Visitors to the Venice Biennale encountered a series of visually striking performances and installations addressing conflict, coexistence and the future of humanity.
At the Austrian Pavilion, a naked performer acted as a human bell clapper in Florentina Holzinger’s “Seaworld Venice.”
In the Japanese Pavilion, visitors carried and cared for lifelike baby dolls as part of Ei Arakawa-Nash’s work focused on caregiving.
Meanwhile, Moldova’s pavilion featured drone-powered flying carpets suspended inside a church space, transforming symbols of war into imagined tools of escape and peace.
Crowds also explored surreal installations inside the Nordic Pavilion examining coexistence and environmental anxiety.

