Wallace Chan, the Hong Kong-based jeweller and sculptor, has taken over two of Venice’s most distinctive historic websites for a twin presentation timed to this 12 months’s Venice Biennale, bringing his titanium sculptures into dialogue with town’s heritage.
Chan is a jeweller recognized for modern items that mix conventional stones and settings with distinctive shapes and hues impressed by nature. A long time earlier than he started working in jewelry, he practiced conventional stone carving in Hong Kong, utilizing minerals like jade to carve basic Chinese language topics. He started working in jewelry in 2011 after a six-month hiatus he spent finding out as a Buddhist monk. The twin presentation in Venice, which opened through the Venice Biennale’s vernissage week, blends Chan’s expertise in sculpture, jewellery-making and spirituality.
At Palazzo Contarini del Bovolo, the Fifteenth-century Venetian palazzo famed for its multi-storey spiral staircase, Chan presents Mythos, a site-specific set up of suspended sculptures that pulls inspiration from Venetian Renaissance portray and classical mythology. Mounted alongside the constructing’s exterior loggia are 4 sculptures exploring cosmology by means of the lens of Tintoretto’s The Three Graces and Mercury (1576-77), which hangs within the Doge’s Palace. In Tintoretto’s allegorical composition, the Three Graces—symbols of magnificence and pleasure—flank Mercury, the god of commerce and journey, celebrating Venice’s prosperity and maritime energy.
The well-known spiral staircase at Palazzo Contarini del Bovolo. Picture by Federico Sutera
Chan, who by means of an interpreter advised The Artwork Newspaper he has been fascinated by the parable for a lot of his life, has reimagined the figures from their classical idealised nude depictions. As an alternative, the Three Graces seem as twisting, summary faces, whereas Mercury is remodeled right into a celestial physique. Chan says he needed to point out the spirit and fantastic thing about the thoughts over the bodily type. The distorted faces seem to dissolve by means of movement, suggesting an infinite means of transformation. Chan compares this perpetual motion to the spiral staircase itself, making the shapes a metaphor for an endless pursuit.
The cosmological elements of the set up additionally have interaction with the constructing’s lesser-known scientific significance—due to its commanding peak above a lot of the Venetian skyline, the tower served as an astronomical remark level through the nineteenth century. The German astronomer Ernst Wilhelm Tempel made a number of discoveries from its rooftop, together with a comet and a nebula.
Contained in the palazzo, three sculptures are suspended in dialogue with one other Tintoretto masterpiece, Paradise. Hovering beneath the painted imaginative and prescient of heaven, the works are accompanied by a soundscape that includes recordings from Chan’s Shanghai workshop, the place the titanium kinds are hammered and polished. The economic sounds present a putting counterpoint to the set up’s ethereal ambiance. In a separate gallery, a big quartz crystal is paired with a poem written and recited by Chan. The recording is softly broadcast by means of discreet audio system, noticeable solely when guests go straight beneath them.

Chans’ sculptures and Tintoretto’s portray. Picture by Federico Sutera
The exhibition is curated by James Putnam, who for many years has positioned modern artwork in dialogue with historic collections, lengthy earlier than it turned a typical curatorial follow. Whereas serving as curator of Egyptian antiquities on the British Museum, he started putting in modern works alongside objects from the everlasting assortment, a transfer he says allowed the 2 sides to “energise one another”.
For Putnam, such juxtapositions are finally about broadening guests’ horizons. “It brings youthful individuals into the museum and rejects (the thought of it) as a boring place that they’re taken to after they’re in school,” he says.
The pairing of Chan’s sculptures with Tintoretto’s work emerged organically, Putnam says. He recollects seeing three of the works in Chan’s Shanghai studio and instantly sensing their affinity with the Renaissance grasp’s compositions.
“I noticed three sculptures that I assumed slot in very well in his studio in Shanghai, after which might have a dialogue with the Tintoretto portray. All of it tied in actually properly in a type of unintentional method,” he says. “However, you realize with Mr Chan, in fact, all the things is linked.”

Chan’s sculptures suspended contained in the Chapel of Santa Maria della Pietà. Picture by Federico Sutera
A 15-minute stroll away, Chan’s second presentation, Vessels of Different Worlds, occupies the Chapel of Santa Maria della Pietà, the distinguished 18th-century sanctuary on Venice’s waterfront within the Castello district. The church is maybe equally acquainted to Biennale guests for its proximity to the Resort Metropole, whose backyard has lengthy hosted vernissage events throughout opening week.
Chan beforehand exhibited on the chapel through the 2024 Venice Biennale. This 12 months, he returns with three suspended sculptures impressed by sacred oil vessels utilized in Catholic rituals. Their biomorphic kinds additionally draw on the fantastical, surreal imagery of Hieronymus Bosch, combining liturgical references with otherworldly visuals. The historic and non secular significance of the chapel knowledgeable the set up, Chan says. His aim was for the sculptures to exist in concord with the house, extending the location’s historic resonance and the works’ that means.

Wallace Chan. Picture by EM Studio
Every vessel stands roughly 1.5m excessive and affords a preview of a forthcoming exhibition on the Lengthy Museum in Shanghai, opening on 18 July. There, the kinds shall be realised on a monumental scale as sculptures reaching as much as 10m in peak, massive sufficient for guests to enter and expertise their revolving interiors. Collectively, the Venice displays and the Shanghai challenge set up a dialogue between two cities, each formed by maritime commerce and cultural alternate. In each, water serves as a recurring conceptual thread, each as a reflective floor and as a pressure of transformation.
The sculptures are long-established from titanium, a fabric prized for its distinctive strength-to-weight ratio. For Chan, the steel carries a symbolic dimension as effectively. He regards titanium as the fabric closest to eternity, lending permanence to works preoccupied with cosmology, historical past and the passage of time, all main themes of his displays.
Wallace Chan: Mythos, till 18 October, Scala Contarini del Bovolo, VeniceWallace Chan: Vessels of Different Worlds, till 18 October, Chapel of Santa Maria della Pietà, VeniceWallace Chan: Vessels of Different Worlds, 18 July-25 October, Lengthy Museum, Shanghai








