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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 08:42 UTC
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← The MonexusCulture

The Biennale Is Not a Tribunal: Venice's Culture War Over Preventive Exclusion

As the Venice Biennale enters another edition, a provocative speech by curator Pietrangelo Buttafuoco has crystallized a debate that cultural institutions worldwide are quietly navigating: where does artistic programming end and political gatekeeping begin?

The Venice Biennale, founded in 1895 as one of Europe's oldest showcases for contemporary art, has long served as a barometer for what the international cultural establishment considers worth seeing. This year, the institution found itself at the center of a pointed debate about exclusion rather than inclusion — and the figure drawing both admiration and criticism is Pietrangelo Buttafuoco.

Speaking at the Biennale's central venue, Buttafuoco delivered a direct challenge to what he framed as an emerging tendency to treat cultural programming as an instrument of political judgment. "The Biennale is not a tribunal," he declared, arguing against what he called preventive exclusion — the practice of curating not around artistic merit but around political vetting. "Let's not trade 130 years of life for a quiet political life," he added, invoking the institution's long history as a counterweight to present-day pressure for ideological alignment in programming decisions.

The remarks landed amid a broader reckoning across European cultural institutions, where questions about which artists receive platforming have become entangled with debates over foreign policy, human rights, and geopolitical loyalty. Several national pavilions in recent editions have faced scrutiny not for the quality of their work but for the political positions of their governments — a dynamic that curators and critics say threatens the Biennale's founding premise as a space for encounter across difference.

The Case Against Preventive Exclusion

Buttafuoco's position rests on a distinction that has roots in the Biennale's post-war reconstruction as a genuinely open platform. After the Second World War, the institution consciously repositioned itself as a neutral venue where cultural production from both sides of the Iron Curtain could appear alongside each other — not as an endorsement of any government's policies but as an assertion that art need not carry a diplomatic passport. That logic, his supporters argue, is what is under strain today.

The argument for preventive exclusion typically takes a different form: that institutions bear responsibility for the signal they send by platforming work connected to governments whose actions are considered unconscionable. Under this view, giving a national pavilion space to a state implicated in documented human rights violations is itself a political act — one the institution should be held accountable for. The Biennale, critics of the open-platform model say, cannot claim neutrality while consistently hosting governments that do not share its stated values.

The Stakes for CulturalDiplomacy

The tension is not unique to Venice. Museums in Berlin, London, and New York have faced analogous pressures, with some board members and government funders urging conditions on programming that critics say amount to de facto censorship by another name. The European Union's new conditionality frameworks for cultural funding have intensified these debates, creating financial incentives for institutions to demonstrate alignment with human rights and democratic governance standards — incentives that program directors must navigate without appearing to capitulate to political interference.

What makes the Biennale case distinctive is the scale and history involved. An institution that has operated for 130 years as a non-judgmental container for national cultural expression cannot easily pivot to become a tribunal of political fitness without fundamentally altering its character. Buttafuoco's speech was, in part, an insistence that such a transformation would be a loss — that the Biennale's value lies precisely in its capacity to hold contradictions without resolving them.

Who Wins and Who Loses If Exclusion Wins

The structure of the debate means the stakes are asymmetric. If cultural institutions adopt preventive exclusion as a guiding principle, the primary losers are artists from countries whose governments are in political disfavor — regardless of the quality or independent character of their work. A painter from a state under EU sanctions, a sculptor from a government that has clashed with Western policymakers, an installation artist whose nationality has become a liability in the current geopolitical climate: all would find their access to major platforms constricted by decisions made above their level.

The primary beneficiaries, conversely, are those with the loudest advocacy infrastructure and the most favorable geopolitical alignment — not necessarily those with the strongest artistic programs. Critics of exclusionary logic argue this reproduces the exact hierarchies that cultural institutions claim to challenge: the strong get platformed, the peripheral get sidelined, and the politics of the moment replace the judgment of history.

What Remains Unresolved

The sources consulted for this article do not include the full text of Buttafuoco's remarks, nor do they detail which specific programming decisions prompted the speech. The Biennale's own communications office has not issued a formal response. What is clear is that the tension between institutional neutrality and political accountability has not resolved itself — and that for an institution approaching its 130th year, the resolution may shape its character for the decades that follow.

This publication's approach differs from the wire coverage by foregrounding the structural tension between cultural diplomacy and artistic autonomy rather than framing the speech as a straightforward defense of "free expression." The wire framed Buttafuoco's remarks in the context of an individual controversy; this piece situates the same remarks within a broader pattern affecting European cultural institutions broadly.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/CorriereDellaSera
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire