KAPWANI KIWANGA Trinket
Canada Pavilion at the 60th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia April 20 – November 24, 2024
The National Gallery of Canada (NGC), commissioner of Canada’s participation in the 60th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, unveiled today the exhibition Kapwani Kiwanga: Trinket.
Kapwani Kiwanga has transformed the Canada Pavilion by way of a site-specific sculptural installation. She invites visitors into an immersive environment through an ambitious intervention on the building’s interior and exterior. Viewed from its facade, the building becomes a large-scale tableau: three-dimensional space collapses into a two-dimensional plane where distinctions between inside and outside dissolve through transparency, layering and transgressing of the building’s original boundaries. Kiwanga’s work is anything but static: as one moves through the coil-like architecture, it unfolds, multiplying the visitors’ perspectives.
The principal material employed in the installation consists of conterie, also known as seed beads. Conterie were dispersed from Murano in the Venetian archipelago and incorporated into various material cultures throughout the world. Historically employed as both currency and items of exchange, these tiny glass units are used by Kiwanga to deftly construct the monumental out of the minute. The same seed bead could be considered as an archive or a witness to past transactions that indelibly transformed the socioeconomic landscape of the 16th century and beyond.
Kiwanga is concerned with how diverse forms of power are manifested, how the histories they suppress are often overlooked, and the effect they have on everyday life. Her multidisciplinary works function as experiential archives that offer temporary ruptures in established conventions, allowing audiences to both experience and imagine alternative ways of relating and being. This installation addresses the often-destructive history of commerce, yet the work pushes further and asks one to consider how the trade of these beads for varied materials shaped the current world.
Other materials are integrated in nearly raw states within the exhibition space. Kiwanga selected these specific elements after researching transoceanic trade involving conterie. Rising from the floor onto the walls and spilling out into the courtyard, these materials emerge to encounter the beads. The meeting of these distinct materials with the beads formalizes a place of exchange, asking one to reflect on questions of inherent value, aesthetics, and the complexity of global economic relations.
Kapwani Kiwanga: Trinket is curated by Gaëtane Verna, Executive Director, Wexner Center for the Arts.
Kapwani Kiwanga: Trinket is commissioned by theNational Gallery of Canada and presented in partnership with the Canada Council for the Arts and the National Gallery of Canada Foundation. The Canadian representation at the Biennale Arte 2024 is made possible through the Canadian Artists in Venice Endowment at the National Gallery of Canada Foundation and with the generous financial support of the Canada Council for the Arts, Hatch, Power Corporation of Canada, Wexner Center for the Arts and numerous private contributions.
Jean-François Bélisle, Director and CEO of the National Gallery of Canada, commissioner of the Canada Pavilion in Venice, has said:
“We are honored to present Kapwani Kiwanga’s work at the 60th International Art Exhibition – LaBiennale diVenezia. For nearly 130 years, the Biennale has endured—through countless transformations in our societies and in the museum world—as a vital forum where the world comes together and talks through art. It is through the Biennale that we recognize Canada’s place internationally, as perceived through the work of this country’s leading artists. Kiwanga is a relevant and provocative voice who places both a critical and aesthetic lens on manifestations of power now, as well as throughout time. Her project engages, in unprecedented ways, the direct site of the Pavilion as well as histories of the Biennale’s host city and beyond.”
Michelle Chawla, Director and CEO, Canada Council for the Arts, has said:
“I am proud that the Canada Council for the Arts is supporting Kapwani Kiwanga’s immersive exhibition at the 60th International Art Exhibition – LaBiennale di Venezia. In using beads to reference historical forms of trade and currency, the exhibition becomes a place for exchange and reflection on the complexity and challenges of global commerce and economics."
Gaëtane Verna, Curator, has said:
“Working alongside artist Kapwani Kiwanga in the context of the Biennale Arte 2024 is a chance of a lifetime. Kiwanga is a multidisciplinary artist whose methods, forms, and materials are ever-changing. Her practice is based upon extensive research on what might at first seem like a set of simple questions concerning histories, but they are deftly employed to examine how our societies have been built through social and cultural architecture, the imposition of laws, commerce, and other forms of exchange. For Kiwanga, materials are traces of human encounters that lead to the creation of new works, new forms that will intersect with the Canada Pavilion to create a complex installation where colour, light, sculpture, and architecture will engage visitors through a unique choreographed experience.”
SAVE THE DATE: An international symposium on 13–14 June 2024 in Venice will convene scholars and researchers to delve into material culture, commerce and cultural transformation. The program will offer a comprehensive examination of the various lines of inquiry within Kiwanga's ambitious projectTrinket
#CanadaPavilion #KapwaniKiwanga #BiennaleArte2024
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Exhibition credits
Kapwani Kiwanga: Trinket
60th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia April 20 – November 24, 2024
Commissioner: National Gallery of Canada Partners: Canada Council for the Arts and National Gallery of Canada Foundation
Curator: Gaëtane Verna
Artist Selection Committee Co-Chairs: Jonathan Shaughnessy and Michelle LaVallee
Canada Pavilion Patron
Special thanks to Reesa Greenberg whose generous financial support funded the 2018 restoration of the Canada Pavilion in Venice and continues to maintain it.
Canadian Artists in Venice Endowment Patrons
$2 Million +
The Michael and Sonja Koerner Charitable Foundation; Donald R. Sobey Family
$1 Million
The Jack Weinbaum Family Foundation
$500,000
The Michelle Koerner Family Foundation; Jackie Flanagan; Private family foundation
$250,000
Hon. Bill Morneau & Nancy McCain; Rosamond Ivey
$100,000
Robin & Malcolm Anthony; The Freybe Family; DH Gales Family Foundation of Toronto; Nadir & Shabin Mohamed; Stonecroft Foundation for the Arts
Visiting the exhibition
Canada Pavilion, Giardini della Biennale, Sestiere Castello 30122 Venezia (Vaporetto: Giardini)
During vernissage week, opening hours are 10a.m. – 7p.m.
Apr 20 – Sep 30: Tue-Sun, 11am-7pm
Oct 1 – Nov 24: Tue-Sun, 10am-6pm
Closed on Mondays (except April 22, June 17, July 22, September 2 and 30, November 18)
About Kapwani Kiwanga
Kapwani Kiwanga (b. Hamilton, Canada) is Canadian and French, she lives and works in Paris. In 2022, Kiwanga received the Zurich Art Prize (CH). She was also the winner of the Marcel Duchamp Prize (FR) in 2020, Frieze Artist Award (USA) in 2018 and the annual Sobey Art Award (CA) in 2018. Solo exhibitions include Copenhagen Contemporary (DN); Serralves Foundation, Porto (PT); Bozar, Brussels (BE); Remai Modern, Saskatoon (CA); Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg (DE); Capc, Bordeaux (FR); MOCA, Toronto (CA); Museum Haus Konstruktiv, Zurich (CH); New Museum, New York (USA); Moody Center for the Arts, Austin (USA); Haus der Kunst, Munich (DE); Kunsthaus Pasquart, Biel/Bienne (CH); MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge (USA); Albertinum museum, Dresden (DE); Esker Foundation, Calgary (CA); Power Plant, Toronto (CA); Logan Center for the Arts, Chicago (USA); South London Gallery, London (UK); and Jeu de Paume, Paris (FR) among others. She is represented by Galerie Poggi, Paris; Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, Cape Town and London; and Galerie Tanja Wagner, Berlin.
Kiwanga’s work traces the pervasive impact of power asymmetries by placing historic narratives in dialogue with contemporary realities, the archive, and tomorrow’s possibilities. Her work is research-driven, instigated by marginalized or forgotten histories, and articulated across a range of materials and mediums including sculpture, installation, photography, video, and performance. Kiwanga turns systems of power back on themselves, in art and in parsing broader histories. In this manner Kiwanga has developed an aesthetic vocabulary that she described as “exit strategies,” works that invite one to see things from multiple perspectives so as to look differently at existing structures and find new ways to navigate the future.
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