TRACES – PANAMÁ’S DEBUT AT THE VENICE BIENNALE
The Panama Pavilion at the 2024 Venice Art Biennale arises as a profound reflection on the enduring traces that migration leaves on individuals and their surroundings. Entitled Traces: On the Body and on the Land, this exhibition echoes the current migration crisis with a particular focus on the Panamanian context, interpreted by four artists through drawings, paintings, collages, glass sculptures, and installations.

For the first time ever, there is a Panama Pavilion at the prestigious Venice Art Biennale. This unique opportunity features four outstanding Panamanian artists who epitomize the best of the country’s contemporary art: Brooke Alfaro (1949), Isabel de Obaldía (1957), Cisco Merel (1981) and Giana De Dier (1980).
The artwork Mirages of the Gap by artist Cisco Merel provides a metaphorical exploration of the journey migrants make through the thick and roadless rainforest known as the Darien Gap. Based on two large abstract structures in which paint and pigment have been replaced by layers of mud, the rough textures of the multicolored soil that the artist gathered in situ symbolize the arduousness of the earthy trails that human beings have carved through the jungle.
The massive migration of Afro-Caribbean men and women in the early twentieth century for the construction of the Panama Canal brought about a profound transformation in Panama and its demographic makeup. The migratory waves not only etched an enduring mark on the nation’s history and but also exerted a significant influence on its cultural diversity. For those who dared to venture and relocate, the migrating body became a repository of chronicles and memories, while the individuals themselves grappled with the challenge of deciding what to carry along and what to leave behind. The central question evolves into a poignant dilemma: how to reconcile the desire to preserve one’s identity with the pressing need to assimilate for survival? Through collage, Giana De Dier meticulously assembles archival material, family documents, and oral histories, weaving them into new narratives that illuminate the migrant experience.
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Pavilion of PANAMA Traces: on the body and the land. 60th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia. Photo: Andrea Avezzù. Courtesy: La Biennale di Venezia
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Pavilion of PANAMA Traces: on the body and the land. 60th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia. Photo: Andrea Avezzù. Courtesy: La Biennale di Venezia
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Pavilion of PANAMA Traces: on the body and the land. 60th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia. Photo: Andrea Avezzù. Courtesy: La Biennale di Venezia
Inside the installation entitled Selva, visitors find themselves surrounded by a series of monumental drawings. With loose and expressive strokes, Isabel De Obaldía offers an immersion into the Darien Gap jungle. Roots surrounded by ferns, palms intertwined with vines, rivers, and waterfalls, confront the observer directly. Glass sculptures display dramatic colors and shapes with carved and richly textured surfaces that generate luminous effects.
The oceans and jungles in Brooke Alfaro’s paintings do not depict sublime seascapes nor peaceful rainforests. Rather, they are the scenarios of great human dramas where vulnerable individuals, often in large groups, in various types of boats or surrounded by wilderness, confront an aggressive and dangerous natural world. Although the compositions stem from his imagination, the pervasive sense of tragedy reminds us of the rafts full of migrants from the Mediterranean or in the Darien that we see in the news today. Alfaro began painting these ominous scenes in the nineties, long before the news about migration through Panama reported the current human crisis of epic proportions.
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Pavilion of PANAMA Traces: on the body and the land. 60th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia. Photo: Andrea Avezzù. Courtesy: La Biennale di Venezia
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Pavilion of PANAMA Traces: on the body and the land. 60th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia. Photo: Andrea Avezzù. Courtesy: La Biennale di Venezia
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Pavilion of PANAMA Traces: on the body and the land. 60th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia. Photo: Andrea Avezzù. Courtesy: La Biennale di Venezia
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Pavilion of PANAMA Traces: on the body and the land. 60th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia. Photo: Andrea Avezzù. Courtesy: La Biennale di Venezia
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Pavilion of PANAMA Traces: on the body and the land. 60th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia. Photo: Andrea Avezzù. Courtesy: La Biennale di Venezia
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The title of the 60th International Art Exhibition of the Biennale di Venezia, "Stranieri Ovunque", refers, in part, to foreignness as the inherent nature of the subject. Understood in this way, the national pavilions of Spain, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom exhibit artistic proposals that develop the theme of colonialism and reconstruct histories, remedy ties between identity and territory, and explore the dramatic plurality of this potent historical axis. That said, this review does not intend to unveil or unpack the most unjust transcendental truths, but merely to reflect on the musings of others.

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The Ukranian Pavilion addresses the othering effect of war, two years into the Russian Invasion, in Net Making at the 60th Venice Biennale.
UKRAINE AND THE EFECT OF WAR AT VENICE BIENNALE
The Ukranian Pavilion addresses the othering effect of war, two years into the Russian Invasion, in Net Making at the 60th Venice Biennale.

The exhibition of the 60th edition of the Venice Biennale - Stranieri Ovunque (Foregneirs Everywhere) - curated by Brazilian Adriano Pedrosa, presents 331 artists, significantly more than the usual number. More than a third of those artists come from Latin America.
FOREIGNERS EVERYWHERE: LATIN AMERICA TAKES OVER THE VENICE BIENNALE
The exhibition of the 60th edition of the Venice Biennale - Stranieri Ovunque (Foregneirs Everywhere) - curated by Brazilian Adriano Pedrosa, presents 331 artists, significantly more than the usual number. More than a third of those artists come from Latin America.

Xirómero / Dryland is an interdisciplinary collective work conceived by Thanasis Deligiannis and Yannis Michalopoulos, created along with the artists Elia Kalogianni, Yorgos Kyvernitis, Kostas Chaikalis and Fotis Sagonas for the Greek Pavilion at the 60th Venice Biennale. The project is curated by Panos Giannikopoulos.
WATER AS A PRISM: GREEK PAVILION AT THE VENICE BIENNALE
Xirómero / Dryland is an interdisciplinary collective work conceived by Thanasis Deligiannis and Yannis Michalopoulos, created along with the artists Elia Kalogianni, Yorgos Kyvernitis, Kostas Chaikalis and Fotis Sagonas for the Greek Pavilion at the 60th Venice Biennale. The project is curated by Panos Giannikopoulos.

For the 60th International Venice Biennale, Nemes designed the project as an immersive, painting-based Gesamtkunstwerk that expands the genre of painting and extends it to other media. Project curated by Róna Kopeczky.
TECHNO ZEN BY MÁRTON NEMEZ: THE HUNGARIAN PAVILION IN VENICE BIENNALE
For the 60th International Venice Biennale, Nemes designed the project as an immersive, painting-based Gesamtkunstwerk that expands the genre of painting and extends it to other media. Project curated by Róna Kopeczky.

The Mongolian Pavilion at the Venice Biennale presents artist Ochirbold Ayurzana with the exhibition Discovering the Present from the Future. The proposal is curated by Oyuntuya Oyunjargal, the Cultural Envoy of Mongolia to Germany, and co-curated by Gregor Jansen, director of the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf in Germany.
OCHIRBOLD AYURZANA AT THE MONGOLIAN PAVILION
The Mongolian Pavilion at the Venice Biennale presents artist Ochirbold Ayurzana with the exhibition Discovering the Present from the Future. The proposal is curated by Oyuntuya Oyunjargal, the Cultural Envoy of Mongolia to Germany, and co-curated by Gregor Jansen, director of the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf in Germany.

The title of the 60th International Art Exhibition of the Biennale di Venezia, "Stranieri Ovunque", refers, in part, to foreignness as the inherent nature of the subject. Understood in this way, the national pavilions of Spain, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom exhibit artistic proposals that develop the theme of colonialism and reconstruct histories, remedy ties between identity and territory, and explore the dramatic plurality of this potent historical axis. That said, this review does not intend to unveil or unpack the most unjust transcendental truths, but merely to reflect on the musings of others.
THREE PAVILIONS AT BIENNALE 2024 THAT EXPLORE THEIR OWN COLONIAL PASTS
The title of the 60th International Art Exhibition of the Biennale di Venezia, "Stranieri Ovunque", refers, in part, to foreignness as the inherent nature of the subject. Understood in this way, the national pavilions of Spain, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom exhibit artistic proposals that develop the theme of colonialism and reconstruct histories, remedy ties between identity and territory, and explore the dramatic plurality of this potent historical axis. That said, this review does not intend to unveil or unpack the most unjust transcendental truths, but merely to reflect on the musings of others.

Engaging with the theme of Adriano Pedrosa’s main exhibition for the Venice Biennale, Stranieri Ovunque—Foreigners Everywhere, Vlatka Horvat’s project for the Croatian Pavilion by the Means at Hand, curated by Antonia Majaca, exists as an accumulative exhibition of artworks by a wide-ranging group of international artists living as “foreigners,” reflecting on questions and urgencies of the diasporic experience.
CROATIAN PAVILION AT THE VENICE BIENNALE
Engaging with the theme of Adriano Pedrosa’s main exhibition for the Venice Biennale, Stranieri Ovunque—Foreigners Everywhere, Vlatka Horvat’s project for the Croatian Pavilion by the Means at Hand, curated by Antonia Majaca, exists as an accumulative exhibition of artworks by a wide-ranging group of international artists living as “foreigners,” reflecting on questions and urgencies of the diasporic experience.

It takes an Island to Feel this Good is Darja Bajagić’s exhibition for the Montenegro pavilion at Venice Biennale 2024. Curated by Ana Simona Zelenović and organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art of Montenegro at the initiative of commissioner Vladislav Šćepanović, the exhibition will present a critical consideration of the culture of collective memory and the relationship to shared historical heritage.
ICONOGRAPHY, MEMORY AND HISTORY - THE MONTENEGRO PAVILION
It takes an Island to Feel this Good is Darja Bajagić’s exhibition for the Montenegro pavilion at Venice Biennale 2024. Curated by Ana Simona Zelenović and organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art of Montenegro at the initiative of commissioner Vladislav Šćepanović, the exhibition will present a critical consideration of the culture of collective memory and the relationship to shared historical heritage.