COIMBRA.- AnozeroBienal de Coimbra presents its 2026 edition, To hold, to give, to receive, on view from April 11 through July 5, 2026, across multiple venues in Coimbra, Portugal. Curated by Hans Ibelings and John Zeppetelli, with Daniel Madeira as assistant curator, the biennial brings together artists, architects, filmmakers, and research-based practitioners in a project that reconsiders the exhibition as a space of encounter, reciprocity, and transformation.
Taking as its conceptual point of departure the Proto-Indo-European root ghabhthe origin of the word habitatAnozero26 explores the gestures of holding, giving, and receiving as fundamental conditions of both artistic practice and social life. The exhibition is conceived not as a fixed display but as a living environment, in which artworks, architecture, audiences, and ideas coexist and interact. In this sense, the biennial positions itself as a spatial and relational structure, foregrounding the ethical and material conditions through which cultural production takes place.
Drawing on Peter Kropotkins concept of mutual aid, the curatorial framework emphasizes collaboration, interdependence, and horizontality as alternatives to the individualism and polarization that characterize contemporary social and political life. Rather than isolating artistic practices, the biennial stages forms of proximity and exchange, proposing art and architecture as sites capable of imagining and articulating other ways of living together.
At the centre of the project is the Monastery of Santa Clara-a-Nova, whose monumental architecture and layered history, from seventeenth-century religious sanctuary to military barracks and now a contemporary art venue, serve as a key interlocutor for the exhibition. The monastery is not treated as a neutral container but as an active participant, shaping the reception and meaning of the works it hosts. Its spaces resonate with projects that engage themes of memory, testimony, grief, extraction, and resistance, situating the exhibition within a broader temporal and political continuum.
For this edition, the biennial extends beyond the monastery across a network of sites throughout Coimbra, activating the city itself as a landscape of circulation, memory, and transformation. Each venue contributes to a wider constellation in which artworks interact with the urban fabric and historical context of the city. In this distributed format, Coimbra becomes both context and medium, a site in which the boundaries between exhibition, architecture, and public space are continuously negotiated.
Its participants reflect the biennials expanded field of inquiry, encompassing artists and architects whose practices engage critically with the political, social, and spatial conditions of the present, whose projects range from large-scale installations and moving-image works to research-driven investigations and architectural propositions.
Participating artists, architects: Chantal Akerman, Christian Andersson, Jonathas de Andrade, Vasco Araújo, arquivo mangue, Lina Bo Bardi, Taysir Batniji, Frédéric Bruly Bouabré, Arno Brandlhuber e/and Constanze Haas, Inês Brites, Adam Broomberg e/and Rafael Gonzalez, Alberto Carneiro, Centrala, Rui Chafes e/and Candura, Julian Charrière, Sandro Chia, Colectivo SEM-FIM, Luisa Cunha, Eva Davidova, Thomas Demand, Forensic Architecture, Arturo Franco, Nan Goldin, Shilpa Gupta, Inside Outside, Kosmos, Juha Lilja, Mário Macilau, Fina Miralles, Adriana Molder, Office of Adrian Phiffer, Pezo von Ellrichshausen, João Salema, Taryn Simon, Charles Stankievech, Mungo Thomson, Maria Trabulo, Pedro Vaz, Carlos Ferrand Zavala, Anarchism and Planning, Three rooms, Xenia aNC, Atelier Local, Ateliermob, Colectivo Warehouse, Fala, fr-ia, JQTS, Nuno Valentim, Paula Santos, Pedra Líquida,