Manuel Borja-Villel, Grada Kilomba, Diane Lima and Hélio Menezes feature in ‘decentralised’ edition
The Fundação Bienal has announced that the 2023 Bienal de São Paulo – its 35th edition – will be curated by a team comprised of Manuel Borja-Villel, Grada Kilomba, Diane Lima and Hélio Menezes.
The exhibition will not feature a chief curator, but will be organised by the curatorial collective ‘in a decentralised manner’. The lineup represents progress of sorts for an exhibition (founded in 1951 – the world’s second oldest art biennial after Venice) which has never been led by a Black or indigenous curator – and has rarely featured women in the top role either.
Borja-Villel is an art historian and director of the Museo Reina Sofía in Madrid since 2008. Lima is a researcher and curator whose work focuses on decolonial perspectives – she recently cocurated Frestas – 3rd Triennial de Artes do Sesc SP. And Menezes is an anthropologist at the Universidade de São Paulo – recently curator of contemporary art at Centro Cultural São Paulo.
Meanwhile, Kilomba is an artist, whose multidisciplinary practice mixes history, theory and performance. “If I am to tell my story, I cannot tell it with the language of disciplines that have colonised me: the language of the patriarchy and of the colonisers,” she recently told ArtReview’s Fi Churchman. “We have to invent new languages.”
The biennial’s 2021 edition, titled Though It’s Dark, Still I Sing, was curated by Jacopo Crivelli Visconti. The show captured the sombre mood of a country ravaged by the pandemic, ecological destruction and political failure – while also gesturing at moments of social repair, wrote ArtReview‘s Oliver Basciano in his review last year.