Venice has two calendars. One belongs to the crowds. The other belongs to the Biennale.
The 61st International Art Exhibition runs from 9 May to 22 November 2026 across the Giardini and the Arsenale, under the title In Minor Keys, from a curatorial concept by Koyo Kouoh.
A quieter register
The title is a thesis. In Minor Keys proposes art that works through nuance rather than spectacle: listening instead of shouting, attention instead of scale. In a culture addicted to loudness, that is almost a provocation.
It also happens to describe the best way to experience Venice itself. The city rewards the visitor who slows down, who takes the longer calle, who treats an afternoon as a unit of measure.
The Arsenale as destination
The Biennale’s Arsenale venue is reason enough to come: the former shipyards of the Venetian Republic, brick naves and dock basins that once built the fleet of an empire, now holding contemporary art. Few exhibition spaces anywhere carry that much accumulated time.
Walking the Corderie with six months of exhibition ahead of you, rather than six days, is one of the underrated luxuries of the format. The Biennale is a season, not an event.
How the luxury traveller should read it
The smart move is contrarian timing. Opening week belongs to the art world’s professional circuit. The months that follow, especially early autumn, offer the same exhibition with a fraction of the pressure, better tables and softer light.
Pair the pavilions with the city’s parallel art infrastructure: the foundations, the palazzo collections, the churches that hold masterpieces behind unremarkable doors.
Luxury.it perspective
A Biennale year is the best year to visit Venice, and the best months are the ones nobody fights over. Culture, in this city, is the most reliable form of exclusivity.
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