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Pavilion of Saudi Arabia at the 59th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia





Muhannad Shono presents The Teaching Tree, a site-specific installation curated by Reem Fadda and assistant curator Rotana Shaker



Multidisciplinary artist Muhannad Shono has been selected to represent Saudi Arabia at Biennale Arte 2022 in Venice. Curated by Reem Fadda and Assistant Curator Rotana Shaker, The Teaching Tree is a large-scale, ambitious installation exploring themes of creation, regeneration, nature, and mythology.




Commissioned by The Visual Arts Commission, one of 11 sector-specific commissions overseen by Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Culture, the installation will be on display at the Arsenale-Sale d’Armi from 23 April to 27 November 2022.

As Saudi Arabia’s burgeoning contemporary art scene continues to define itself on the world stage, Shono has emerged as a compelling voice among a new generation of rising artists from the region.




The Teaching Tree is a vast, 40-metre-long, organically formed structure made of palm fronds painted in black and animated by pneumatics. The enigmatic form fills the length of the pavilion, embodying Shono’s investigation of the drawn line and its potential for creation and destruction. Through this, he explores ideas of resilience and regeneration both in the natural world and within human imagination. Shono’s practice counters the limits of singular narratives, instead questioning truths, ontologies, and the basic concepts underpinning human life. Investigating the drawn line, Shono interrogates the impact of writing and the generation of thought, as well as their respective potentials. For Shono, embracing the line and mark making is an act of creative agency. As such, The Teaching Tree builds on central concepts within his practice, interrogating the self, tradition, mythology, and the natural world.




The stories of Al Khidr have also had a profound influence on Shono’s personal and creative life. Made of plant matter, it was known that wherever Al Khidr sat a garden would grow, symbolising rebirth, regeneration, and healing. The Teaching Tree thus alludes to ‘mother nature’ and its hope for rebirth in face of warning signs of past and future ecological struggles.

Commenting on his work, Shono said: “My work embodies the irrepressible spirit of creative expression: the power of the imagination that grows despite what may attempt to limit it but instead makes it more resilient. This is a resilience that is taught by nature, in its continuous cycles of death and re-growth, like trees nourished by the ashes of wildfires.”




The exhibition's curator, Reem Fadda, added, “The Teaching Tree references the drawn line overgrown, now encapsulating a multitude of dimensions. This object becomes emblematic and dichotomous in imaginations represented, words written, and marks engraved, reflecting upon their irreversible effects on history.”





The Saudi Pavilion responds to the overarching theme of the 59th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, The Milk of Dreams. Derived from the title of the children’s book by Surrealist artist Leonora Carrington, The Milk of Dreams refers to a magical world of imagination, where everyone can change, be transformed, and become something or someone else. Indeed, Shono’s work looks towards the limitless possibilities of human imagination and humanity itself.





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