Manifesta

Nomadic contemporary art biennial From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Manifesta, also known as the European Nomadic Biennial, is a European pan-regional contemporary cultural biennale.[1]

Genrebiennale, focus on contemporary art
Begins1994
Frequencybiennial, every two year.
LocationItinerant
Quick facts Genre, Begins ...
Manifesta – European Biennial of Contemporary Art
Genrebiennale, focus on contemporary art
Begins1994
Frequencybiennial, every two year.
LocationItinerant
Previous eventManifesta 15 (2024)
Next eventManifesta 16 (2026)
Organised byInternational Foundation Manifesta
Websitemanifesta.org
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History

Manifesta was founded in 1994 by Dutch art historian Hedwig Fijen.[2]

Manifesta 1. The first edition took place in Rotterdam. One of the coordinators in Rotterdam was Thomas Meyer zu Schlochtern of the Rotterdamse Kunststichting.[3] Among the local artists brought into the international scene, were Jeanne van Heeswijk, Bik Van Der Pol, and Joep van Lieshout.[4]

Manifesta 2. Luxembourg (1998)

Manifesta 3. Ljubljana (2000)

Manifesta 4. Frankfurt (2002)

Manifesta 5. San Sebastián (2004)

Manifesta 6. The 2006 edition of Manifesta was set to happen in Nicosia, Cyprus, under the direction of Florian Waldvogel, Mai Abu ElDahab, and Anton Vidokle. In June 2006, Nicosia for Art, the city-run nonprofit organization sponsoring the exhibition, cancelled the event due to political turmoil around the green line of Nicosia.[5]

Manifesta 7. the 2008 edition took place across four cities in the Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol region of northern Italy: Bolzano, Trento, Rovereto, and Fortezza. Curated by Adam Budak, Anselm Franke, Hila Peleg, and the Raqs Media Collective, the exhibition was titled "100 Miles in 100 Days" and explored themes of transformation, memory, and regional identity. Among the participating artists were Claire Fontaine, Tatiana Trouvé, and Runa Islam, whose works reflected the biennial’s focus on site-specificity and cultural dialogue within post-industrial and historical spaces.

Manifesta 8. Murcia in dialogue with northern Africa (2010)

Manifesta 9. Limburg (2012)

Manifesta 10. Saint Petersburg (2014) in Russia created tensions as the government had just prohibited "gay propaganda".[6]

Manifesta 11. Zürich (2016)

Manifesta 12. It was held in Palermo, Italy, around the theme "The Planetary Garden. Cultivating Coexistence". The exhibition put forward an interpretation of the city's history as the expression of a syncretism of cultures across the Mediterranean. The curators used the idea of the garden as a metaphor on how it might be possible to aggregate differences and to compose life out of movement and migration.[7]

Manifesta 13. (planned to have been held in Marseille) cancelled due to Covid19,

Manifesta 14. It was held in Pristina, Kosovo, in 2022.[8][9]

Manifesta 15. Barcelona (2024)

Manifesta 16. Planned in Ruhr in 2026.

Education

Manifesta's Education and Mediation programme is a part of each Manifesta Biennial. The education team is among the first to begin developing programmes in Manifesta's host cities. The programmes created by the team are derived from conversations, extensive field research and sociocultural and educational mapping.

The programme is developed collaboratively with artists and associations of the host city and includes projects that are educational, curatorial, artistic, research-based, and accessible to everyone. The education team is responsible for developing a discursive mediation and a critical perspective on the curatorial project. Additionally the team creates a set of interrelated research-and-practice-based programmes focussed on local knowledge and practices.[10]

Editions

More information Year, Edition ...
Year Edition Place Theme Curated by
1996 1st Rotterdam Katalyn Neray
Rosa Martinez
Viktor Misiano
Andrew Renton
Hans-Ulrich Obrist
1998 2nd Luxembourg Robert Fleck
Maria Lind
Barbara Vanderlinden
2000 3rd Ljubljana "Borderline Syndrome. Energies of Defence" Francesco Bonami
Ole Bouman
Maria Hlavajová
Kathrin Rhomberg
2002 4th Frankfurt Iara Boubnova
Nuria Enguita Mayo
Stéphanie Moisdon
2004 5th San Sebastián Massimiliano Gioni
Marta Kuzma
2006 6th Nicosia Cancelled[5] Florian Waldvogel
Mai Abu ElDahab
Anton Vidokle
2008 7th Franzensfeste

Bolzano

Trento

Rovereto

"100 Miles in 100 Days"[11] Adam Budak

Anselm Franke
Hila Peleg

Raqs Media Collective

2010 8th Murcia Alexandria Contemporary Arts Forum (ACAF)
Chamber of Public Secrets (CPS)
tranzit.org
2012 9th Genk Cuauhtémoc Medina
Dawn Adès
Katerina Gregos
2014 10th Saint Petersburg Kasper König[6][12]
2016 11th Zurich "What People Do for Money: Some Joint Ventures" Christian Jankowski
Francesca Gavin[13]
2018 12th Palermo "The Planetary Garden. Cultivating Coexistence" Ippolito Pestellini Laparelli
Mirjam Varadinis
Andrés Jaque
Bregtje van der Haak
2020 13th Marseille[14][15] Indefinitely postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic Alya Sebti, Katerina Chuchalina, Stefan Kalmár
2022 14th Pristina[16] "It matters what worlds world worlds: how to tell stories otherwise" Catherine Nichols
Carlo Ratti
2024 15th Barcelona[17] "Balancing Conflicts", "Cure and Care" and "Imagining Futures" Sergio Pardo López

Filipa Oliveira

2026 16th Ruhr Josep Bohigas
2028 17th Coimbra
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Ownership

The Manifesta Biennial is owned and organized by Amsterdam-based International Foundation Manifesta (IFM).

References

Further reading

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