VENICE.- The Uzbekistan Art and Culture Development Foundation (ACDF) announces its participation in the 61st Venice Biennale with two presentations: the Uzbekistan National Pavilion, The Aural Sea, and Instruments of the Mind, a solo exhibition by Vyacheslav Akhunov presented by the Centre for Contemporary Arts Tashkent (CCA) as an official collateral event at Palazzo Franchetti.
Commissioned by Gayane Umerova, Chairperson of the ACDF, these projects bring into focus both a new generation of curatorial and artistic voices and the work of a foundational figure in contemporary art in Uzbekistan.
The Aural Sea
Uzbekistan National Pavilion
The Aural Sea engages the Aral Sea region of Karakalpakstan, Uzbekistan through mythmaking and storytelling as ways of responding to environmental transformation.
Since the 1960s, the large-scale diversion of the regions rivers for agricultural irrigation has caused the Aral Sea to lose over 90 percent of its volume, turning one of the worlds largest inland lakes into desert. Against this backdrop, the exhibition considers the Aral Sea as a site for climate resilience and alternative futures.
Curated by Sophie Mayuko Arni, Kamila Mukhitdinova, Nico Sun, Thái Hà and Aziza Izamovathe inaugural cohort of the Bukhara Biennial Curatorial School, an initiative of ACDFthe Pavilion brings together artists Jahongir Bobokulov, Zi Kakhramonova, Aygul Sarsen, Zulfiya Spowart, Xin Liu, A.A.Murakami, and Nguyen Phuong Linh. Working across installation, interactive work, and painting, the artists engage their ecological imaginations to learn with and from the Aral Sea.
The exhibition draws inspiration from the Uzbek-Karakalpak author Allayar Darmenov, whose writings imagined a replenished Aral region through fiction and fantasy. Following this approach, The Aural Sea proposes imagination as a form of agency: mythmaking and storytelling not as escape, but as tools for navigating loss and holding open space for what might yet be possible.
Responding to the 61st Biennales theme In Minor Keys, the Pavilions title signals its method: listening. The exhibition considers what it means to hear a landscape that has undergone dramatic transformation, and what might be learned from attending to voices shaped by that experience.
The Pavilion draws on ACDFs sustained engagement with the Aral Sea region through its wider educational and cultural initiatives. These include the Aral Culture Summit, a transdisciplinary platform convening artists, scientists, and policymakers, and the Aral School, an interdisciplinary postgraduate programme based in Nukus dedicated to ecological and social regeneration.
Instruments of the Mind
Vyacheslav Akhunov
Centre for Contemporary Arts Tashkent (CCA)
Palazzo Franchetti
Presented as an official collateral event of the Biennale, Instruments of the Mind is a solo exhibition by Vyacheslav Akhunov (b. 1948), a founding figure of conceptualism in Central Asia whose practice is closely connected to 1970s Moscow Conceptualism.
Curated by Dr Sara Raza, Chief Curator and Artistic Director of the CCA Tashkent, the exhibition spans five decades of Akhunovs work across painting, drawing, video, installation, performance, and text. Structured as an anti-chronological project, it features several unrealised and previously unexhibited works from the 1970s in dialogue with more recent works.
At Palazzo Franchetti, the exhibition transforms the space into a living archive, offering a reflection on memory, time, and spiritual consciousness. Akhunovs work moves between introspection, transcendence, absurdity, and humour.
The presentation marks a key milestone in the inaugural year of programming at the CCA, which opens to the public in March 2026 as Uzbekistans first permanent institution dedicated to contemporary art.