La Biennale di Venezia is not simply an art fair staged in Venice every two years. Founded in 1895, it is one of the world’s oldest and most influential cultural institutions, widely regarded as one of the contemporary art world’s most important recurring exhibitions. For artists, curators and countries alike, participation in the Biennale remains one of the art world’s most prestigious markers of international visibility.
Every two years, Venice transforms into a global cultural stage as exhibitions unfold across the city’s historic palazzi, churches and foundations. At the centre of the Biennale are two emblematic sites: the Giardini and the Arsenale. The Giardini, public gardens created during the Napoleonic era, house many of the permanent national pavilions where countries including Britain, France, Germany and the United States present their official exhibitions. Nearby, the Arsenale — the vast former shipyard of the Venetian Republic — provides monumental industrial spaces for large-scale contemporary installations and the Biennale’s international exhibition. Together, the Giardini and the Arsenale form the institutional heart of the Biennale, while exhibitions and collateral events spread throughout Venice’s palazzi, churches and foundations during the months-long event.
Over more than a century, the Biennale has helped define the international contemporary art conversation, launching or consolidating the careers of some of the most important artists of the modern era. More than an exhibition, it functions as a barometer of artistic, political and cultural change.
This is the context in which Bvlgari has announced its role as Exclusive Partner of the International Art Exhibition until 2030. The agreement marks the first time the Biennale has granted a luxury maison this type of long-term exclusive status, signalling a notable evolution in the relationship between major cultural institutions and private patronage.
Luxury brands have long supported exhibitions, museums and restoration projects in Italy, but traditionally through sponsorships tied to individual events, pavilions or heritage initiatives. Bvlgari’s partnership goes considerably further. Rather than acting solely as a sponsor, the Roman jeweller is embedding itself within the Biennale through commissions, exhibitions and institutional collaborations extending across several editions.
The maison will inaugurate its role in 2026 with two major artistic initiatives. At the Giardini, the newly created Bvlgari Pavilion will host Canadian artist Lotus L. Kang, whose installations explore transformation, memory and the passage of time through light-sensitive film and evolving sculptural elements. At the Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana, meanwhile, Fondazione Bvlgari — launched in 2024 to expand the brand’s cultural and philanthropic activities — will present works by Italian artists Lara Favaretto and Monia Ben Hamouda. Favaretto, one of Italy’s most respected contemporary artists, is known for large-scale works examining fragility, disappearance and the instability of monuments, while the younger Milan-born Tunisian-Italian artist Ben Hamouda has gained international attention for installations exploring language, spirituality and Mediterranean identity.
The partnership also reflects Bvlgari’s broader strategy of embedding itself within Italy’s cultural landscape. Over the years, the maison has contributed to major restoration projects including the Spanish Steps in Rome, the mosaics of the Baths of Caracalla and works at Venice’s Doge’s Palace and Murano. At the same time, it has strengthened ties with contemporary art through collaborations with institutions such as MAXXI in Rome and the Whitney Biennial in New York.
For the Biennale itself, the arrival of a long-term exclusive luxury partner reflects the growing importance of private funding within the cultural sector. For Bvlgari, the partnership offers more than visibility: it places the Roman jeweller in close proximity to one of the art world’s most influential international platforms.
The 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia runs from 9 May to 22 November 2026, with preview days taking place from 6 to 8 May. The exhibition unfolds across the Giardini, the Arsenale and various locations throughout Venice. Main Biennale tickets include access to both the Giardini and the Arsenale, while collateral exhibitions across the city may be free, ticketed or require advance booking, depending on the venue.
