Event Recap: G.A.S. at the Opening Week of the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia

Event Recap: G.A.S. at the Opening Week of the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia

In February 2026, G.A.S. Foundation was formally announced as a participant in the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia by Koyo Kouoh. During the opening week of 5–9 May, the Foundation presented Chorus, a major installation developed through its residency programme spanning its purpose-built creative campus in Lagos and its sustainability-focused farm with an onsite studio in Ikise. Alongside this presentation, alumni, trustees, and collaborators participated in a range of independently programmed events across Venice, reflecting the expanding reach of the Foundation’s network.

Dinner hosted by G.A.S. Global Circle Patron Osahon Okunbo. Image courtesy of Osahon Okunbo.

On Tuesday 5th May, G.A.S. alumna Ṣọlá Olúlòde participated in a discussion organised by the African Art in Venice Forum, contributing to a conversation centred on queer African perspectives and their place within contemporary art and art history. Later that evening, G.A.S. Global Circle Patron the Osahon Okunbo Foundation hosted a dinner at the Venetian Ballroom, Hotel Metropole, bringing together artists, patrons, trustees, alumni, and friends of the Foundation for an evening of exchange and reflection around continued support for African art and cultural production.

Guest Artists Space (G.A.S.) Foundation, Chorus, 2026. Photo: Contemporary And (C&).

On Wednesday, 6 May, Chorus opened for a private preview in Venice as part of the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia. Presented within the Arsenale alongside contributions from three other African art institutions - RAW Material Company in Senegal, blaxTARLINES KUMASI in Ghana, and the Nairobi Contemporary Art Institute in Kenya - the installation takes the Yorùbá courtyard as its architectural and conceptual point of departure. Bringing together the voices of former residents and collaborators, Chorus centres a film that unfolds through channels of sound, washes of colour, and moving images, reflecting on the relationships, exchanges, and forms of collective practice that shape G.A.S. Foundation.

On the same day, G.A.S. alumna Ruby Onyinyechi Amanze, in collaboration with Wura Ogunji, presented THE DASH, a live performance within 1922 Revisited, curated by Janine Sytsma in dialogue with Koyo Kouoh's exhibition In Minor Keys. Presented in collaboration with the African Art in Venice Forum and the European Cultural Centre, the performance brought together movement, sound, and archival reference to consider memory, absence, and historical trace.

 

Presentations by G.A.S. Alumni Ṣọlá Olúlòde and Ruby Onyinyechi Amanze. Image courtesy of Ṣọlá Olúlòde and Francesca Bottazzin.

On Thursday 7th May, G.A.S. hosted a networking breakfast featuring presentations from members of the curatorial team, Yinka Shonibare CBE, Belinda Holden CEO Yinka Shonibare Foundation (Y.S.F.), Moni Aisida Executive Director of G.A.S and Ann Marie Peña. Each speaker shared the purpose of G.A.S., their contribution, and the Chorus exhibition. The day was followed by G.A.S. alumna Ṣọlá Olúlòde’s participation in a panel discussion at the British Pavilion alongside artists Pio Abad and Mohammad Z. Rahman, marking the opening of Lubaina Himid’s exhibition Predicting Histories: Testing Translation. The discussion brought together practices engaging migration, memory, and the afterlives of colonial systems. Drawing on Dorothy Price’s reading of “dwelling” in relation to Himid’s work, the conversation extended the idea of architectural space into everyday forms of inhabitation, including clothing, food, and cultivation, as ways in which belonging is constructed, negotiated, and reimagined.

Yinka Shonibare CBE speaking at The Hope Forum 2026. Image courtesy of ART 2030.

On Saturday 9th May, Founder Yinka Shonibare CBE participated as a featured speaker at the Hope Forum 2026 organised by Art 2030, themed Archipelagos of Hope, contributing to a global conversation on cultural futures. Later that day, the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia opened to the public. Across the wider Biennale landscape, G.A.S. affiliated artists and collaborators presented work across multiple national pavilions and exhibition sites. In the Zimbabwe Pavilion, Second Nature | Manyonga featured G.A.S. alumnus Gideon Gomo alongside four artists, presenting work that explores neuroplasticity as a framework for thinking through identity and transformation. At the Gaggiandre, Nolan Oswald Dennis presented Black Earth Calendar and Black Water Station (Mbarara), developed through seismic sensing systems positioned across the African continent. Ranti Bam presented Ifa Ile Oja in the Arsenale, a sculptural installation of hand-built stoneware vessels reflecting on body, spirit, and relational presence. Temitayo Ogunbiyi presented sculptural and spatial works combining botanical forms, hair geometries, and playground structures, extending her research into public space, movement, and embodied knowledge.

 

Presentations by G.A.S. alumni Gideon Gomo, Nolan Oswald Dennis, and Ranti Bam, alongside trustee Temitayo Ogunbiyi, at the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, by Koyo Kouoh.

 


 

Acknowledgements

Chorus is led by Ann Marie Peña, with support of founder Yinka Shonibare CBE, Belinda Holden CEO Yinka Shonibare Foundation (Y.S.F.) and Moni Aisida Executive Director of G.A.S. Foundation. This project is managed by Samantha Russell, with architectural installation design by MOE+ Art Architecture (Papa Omotayo, Oyinade Adegbite). Film production by Filmwrights (Randall Wright) and Julie Buckland, while sound design by Sound Disposition (Roland Heap, Simon Haupt) and Funmilola Ogunshina.

The installation is generously supported by The Osahon Okunbo Foundation (TOOF), Olufemi A. Akinsanya, Triangle Network , Yinka Shonibare CBE, Annette Anthony, Kayode Adegbola, Bimpe Nkontchou, Denise Bradley-Tyson, Wally Bakare, Yemi Adunola, Adeniyi Adenubi, Oba Nsugbe, and Tokini Peterside-Schwebig.

Among the many contributors represented in Chorus are: Alberta Whittle, Ayomide Fasedu, Bisila Noha, Catherine Bardi, Damilola Akin-Olasupo, Emma Prempeh, E.N. Mirembe, Gideon Gomo, Jonn Gale, Ofem Ubi, Olayinka Eno Babalola, Olufela Omokeko, Portia Zvavahera, Raqs Media Collective, Raymond Pinto, Ṣọlá Olúlòde, Tobi Onabolu and Umar Rashid

How You Can Support Our Foundation

Your generous contributions support the Foundation’s distinctive interdisciplinary residencies, research, education programmes and public events.