Can artwork be each a refuge and a catalyst for change? The twenty fourth version of Guatemala’s Bienal de Arte Paiz (till 15 February) attests to artwork’s capability to query and subvert, but in addition join and rework. The Italian curator and inventive director of Museo de Arte Moderno de Bogotá, Eugenio Viola, has orchestrated the most important version of the Guatemalan biennial underneath the title and idea The World Tree, a cosmogonic image for historical civilisations—together with the Maya, for whom the Ceiba tree represents “the universe’s construction and the interrelation between the degrees of existence”—and in addition a synaptic map drawn from neuroscience usually depicted as a tree.
This version of Latin America’s second-oldest biennial options 46 artists from 30 nations throughout 11 venues in Antigua and Guatemala Metropolis. Along with being the biennial’s largest version that is additionally its longest, with the exhibition’s period prolonged to over three months. One other vital improvement is that the organising non-profit, Fundación Paiz, has created its first everlasting exhibition and programming venue, which soft-launched with a efficiency by the Cuban artist Carlos Martiel on 6 November and can open on the finish of the biennial.
These adjustments sign the organisers’ intention to increase the biennial’s attain domestically and internationally, reaffirming its function as Guatemala’s predominant personal up to date artwork initiative since 1978. Fundación Paiz’s president, María Regina Paiz, says the main focus “stays on amplifying the biennial’s resonance amongst Guatemalans”.
Viola’s idea for this version of “an interconnected arboreal metaphor” takes varied kinds, many created by artists he has collaborated with beforehand. Some, particularly the 31 items commissioned particularly for The World Tree, discover the biennial’s theme by lenses that vary from the poetic to the political.
María Adela Díaz’s fee at Munag, Invisible Futures Photograph: Sergio Muñoz. Courtesy Fundación Paiz
“The problem was to curatorially unite 11 venues, transferring from the macro—the World Tree—to the micro—the little bushes of the synapse,” Viola says. “The venues and artworks function as websites of emergence, uncertainty and signs of our current, making a counter-cartography of resistance and resilience.”
Fragmented tree branches, reflecting how historical cultures noticed bushes because the axis mundi and the present-day lack of reference to nature, inform the Peruvian artist Ximena Garrido Lecca’s work at La Nueva Fábrica in Antigua. The non-profit can be the one biennial venue that could be a area devoted to up to date artwork, as the remaining are historic buildings or museums, and Guatemala doesn’t have a nationwide up to date artwork museum.
At Antigua’s Museo Nacional de Arte de Guatemala (Munag), one of many biennial’s strongest venues, bushes are potent metaphors. That is seen within the French Algerian artist Kader Attia’s large-scale set up depicting a desolate panorama populated by dry bushes, every bearing a rubber slingshot, representing colonialism but in addition resilience. The commissioned work by the Mexican artist Tania Candiani explores underlying connections throughout the earth, particularly mycelium, by a show of grime encapsulated in glass the place the roots, relatively than the tops of the crops, are the protagonists. Sounds from deep within the earth create a pulsating ambiance.

Igor Grubic’s site-specific set up, Migrant Seeds, at Antigua’s La Recolección Photograph: Constanza Ontiveros Valdés
On the biennial’s solely open-air venue, the dreamy ruins of Antigua’s La Recolección, an 18th-century monastery broken by earthquakes, the Croatian artist Igor Grubic’s commissioned work options plant pots mixing with the panorama. They gesture towards regeneration and adaptation. “Seeds embody the migration of individuals, concepts and languages, however we have to plant the seeds of affection,” Grubic says. Plant motifs additionally seem within the Brazilian artist María Nepomuceno’s fee at Munag, the place a poetic backyard of potted crops speaks to humanity’s potentialities.
Timber related at their roots—encapsulated within the biennial’s official emblem by the Guatemalan artist Erick Boror—are even embedded in Guatemala Metropolis’s central plaza, the place pedestrians (usually inadvertently) stroll over them. When standing atop the plaza’s commentary deck, the motif reveals itself, leaving a mark on town’s coronary heart.
Nature extra broadly is a recurring concern all through the biennial, with some Guatemalan artists reflecting on ecological points utilizing lake water as inventive materials. María Adela Díaz tinted 40 yards of cloth with the cyanobacteria affecting Lake Amatitlán, displayed at Munag’s entrance. “The piece is ephemeral as I take advantage of dwell cyanobacteria,” Díaz says. “I intend to proceed with this mission, calling out environmental degradation; hopefully the federal government or different organisations can get entangled.”

Verónica Riedel’s fee, Cloth of the long run, at Guatemala Metropolis’s Centro Cultural de España Photograph: Constanza Ontiveros Valdés
The commissioned piece by Verónica Riedel at Guatemala Metropolis’s Centro Cultural de España (CCE) consists of figures manufactured from biomaterials, together with species invading Atitlán Lake—one in every of Guatemala’s predominant vacationer sights—and Mayan healing crops. The work factors to air pollution and social points, but in addition presents technique of therapeutic.
A number of featured initiatives are a part of transdisciplinary analysis studios, like Plano Negativo at Antigua’s Centro de Formación de la Cooperación Española (CFCE), which analyses the consequences of the pressured eradication of the coca plant, which broken ecosystems. “We present advanced dynamics,” says the mission’s co-director Hannah Meszaros-Martin. “Our predominant query in Colombia is how the setting turns right into a weapon attacking communities.”
Indigenous illustration and Mesoamerican references, primarily Mayan, are additionally prevalent all through this Bienal de Arte Paiz. Some initiatives largely give attention to formal connections, as seen within the French artist Orlan’s self-portrait images, a part of her Self-Hybridization collection (1998-present), at CFCE. Within the photographs, the artist embodies the options of a collection of Mayan figures lent by Guatemala’s Ruta Maya Basis, which with extra contextualisation might need drawn deeper connections however right here dangers verging on cultural appropriation.

Comissioned mission by the Guatemalan Jorge de León, Transport Documentation, at Guatemala Metropolis’s Centro Cultural de España Photograph: Constanza Ontiveros Valdés
Others, just like the commissioned mixed-media mission by the Guatemalan artist Jorge de León at CCE, reveal a extra analytical strategy, utilizing analysis on a Mesoamerican object of unclear provenance to uncover points regarding historical past, id and present-day migration. Video works by the Tz’utujil Maya artist Antonio Pichillá additional reveal the rhythms, syncretism and symbols embedded in rituals.
Efficiency is a big a part of the biennial’s programme, reflecting each Viola’s experience within the style and the biennial’s overarching spirit. The Cuban artist Glenda León’s contribution explores spirituality by turning braille representations of deities in a number of languages right into a musical rating carried out by the Kaqchikel Maya pianist Yahaira Tubac. Different performances are extra overtly political. The Chilean Mapuche artist Seba Calfuqueo, for example, addressed the copper business’s historic, social, political and ecological impacts embodying a copper determine and carrying copper masks with ribbons bearing woven messages rising from their mouths as a voice is heard within the background narrating the numerous results of extraction in Chile.

Regina José Galindo’s efficiency, Yo Me Siento Libre, exterior the supreme courtroom of Guatemala Photograph: Constanza Ontiveros Valdés
The efficiency with arguably essentially the most native political resonance was that of the Guatemalan artist Regina José Galindo, who carried out because the incarcerated reporter José Rubén Zamora on the plaza in entrance of Guatemala’s supreme courtroom, studying aloud his letter denouncing years of state oppression. “It’s preferable to die standing than kneeling,” the letter reads partially.
Though uneven in some venues and initiatives—usually as a result of challenges of putting in up to date work in historic areas—this version of the Bienal de Arte Paiz portrays the complexities of humanity whereas providing much-needed hope and embodying Viola’s conception of artwork as group. In a means, this displays the biennial’s bigger mission.“This isn’t the mission of 1 basis or household, however of a rustic,” Paiz says.
The twenty fourth Bienal de Arte Paiz,The World Tree, till 15 February 2026, varied venues in Antigua and Guatemala Metropolis, Guatemala








