The 36th Bienal de São Paulo – Not All Travellers Walk Roads – Of Humanity as Practice opens on September 6, with free admission until January 11, 2026. With the opening of the exhibition, the Bienal also launches its public program, the Conjugations: a series of debates, gatherings, performances, and activations, some of which are developed in collaboration with cultural institutions from various parts of the world and presented at the Bienal Pavilion throughout the exhibition’s four-month run.
The initiative seeks to explore how these institutions, grounded in different geographies, conjugate the notion of humanity through their everyday practices. Each organization invited curates a meeting in São Paulo involving thinkers, artists, performers, and diverse audiences, activating global connections with the local context.
Conceptualised by Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung – alongside co-curators Alya Sebti, Anna Roberta Goetz, Thiago de Paula Souza, co-curator at large Keyna Eleison, and communications and strategy advisor Henriette Gallus – the 36th Bienal is inspired by the poem “Da calma e do silêncio” [Of Calm and Silence] by poet Conceição Evaristo. It is founded on active listening to humanity as a practice of constant displacement, encounter, and negotiation.
Kader Attia
Kader Attia is a French-Algerian multidisciplinary artist whose research-based approach has been instrumental for decolonial strategies – to backlash colonial history and museums. His interest and subjects found a turning point since he focused on creating tools for repair and care, either of objects, bodies, representations, and memories.
La Valise oubliée [The Forgotten Suitcase] (2024) interweaves individual and collective histories of the Algerian War (1954-1962), during which hundreds of thousands of Algerians were killed. This recent video work by Kader Attia takes the suitcase as a dynamic metaphor of both the past unveiled and the future to be edited (playing with the potentialities of an unfinished narrative). Attia unpacks three suitcases, three individual stories that interweave threads of our collective history: those of French artist and Algerian sympathizer Jean-Jacques Lebel, feminist decolonial thinker Françoise Vergès, and Attia’s mother. The memorabilia removed from the luggage evokes intense, sometimes traumatic memories – from a secret letter by a member of the Algerian National Liberation Front (entrusted to Lebel) to a photo album belonging to the controversial lawyer Jacques Vergès (Françoise Vergès’s uncle), who defended Algerian militants during the war, to photographs of the artist’s mother. By juxtaposing different narrative levels and threads, Attia tells the story both of his family and of the countless nameless men and women who resisted and organized in the shadows against colonialism.
As often in Kader Attia’s work, the awakening of consciousness about the immensity of the destruction and loss under colonialism (either through ecology, architecture, or economy…) goes with a traumatic experience of counting, reenacting, and archiving the dead or the wound. Hence a general ghostly memory is efficiently enacted in his installations and video works; as exercises of exorcism.
Having grown up between France and Algeria, Kader Attia uses his own transcultural experience (including the neocolonial suburban lower class condition) as an introspective research eventually becoming a tool against neocolonial power structures. From The Repair of Occident to Extra-Occidental Cultures (2012), shown at dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel, to the recent Un descenso al paraiso [A Descent into Paradise] (2025), at MUAC, Mexico City, Kader Attia’s art of repair walks on the thin line between dis-membering and re-membering.
—Morad Montazami
Nari Ward
Nari Ward gathers stories from objects and places, transforming them into powerful narratives. The materials he chooses – whether discarded strollers, shoelaces, worn f irehoses, or cotton balls – carry layered histories and echoes of lived experiences. Like an archaeologist of the everyday, Ward excavates remnants of consumer culture, societal trauma, and diasporic stories, exposing tensions between memory and forgetting, identity and belonging. Through his multidisciplinary and inventive practice, he converts these abandoned relics into spaces of reflection and reclamation, bridging personal and collective memory, private and public stories, and addressing questions of social justice, power, and overlooked histories.
Spring Seed (2025), his new project for the 36th Bienal de São Paulo, traces the intangible cultural and commercial entanglements of Jamaica – where Ward was born and raised before migrating to New York at the age of twelve – Brazil, and Japan through the trajectory of coffee, a commodity deeply tied to labor economies, global consumerism, and colonial histories, yet equally associated with desire and leisure. At the center of the installation, an enclosed arena made of bedsprings houses a new video that interweaves footage from Ward’s trips to São Paulo’s Liberdade neighborhood (its Japanese-Brazilian community), Bahia, and Jamaica’s Blue Mountain coffee region. A symbol of luxury and exclusivity, Blue Mountain coffee is cultivated in small quantities, with most of its production exported to Japan, where it is prized for its rarity and refinement. Within this intimate space, which viewers need to enter, an altar-like speaker system, draped in ironed cotton covers infused with Blue Mountain coffee grinds, functions as both a sculptural and multi-sensorial element, layering sound recordings from São Paulo’s Chapel of Our Lady of Souls of the Afflicted – built on an ancestral Black and Indigenous gravesite. These sonic and visual textures resonate with Ward’s earlier works, such as the video Spellbound (2015), which explored Savannah, Georgia’s fraught histories of slavery, colonialism, resilience, and emancipation.
Through his charged assemblages, Ward not only reclaims discarded materials but also reimagines the potential they carry. Spring Seed extends this ongoing exploration into collectivity, mapping unseen flows and exchanges while complicating dominant narratives. By weaving together visual language, sound, and scent, and by employing moving images – a medium inherently capable of traversing time and space – Ward embraces a non-linear approach that activates the viewers’ imagination, revealing the energies and hidden forces that shape a sense of community and belonging. In doing so, he creates a space where memory resists erasure, and the past speaks powerfully to the present – just as a seed springs to life.
—Roberta Tenconi
Learn more on the The 36th Bienal de São Paulo website.