VENICE.- Three years after the passing of Ilya Kabakov, Venice pays homage to one of the most significant artistic duos on the international stage with Venetian Diary, a monumental and participatory project conceived by Ilya and Emilia Kabakov. The result of their shared vision, the work places at its center the stories, memories, and objects of Venetians, offering an intense collective self-portrait of the city while reaffirming the poetic and conceptual force that has established the duo as seminal figures in contemporary art.
Presented in conjunction with the 61st Venice Biennale, the project, curated by Cesare Biasini Selvaggi and Giulia Abate, unfolds as a dialogue between the city and the Biennale across two sites: the main floor of Ca' Tron, a sixteenth-century palazzo overlooking the Grand Canal, and the Venetian Pavilion at the Giardini, as part of the exhibition Persistent Notes, curated by Giovanna Zabotti with Denis Isaia and Cesare Biasini Selvaggi.
From May 9 to June 28, 2026, the exhibitionorganized by BAM under the patronage of the Municipality of Venicetransforms Ca' Tron into a vast narrative and relational apparatus. This is not a show about Venice, but a show with Venice.
The protagonists are approximately 550 inhabitants of the metropolitan area of Venice, spanning generations, social backgrounds, and urban contexts. Each participant was invited to write a diary entry recounting their relationship with the city and to contribute a personal object symbolically representing that bond. Fragments of livesmemories, desires, nostalgia, and aspirationsare displayed in museum-style vitrines, forming a layered and unexpected human mosaic, suspended between past and future and organized into thematic sections. Participants include shopkeepers, entrepreneurs, artisans, retirees, homemakers, athletes, students, gondoliers, creatives, cultural professionals, maritime workers, restaurateurs, members of historic families, journalists, public servants, and representatives of different religious communities.
The project places at its center those Venetians who never appear on the red carpet yet sustain the city through their daily work and presence. The selection reflects the social complexity of Venice: children, the elderly, newcomers, and long-established families responded to a public open call, transforming the Kabakovs' invitation into a collective and democratic gesture. The artists and curators chose to identify each contribution by first name only, underscoring the equal importance of every storyand, by extension, of every individualwithout hierarchy.
Displayed in a series of thematic vitrines and accompanied by participants' narratives, the collected objectstools, mementos, and traces of everyday lifebecome true "resonance chambers" of existence.
In continuity with the Kabakovs' poetics and their celebrated total installations, the work takes the form of an immersive environment in which the individual dimension intertwines with the collective. The city is not a stage but living matter; Venetians are not extras but protagonists. The gesture is both simple and radical: to place the individual at the center, recognizing them as custodians of a heritage that is not only historical, cultural, and artistic, but fundamentally human.
A complementary component of the project is presented within the Venetian Pavilion, in dialogue with Persistent Notes and in resonance with the curatorial vision of the 2026 Art Biennale. Here, the section entrusted to Ilya and Emilia Kabakov focuses on a specific group: creatives. Their objectscharged with memory and symbolic of personal and artistic trajectoriesbecome gestures of recognition toward those who contribute to the ongoing redefinition of cultural identity in a city that hosts one of the most significant art events in the world.
The project marks the latest and most intense chapter in a nearly fifty-year relationship between the Kabakovs and Venice.