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    Malta Biennale names 72 artists for inaugural edition of “Insulaphilia” – ARTnews.com

    EbrahimBy EbrahimDecember 5, 2023No Comments6 Mins Read
    A view of the cityscape is visible in the capital Valletta, Malta.

    Getty Images

    Organizers of a new art biennial which will take place on the southern Mediterranean island of Malta, have named 72 artists from around 30 countries who will participate in its inaugural edition, which is scheduled to take place next year from March 11 to May 31, with Exhibitions planned at twelve historic sites in Maltese towns.

    Established names like Cecilia Vicuña, Tania BrugueraLaure Prouvost and Pedro Reyes will be among the participants.

    The 72 artists will participate in the main exhibition of the Biennale, curated by Sofia Baldi Pighi, an independent Italian curator, temporarily based in Malta. The exhibition focuses on issues relating to the Mediterranean more broadly, as detailed in its curatorial statement entitled “Insulaphilia”. The concept refers to an obsession with islands and, said Baldi Pighi ARTnews, encourages artists to reflect on Malta’s unique position, at the crossroads of the main surrounding regions and their history. She organized the main exhibition into four sections, each emerging from the themes exposed in “Insulaphilia”: regional issues, facets of decolonization, the political dimensions of the Mediterranean and the various forms of resistance.

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    Like many major art events in their first editions, the Malta Biennale faced challenges relating to its location and timing. The organization of the first edition, which lasted two years, takes place as geopolitics become increasingly bleak amid an ongoing war in the Middle East. Baldi Pighi said the Biennale seeks to be a “safe place” for artists uprooted from conflict-torn regions to interrogate sensitive topics. This philosophy extends not only to the artists participating in the exhibition’s main thematic exhibition, but also to the eleven national pavilions surrounding it, representing Austria, China, Franco-Germany, Italy, Malta , PalestinePoland, Serbia, Spain, Türkiye and Ukraine.

    Two artists, one Palestinian and the other Ukrainian, will present solo exhibitions to represent their respective national pavilions (their names have not yet been released, although Baldi Pighi confirmed that the artists are currently in Poland and Malta, respectively). to host a pavilion recognizing Palestine in June, a decision that Pighi said preceded the Venice Biennale’s rejection of a Palestinian affiliated museum’s proposal to hold a collateral event in association with the 2024 edition of the biennale . “It was very important to have Palestine among us,” the curator said.

    In an email to ARTnews, Mario Cutajar, president of Heritage Malta, a government agency responsible for culture and co-organizer of the biennial, highlighted the representation of these pavilions. “The biennial would not be relevant if it did not discuss our present,” Cutajar said, adding that the search for a solution “must itself be an international endeavor.”

    Baldi Pighi is explicit in his intention not to curate an exhibition that replicates other biennials or to import exhibitions that seem detached from the historic sites that will serve as a backdrop and home to the artworks. Throughout the exhibition, particularly in the main exhibition, the focus will be on artworks that address current issues and are able to navigate a conservative climate in Malta, where the migrant crisis and strong Restrictions on abortion rights have become major concerns for the island’s young residents. . She highlighted the “soft power of culture involved in a biennial project” as a factor to take into account in organizing the event. Malta, she added, has only a few contemporary art spaces.

    The biennial will also welcome artist collectives active in Europe. Among them is the Italian collective Post Disaster, a group that uses the urban rooftops of Taranto, southern Italy, as performative spaces to stage discussions about industry-induced crises. For the biennial, members of the group will mount a new site-specific installation at Fort Saint Elme, a 16th-century military site in the capital Valletta. This work will respond to the militarized architecture of Malta.

    Some of the works that will be exhibited by prominent figures, including Vicuña, Bruguera, Prouvost and Reyes, are already known in the United States and Europe. A work by Bruguera from 2018 will be recreated on the facade of the 16th-century Armory building in Birgu, a town in the southeast of Malta located a short walk from the other biennial venues. Reyes, who is Mexican, will exhibit works associated with his 2022 project “Artists Against the Bomb,” which combines calls by artists against nuclear threats, on the neighboring island of Gozo. Elsewhere, El Salvador-born, New York-based artist Guadalupe Maravilla will exhibit her works inside Valletta’s 17th-century Ta-Pilar Church.

    Pighi highlighted the strategic inclusion of leading international voices like Bruguera, saying his practice, rooted in migration research, provides a protective layer to the exhibition’s discourse and mitigates the risk of censorship. In turn, she sees Bruguera and the recognition of some of his peers as a guarantee for younger or lesser-known Maltese artists participating in the biennial.

    Below is the full list of artists at the Malta Biennale 2023.

    Alan Abd El Monim, Italian/Egyptian

    Camilla Alberti, Italian

    Anna Anderegg, Switzerland

    Teresa Antignani, Italian

    Jean-Marie Appriou, French

    Rosa Barba, Italian

    Simon Benjamin, Jamaican

    Laura Besançon, Maltese

    Aaron Bezzina, Maltese

    Rebecca Bonaci, Maltese

    Josian Bonello, Maltese

    Isabelle Borg, Maltese

    Claude Borg, Maria Borg, Sumaya Ben Saad, Rebecca Mifsud, Maltese

    Amy Bravo, American (United States)

    Tania Bruguera, Cuban

    Siwani Buhlebezwe, South African

    Teresa Busutiltil, Australian

    Anna Calleja, Maltese

    Austin Camilleri, Maltese

    Edson Chagas, Angolan/Portuguese

    Mel Chin, Chinese-American

    Leo Chircop, Maltese

    Dolphin Club, Maltese, French

    Joseph Cochran II, American (United States)

    Andrea Conte (Andreco), Italian

    Gaia De Megni, Italian

    Mònica de Miranda, Portuguese/Angolan

    Adama Delphine Fawundu, American (USA)

    Zehra Doğan, Kurdish

    Dolphin Club, Maltese, French

    Madeleine Fenwick, British

    Andrea Ferrero, Peruvian

    Martina, Romeo Roxman Georgina, Gatt, Maltese

    Nina Gerada, Maltese

    Sara, Eleonora Goldschmied, Chiari, Italian

    Bettina Hutschek, German

    Anne Immelé, French

    Daniel Jablonski, Brazilian

    Barbara Kapusta, Austrian

    Dew Kim, South Korea

    Konstantina Krikzoni, Greek

    Wioletta Kulewska Akyel, Polish

    Sara Leghissa, Italian

    Ji Yeon Yaloo, PiaLim, Borg, Korean, Maltese-Australian

    LuzLizarazo, Colombian

    Edson Luli, Albanian

    Basim Magdy, Swiss/Egyptian

    Guadalupe Maravilla, Salvadoran

    Jermay Michael Gabriel, Italian

    Karyn Olivier, American

    Zazzaro Otto, Italian

    Adrian Paci, Albanian

    Post Disaster (Collective), Grazia Mappa, Gabriele Leo, Gabriella Mastrangelo, Peppe Frisino, Italian

    Djana Protić, Croatian

    Laure Prouvost, French

    Keit, Florinda, Neils Bonnici, Camilleri, Plotard (Prune Our Skin), Maltese, Maltese, French

    Agnès Questionmark, Italian

    Anna Raimondo, Italian

    Pedro Reyes, Mexican

    Cemile Sahin, Kurd

    Paul Sammut, British

    Zineb Sedira, Franco-Algerian

    Ana, Giuditta Shametaj, Vendrame, Italian/Albanian, Italian

    Anthony Spagnol, Maltese

    Tom Van Malderen, Belgian

    Fabrizio Vatieri, Italian

    Raphael Vella, Maltese

    Ebrahim
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