 1950
(26th) — Arshile Gorky, Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock
* 1952
(27th) - Alexander Calder, Stuart Davis, Edward Hopper, and Yasuo
Kuniyoshi
* 1954
(28th) — Willem de Kooning, Ben Shahn
* 1960
(30th) — Philip Guston, Hans Hofmann, Franz Kline, Theodore Roszak
* 1962
(31st) — Jan Müller, Louise Nevelson
* 1964
(32nd) — John Chamberlain, Jim Dine, Jasper Johns, Morris
Louis, Kenneth Noland, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg, Frank
Stella
* 1966
(33rd) — Helen Frankenthaler, Ellsworth Kelly, Roy Lichtenstein, Jules
Olitski
* 1968
(34th) — Leonard Baskin, Edwin Dickinson, Richard
Diebenkorn, Red Grooms, James McGarrell, Reuben Nakian, Fairfield
Porter, Byron Burford
* 1970
(35th) — Survey of American Prints and Printmaking (Commissioner: Lois
A. Bingham; curator: Henry T. Hopkins)
* 1972
(36th) — Diane Arbus, Ronald Davis, Richard Estes, Sam Gilliam, Jim
Nutt, Keith Sonnier(Commissioner: Walter Hopps)
* 1976
(37th) — Richard Artschwager, Charles Garabedian, Robert
Irwin, Donald Judd, Agnes Martin, Robert Motherwell, Ed Ruscha, Robert
Ryman, Joel Shapiro, Richard Tuttle, Andy Warhol, H.C. Westermann
(Commissioner: Thomas M. Messer; curators: Hugh M. Davies, Sam Hunter,
Rosalind Krauss, Marcia Tucker)
* 1978
(38th) — Harry Callahan, Richard Diebenkorn (Commissioner:
Robert T. Buck, Jr.; curators: Peter Bunnell, Linda Cathcart)
* 1980
(39th) — Vito Acconci, Christo, Laurie Anderson and others
(Commissioner: Janet Kardon)
* 1982
(40th) — Jess, Robert Smithson (posthumous), Richard
Pousette-Dart (Commissioner: Thomas W. Leavitt; curator: Robert Hobbs)
* 1984
(41st) — Eric Fischl, Charles Garabedian, Melissa Miller and
others (Commissioner: Marcia Tucker; curators: Lynn Gumpert, Ned Rifkin)
* 1986
(42nd) — Isamu Noguchi (Commissioner: Henry Geldzahler)[120]
* 1988
(43rd) — Jasper Johns (Curator: Mark Rosenthal)[121]
* 1990
(44th) — Jenny Holzer — Mother and Child (Commissioner: Michael Auping)
* 1993
(45th) — Louise Bourgeois (Curator: Charlotta Kotik)[122]
* 1995
(46th) — Bill Viola — Buried Secrets (Curator: Marilyn A. Zeitlin)[123]
* 1997
(47th) — Robert Colescott (Commissioner: Mimi Roberts)[124]
* 1999
(48th) — Ann Hamilton (Curators: Katy Kline, Helaine Posner),[125] Yoko
Ono, David Bowes[126]
* 2001
(49th) — Robert Gober (Curators: Olga M. Viso, James Rondeau)
* 2003
(50th) — Fred Wilson (Commissioner and curator: Kathleen
Goncharov).[127]
* 2005
(51st) — Ed Ruscha (Commissioner: Linda Norden; curator: Donna De Salvo)
* 2007
(52nd) — Félix González-Torres (posthumous) (Curator:
Nancy Spector)
* 2009
(53rd) — Bruce Nauman (Curators: Carlos Basualdo, Michael R.
Taylor)[128]
* 2011
(54th) — Allora & Calzadilla (Commissioner: Lisa Freiman)
* 2013
(55th) — Sarah Sze (Curators: Holly Block, Carey Lovelace)
* 2015
(56th) — Joan Jonas (Commissioner: Paul C. Ha, Curators: Paul C. Ha,
Ute Meta Bauer)[129]
* 2017
(57th) — Mark Bradford (Curators: Christopher Bedford, Katy Siegel)[130]
Uruguay[edit]
Ex-warehouse of the Biennale,
1958, ceded to the government of Uruguay, 1960.[32]
List of exhibitors in the
Uruguayan Pavilion:
* 1954 —
José Cuneo, Severino Pose
* 1956 —
Joaquín Torres García
* 1960 —
Zoma Baitler, Washington Barcala, Norberto Berdia, José
Cuneo, José Echave, Adolfo Halty, Augusto Torres, Vicente
Martìn, Julio
Verdier (Commissioner: Jorge Pàez Vilaró)
* 1962 —
Germán Cabrera, Juan Ventayol
* 1964 —
Jorge Damiani, José Gamarra, Nelson Ramos, Jorge Páez
Vilaró
* 1968 —
Antonio Frasconi (Commissioner: Angel Kalenberg)
* 1970 —
Taller de Montevideo (Armando Bergallo, Ernesto Vila, Héctor
Vilche) (Commissioner: Angel Kalenberg)
* 1972 —
Luis A. Solari (Commissioner: Angel Kalenberg)
* 1986 —
Ernesto Aroztegui, Clever Lara (Commissioner: Angel Kalenberg)
* 1988 —
Luis Camnitzer (Commissioner: Angel Kalenberg)
* 1990 —
Gonzalo Fonseca (Commissioner: Angel Kalenberg)
* 1993 —
Águeda Dicancro
* 1995 —
Ignacio Iturria (Commissioner: Angel Kalenberg)
* 1997 —
Nelson Ramos
* 1999 —
Ricardo Pascale
* 2001 —
Rimer Cardillo (Commissioner: Cléver Lara)
* 2003 —
Pablo Atchugarry (Curator: Luciano Caramel)
* 2005 —
Lacy Duarte (Commissioners: Alicia Haber, Olga Larnaudie)
* 2007 —
Ernesto Vila (Commissioner: Enrique Aguerre)
* 2009 —
Raquel Bessio, Juan Burgos, Pablo Uribe (Commissioners: Patricia
Bentancur, Alfredo Torres)
* 2011 —
Alejandro Cesarco, Magela Ferrero (Curator: Clio Bugel)
* 2013 —
Wifredo Díaz Valdéz (Curators: Carlos Capelán,
Verónica Cordeiro)
* 2015 —
Marco Maggi (Curator: Patricia Bentancur)
* 2017 –
Mario Sagradini (Curator: Gabriel Peluffo Linari)
Venezuela[edit]
Designed by Carlo Scarpa,
1956.[32]
List of exhibitors in the
Venezuelan Pavilion:
* 1964 —
Jesús Rafael Soto
* 1970 —
Carlos Cruz-Diez, Jesús Rafael Soto
* 1978 —
Luisa Richter
* 1980 —
Regulo Pérez
* 1988 —
Jacobo Borges
* 1990 —
Julio Pacheco Rivas
* 1995 —
Meyer Vaisman
* 2005 —
Santiago Pol (Commissioner: Vivian Rivas Gingerich)
* 2007 —
Antonio Briceño, Vincent & Feria (Commissioner: Zuleiva
Vivas)
* 2009 —
Claudio Perna, Antonieta Sosa, Alejandro Otero
* 2011 —
Francisco Bassim, Clemencia Labin, Yoshi (Curator: Luis Hurtado)
* 2013 —
Colectivo de Artistas Urbanos Venezolanos (Curator: Juan Calzadilla)
* 2015 —
Argelia Bravo, Félix Molina (Flix) (Curator: Oscar Sotillo
Meneses)
Wales[edit]
The Wales pavilion was
introduced in 2003.[131][132]
List of exhibitors in the
Wales Pavilion:
* 2003 —
Bethan Huws[133] & Cerith Wyn Evans[134] & Simon Pope [5]
* 2005 —
Peter Finnemore, Laura Ford & Paul Granjon[135][136][137]
* 2007 —
Richard Deacon, Merlin James, & Heather and Ivan Morison[138]
* 2009 —
John Cale[139]
* 2011 —
Tim Davies[140]
* 2013 —
Bedwyr Williams[141]
* 2015 —
Helen Sear (Curator: Ffotogallery)
* 2017 —
James Richards[142]
Zimbabwe[edit]
* 2011 –
Tapfuma Gutsa, Misheck Masamvu, Berry Bickle, Calvin
Dondo. (Commissioner: Doreen Sibanda; curator: Raphael Chikukwa)
* 2013 –
Portia Zvavahera, Michele Mathison, Rashid Jogee, Voti
Thebe, Virginia Chihota. (Commissioner: Doreen Sibanda; curator:
Raphael Chikukwa)
* 2015 –
Chikonzero Chazunguza, Masimba Hwati, Gareth Nyandoro. (Commissioner:
Doreen Sibanda; curator: Raphael Chikukwa)
* 2017 –
Charles Bhebe, Admire Kamudzengerere, Sylvester Mubayi,
Dana Whabira. (Commissioner: Doreen Sibanda; curator: Raphael Chikukwa)
Awards[edit]
The Venice Biennale has
awarded prizes to the artists participating at
the Exhibition since the first edition back in 1895. Grand Prizes were
established in 1938 and ran until 1968 when they were abolished due to
the protest movement. Prizes were taken up again in 1986. The
selections are made by the Board of la Biennale di Venezia, following
the proposal of the curator of the International Exhibition.
Also, the Biennale names the
five members of its international jury,
which is charged with awarding prizes to the national pavilions.[144]
1938 to 1968[edit]
This list is incomplete; you
can help by expanding it.
* 1948 :
o Grand Prize for Painting: Georges Braque[145]
o Grand Prize for Sculpture: Henry Moore
* 1950 :
o Grand Prize for Painting: Henri Matisse[146]
o Grand Prize for Sculpture: Ossip Zadkine
* 1952 :
o Grand Prize for Painting: Raoul Dufy
o Special Prize for Sculpture: Alexander Calder
* 1954 :
o Grand Prize for Painting: Max Ernst[147]
o Grand Prize for Sculpture: Jean Arp
* 1956 :
o Grand Prize for Painting: Jacques Villon (France)
o Special Prize for Sculpture: Lynn Chadwick (Great Britain)
o International Grand Prize for Drawing: Aldemir Martins (Brazil)
* 1958:
o International Grand Prize for Painting: Mark Tobey (United States)
o International Grand Prize for Sculpture: Eduardo Chillida (Spain)
o National Grand Prize for Painting: Giulio Turcato, Osvaldo Licini
o National Grand Prize for Sculpture: Umberto Mastroianni
* 1960 :
o Grand prize for painting Jean Fautrier (France), Hans Hartung
(France), Emilio Vedova (Italy)
o City of Venice prize for an Italian artist: Pietro Consagra
* 1962
o Grand prize for painting: Alfred Manessier
o Grand prize for sculpture: Alberto Giacometti
* 1964:
o Foreign artist: Robert Rauschenberg (United States)
* 1966 :
o Foreign artist: Julio Le Parc
o Italian artist: Lucio Fontana, Alberto Viani
* 1968 :
o Grand prize for painting: Bridget Riley
o Grand prize for sculpture: Nicolas Schöffer
o Italian artist: Gianni Colombo, Pino Pascali
Since 1986[edit]
* 1986 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Frank Auerbach, Sigmar Polke
(Germany)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Daniel Buren (France)
* 1988 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Jasper Johns (USA)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Italy
* 1990 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Giovanni Anselmo (Italy), Bernd
and Hilla Becher (Germany)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Jenny Holzer (USA)
* 1993 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Richard Hamilton (United
Kingdom), Antoni Tàpies (Spain), Robert Wilson (USA)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Hans Haacke, Nam June Paik (Germany)
* 1995:
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international exhibition: Gary
Hill (USA), R. B. Kitaj (USA)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Akram El Magdoub, Hamdi Attia, Medhat
Shafik, Khaled Shokry (Egypt)
* 1997 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Emilio Vedova (Italy), Agnes
Martin (USA)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international
exhibition: Marina Abramović (USA) and Gerhard Richter (Germany)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Fabrice Hybert (France)
* 1999 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Louise Bourgeois (France),
Bruce Nauman (USA)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international
exhibition: Doug Aitken (USA), Cai Guo-Qiang (China), and Shirin Neshat
(Iran)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Monica Bonvicini, Bruna Esposito,
Luisa Lambri, Paola Pivi, Grazia Toderi (Italy)
* 2001 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Richard Serra (USA), Cy Twombly
(USA)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international
exhibition: Janet Cardiff & George Bures Miller, Marisa Merz
(Italy), and Pierre Huyghe (France)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Gregor Schneider (Germany)
* 2003 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Michelangelo Pistoletto
(Italy), Carol Rama (Italy)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international exhibition:
Peter Fischli and David Weiss (Switzerland)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Young Artist: Oliver Payne and Nick Relph
(United Kingdom)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Su-Mei Tse (Luxemburg)
* 2005 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Barbara Kruger (USA)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international exhibition:
Thomas Schütte (Germany)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Young Artist: Regina José Galindo
(Guatemala)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Annette Messager (France)
* 2007 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Malick Sidibé (Mali)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international exhibition:
León Ferrari (Argentina)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Young Artist: Emily Jacir (USA)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Andreas Fogarasi (Hungary)
* 2009 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Yoko Ono (Japan), John
Baldessari (USA)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international exhibition:
Tobias Rehberger (Germany)
o Leone d'Argento for the Best Young Artist: Nathalie Djurberg (Sweden)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Bruce Nauman (USA)
* 2011 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Franz West (Austria), Elaine
Sturtevant (USA)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international exhibition:
Christian Marclay (USA)
o Leone d'Argento for the Best Young Artist: Haroon Mirza (United
Kingdom)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Christoph Schlingensief, curated by
Susanne Gaensheimer (Germany)
* 2013 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Maria Lassnig (Austria), Marisa
Merz (Italy)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international exhibition: Tino
Sehgal (United Kingdom/Germany)
o Leone d'Argento for the Best Young Artist: Camille Henrot (France)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Stefano Rabolli Pansera and Paula
Nascimento (Angola)
* 2015 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: El Anatsui (Ghana)
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international exhibition:
Adrian Piper (USA)
o Leone d'Argento for the Best Young Artist: Im Heung-soon (South Korea)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Haig Aivazian, Nigol
Bezjian, Anna Boghiguian, Hera Büyüktaş, Silvina Der
Meguerditchian,
Ayreen Anastas and Rene Gabri, Mekhitar Garabedian, Aikaterini
Gegisian, Yervant Gianikian and Ricci Lucchi, Aram Jibilian, Nina
Katchadourian, Melik Ohanian, Mikayel Ohanjanyan, Rosana Palazyan,
Sarkis, Hrair Sarkissian, curated by Adelina Cüberyan von
Fürstenberg
(Armenia)
* 2017 :
o Leone d'Oro for Lifetime Achievement: Carolee Schneemann (United
States)[148]
o Leone d'Oro for the Best Artist of the international exhibition:
Franz Erhard Walther (Germany)
o Leone d'Argento for the Best Young Artist: Hassan Khan (Egypt)
o Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion: Anne Imhof (Germany)
o
other Biennale :(Biennials ) :
Venice Biennial , Documenta Havana Biennial,Istanbul Biennial (
Istanbuli),Biennale de Lyon ,Dak'Art Berlin Biennial,Mercosul Visual
Arts Biennial ,Bienal do Mercosul Porto Alegre.,Berlin Biennial
,Echigo-Tsumari Triennial .Yokohama Triennial Aichi Triennale,manifesta
,Copenhagen Biennale,Aichi Triennale .Yokohama Triennial,Echigo-Tsumari
Triennial.Sharjah Biennial ,Biennale of Sydney, Liverpool , São
Paulo
Biennial ; Athens Biennale , Bienal do Mercosul ,Göteborg
International
Biennial for Contemporary Art ,DOCUMENTA KASSEL ATHENS
* Dakar