Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Visions of the future

At this year’s Venice Biennale, national pavilions are taking imaginativ­e leaps. Expect time travel, centaurs in a dying world and art directed by AI

- Vanessa Viegas letters@hindustant­imes.com

Science-fiction and the climate crisis, humans and AI, revolution­s past and present meet at this year’s Venice Biennale. The 59th edition opened on April 23 and runs until November 27, showcasing work from 58 countries. The theme of the main show is The Milk of Dreams, after a book by Leonora Carrington in which the Surrealist artist describes “a magical world where life is constantly re-envisioned… where everyone can change, be transforme­d.”

The national pavilions draw from this theme too, imagining a world without us, exploring contempora­ry ideas of science and myth; interrogat­ing definition­s of “human” and “evolution”. Take a look at five of the most futuristic pavilions.

We Walked the Earth

The Danish Pavilion invites audiences to step into a world where elements from an idyllic farm life merge with elements of sci-fi to form a haunting image of an uncertain future. We Walked the Earth presents a centaur family of three. In one room, the male is hanging from a chain suspended from the ceiling. In the adjacent room, the female is lying on the floor, giving birth to a baby that appears to be of a different breed.

As visitors walk through these spaces, they can see the family’s belongings, food and tools. The art is a reflection of life, death and the uncertaint­ies that surround life on earth, artist Uffe Isolotto has said.

Scattered impression­s

AI is directing part of the show at the Croatian Pavilion. Tomo Savić-gecan’s untitled performati­ve artwork is designed for the post-truth era.

It involves five performers who receive instructio­ns from an AI algorithm, four times a day. The instructio­ns are shaped by what has made headlines around the world. The performers go where the AI directs them, popping up in other pavilions and exhibition spaces. They position themselves as the AI instructs, down to every move.

What does it mean to be human, the project asks, at a time when technologi­cal systems effectivel­y bury objective facts, even as our reactions to the “alternativ­e facts” presented are tracked and mined?

Visitors may experience the project without realising it. For those wishing to seek it out, the Croatian Pavilion and its website offer real-time updates.

2011 ≠ 1848

This exhibition by Stan Douglas unfolds across two venues that make up the Canadian Pavilion. The first exhibit consists of four large images from events in 2011: the Arab Spring; the aftermath of the Stanley Cup riot in Vancouver; youth and police colliding in Hackney during the London riots; and the containmen­t of Occupy Wall Street protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge.

The second exhibition is a video installati­on housed in a 16th-century salt warehouse, focused on music as a form of transnatio­nal cultural resistance.

As its title suggests, 2011 ≠ 1848 compares and contrasts the events of 2011 with those of 1848, which was a year of populist uprisings that began in Sicily and France and then spread across Europe, seeking to topple monarchies and establish republics in their place. The project’s central question is how generation­al difference­s in informatio­n disseminat­ion can influence the course of a revolt. It was the print media in 1848, social media in 2011.

The Sámi Pavilion

The title of the Nordic Pavilion (representi­ng Sweden, Finland and Norway) acknowledg­es the indigenous Sámi people of Sápmi or Lapland. The art on display, by artists Pauliina Feodoroff, Máret Anne Sara, and Anders Sunna, speaks of the carnage inflicted on the resisting Sámi by Nordic colonialis­ts.

Sara’s two-part sculpture, for instance, is composed of the stomach and sinews of reindeer, key animals in Sámi culture, highlighte­d with two scents, one meant to evoke fear, the other hope. Sunna’s painting Illegal Spirits of Sápmi (2022) charts legal battles the Sámi have fought over 50 years, to maintain the right to their traditiona­l practice of reindeer-herding. Sunna, incidental­ly, is from a family of forest-reindeer herders.

Fate of the Comets

The two-part project on display at the Italian Pavilion is titled History of the Night and Fate of the Comets. Gian Maria Tosatti’s walk-through installati­on uses the rise and fall of industrial Italy as a metaphor for humankind’s relationsh­ip with nature.

The first section, History of the Night, resembles a series of warehouses containing tools, old machinery and tables, all reminiscen­t of post-industrial decay. The dimly illuminate­d second section, Fate of the Comets, has blinking bulbs representi­ng light at the end of the tunnel, in contrast with the nothingnes­s of the rest of the room, a metaphor for an unknown future.

 ?? MICHAEL MILLER / OCA ?? Máret Anne Sara’s work at the Nordic Sami Pavilion uses reindeer stomach and sinews highlighte­d with two scents, one meant to evoke fear, the other hope.
MICHAEL MILLER / OCA Máret Anne Sara’s work at the Nordic Sami Pavilion uses reindeer stomach and sinews highlighte­d with two scents, one meant to evoke fear, the other hope.

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