Venice and Biennale 'shaken': 'The turmoil on the international scene has entered the exhibition'
One of your browser extensions seems to be blocking the video player from loading. To watch this content, you may need to disable it on this site.
Try again
Issued on: 07/05/2026 - 10:09
07:19 min Share From the showMark Owen is pleased to welcome Angelo Amante, Reuters correspondent in Rome. Russia has returned to the 2026 edition of the Venice Biennale for the first time since the full scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Their presence has triggered protests from activists, artists, and political dissidents who argue that culture itself has become an extension of state power and warfare. We see this collision between art and international conflict with unusual clarity.
Through the voices of Femen's Inna Shevchenko, Pussy Riot's Nadya Tolokonnikova, and Reuters correspondent Angelo Amante, the discussion moves beyond symbolic protest to interrogate a larger question: can cultural institutions remain neutral during war?
The rhetoric employed by the activists is deliberately visceral. Shevchenko declares that “the only culture in Vladimir Putin’s Russia is blood,” while Tolokonnikova accuses Western institutions of “drinking vodka and champagne in their pavilion, soaked in the blood of Ukrainian children.” These statements are not merely condemnations of the Kremlin. They reflect a broader analysis of soft power as a strategic weapon, where museums, exhibitions, language, and artistic prestige become instruments in the struggle for legitimacy and influence.
Amante adds another layer of complexity. Rather than presenting the Biennale simply as a site of protest, he frames it as a microcosm of global political fracture. The controversies surrounding both Russia and Israel, the resignation of the Biennale jury, and debates over reputational damage versus publicity reveal how deeply international conflict has penetrated cultural life. His observation that “the turmoil on the international scene has really entered the exhibition” succinctly captures the transformation of the Biennale from a celebration of global art into an arena of moral and diplomatic confrontation.
By: