Annie Pootoogook, Composition (Women gathering whale meat), 2003-2004 at Humber Street Gallery, Hull. Photo: Rob Battersby
Annie Pootoogook, Composition (Women gathering whale meat), 2003-2004 at Humber Street Gallery, Hull. Photo: Rob Battersby
Reflecting on art’s role in society – and women’s place in art – Kathryn Ogram takes us on a journey through the work being done and presented by women in Hull. – Read more
Visitors with Haegue Yang’s ongoing series The Intermediates at Tate Liverpool, Liverpool Biennial 2018. Photo: Mark McNulty
Visitors with Haegue Yang’s ongoing series The Intermediates at Tate Liverpool, Liverpool Biennial 2018. Photo: Mark McNulty
Our handy guide is here to help you get the most out of your Liverpool Biennial experience: from advice on navigating the city-wide exhibition to finding the best places to stay, eat and drink. – Read more
Krzysztof Wodiczko, Guests, 2009. Installation view at Northlight (Brierfield) Mill, 2017. Photo: Pete Carr
Krzysztof Wodiczko, Guests, 2009. Installation view at Northlight (Brierfield) Mill, 2017. Photo: Pete Carr
Three different voices respond to the timely presentation of Krzysztof Wodiczko's striking installation Guests in a former cotton mill in Lancashire. – Read more
Lara Favaretto, Momentary Monument – The Stone, 2016. Photo: Mark McNulty
We follow the journey of Lara Favaretto’s towering artwork Momentary Monument – The Stone for the Biennial: a 10ft tall, 24-tonnes granite boulder on Liverpool's Welsh Streets. – Read more
From representations of trauma and the destruction of cultural heritage to the power of protest and the subversion through art, Helen Reynolds has detected a highly political slant to many of the artworks in Liverpool Biennial 2016. – Read more
Betty Woodman, Liverpool Fountain, 2016. Photo: Joel Chester Fildes
Why not start your Liverpool Biennial 2016 journey by exploring the exhibitions and public artworks on Liverpool’s world famous waterfront? Sufea Mohamad Noor takes us on a suggested route. – Read more
The Minecraft Infinity Project is a virtual world where players have come together online to create a vast sculptural landscape and portrait of the Biennial festival. The team behind the project explain how and why they created it. – Read more
Liverpool Biennial
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Liverpool L1 0BW
Liverpool Biennial is funded by
Founding Supporter
James Moores