The announcement of Pirelli Hangar Bicocca’s 2026-2027 biennial program goes beyond a mere curatorial schedule, presenting itself as a structural inquiry into the condition of humanity in hypermodernity. The sequence of eight solo exhibitions transforms from a calendar into a deliberate attempt to map the contemporary era through artistic experience. Situated in a former industrial architectural matrix, the institution meticulously deconstructs its own function, transforming from a site of preservation into one of intensive hybridization—a hyper-functional non-museum space that demands not contemplation from the visitor, but activation.
All the exhibitions coming to Hangar Bicocca in 2026-27
Rirkrit Tiravanija, Janet Cardiff & George Bures Miller as well as Luciano Fabro and Cecilia Vicuña: the 2026-2027 program at the Milanese institution will feature eight exhibitions exploring the “living relationship” between artistic practice and architectural practice.
Courtesy the artists and Luhring Augustine, New York Photo Markus Tretter
Courtesy the artists and Luhring Augustine, New York Photo Roman März
Courtesy the artists and Luhring Augustine, New York
Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Seoul, and London © 2025 Cecilia Vicuña / SIAE
Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Seoul, and London © 2025 Cecilia Vicuña / SIAE Photo © Tate, Matt Greenwood
Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Seoul, and London © 2025 Cecilia Vicuña / SIAE Photo Christian Chierego
Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Seoul, and London © 2025 Cecilia Vicuña / SIAE Photo Christian Chierego
Courtesy Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art, Aomori, and Take Ninagawa, Tokyo Photo Naoya Hatakeyama
Courtesy the artist and SculptureCenter, New York Photo Kyle Knodell
Courtesy the artist and Bortolami, New York
Courtesy the artist, Mennour, Paris, and WENTRUP, Berlin © 2025 Hicham Berrada / SIAE Photo Catherine Brossais
Courtesy the artist, Mennour, Paris, and WENTRUP, Berlin © 2025 Hicham Berrada / SIAE Photo Hicham Berrada
Courtesy the artist, Mennour, Paris, and WENTRUP, Berlin © 2025 Hicham Berrada / SIAE Photo Palazzo Grassi – Delfino Sisto Legnani & Marco Cappelletti
Courtesy the artist and neugerriemschneider, Berlin
Courtesy the artist and Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris Photo Florian Kleinefenn
Courtesy the artist Photo Matthias Hermann
Courtesy the artist and Emanuela Campoli, Paris/Milan Photo Luca Vianello and Silvia Mangosio
Courtesy Galleria Christian Stein, Turin Photo Mario Sarotto
© Archivio Fotografico A. Guidetti e G. Ricci Photo Giovanni Ricci
Courtesy the artist and Adrià Goula Photo Adrià Goula
Courtesy the artist and Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid Photo Joaquín Cortes and Román Lores
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- Valentina Petrucci
- 12 December 2025
The rhetoric of an “organic vision” and a “fully accessible experience,” promoted by President Marco Tronchetti Provera and Artistic Director Vincent Todolí, can also be read as a socio-cultural compensatory operation. Implicitly acknowledging the disconnection between the institution and the broader community, it seeks to mend the social fabric through performative and relational art, using accessibility as a vector for democratic legitimation. Here, art becomes a civic act—a tool to reassign meaning to spaces otherwise emptied by disused productive function. The Nave and the Shed, once industrial sites, are reconfigured into temporary heterotopias, resting and transit fields for critical narratives of the contemporary. The curatorial selection follows a dual analytical trajectory: a critique of relational bodies and a critique of the space of power.
Here, art becomes a civic act—a tool to reassign meaning to spaces otherwise emptied by disused productive function.
The early segment of 2026 focuses on the deconstruction of social bonds and bodily intimacy in the civilization of controlled isolation. Benni Bosetto examines domestic architecture not as refuge—the quintessential identity space—but as an “unsettled home,” a membrane between interior and exterior, where rest and intimacy function as acts of non-productive resistance. It is the temporal suspension of everyday gestures that becomes critical. This suspension finds its fullest expression in the work of Rirkrit Tiravanija. His relational practice, through cooking and shared spaces of rest, operates as a microsociology of forced encounter, transforming the exhibition space into a site of intersubjective transit. Installations that mimic modernist architecture are not stylistic quotations but commentaries on the utopian futility of twentieth-century housing projects in the face of the fundamental need to “do together.”
Aki Sasamoto completes the inquiry by dissecting human behaviors as a “constellation of obsessions and contradictions,” highlighting the ritual fragility underlying sociality in the non-urban, non-place context. The exhibition dedicated to Luciano Fabro acts as a reconnection, anchoring the institution to the genealogy of Arte Povera, the movement that first thematized the dialectical relationship between sculptural object, exhibition space, and precarious materiality.
The 2027 program projects the inquiry onto the plane of political ecology and de-hierarchized sensoriality. Carlos Bunga uses material precarity—cardboard, fabrics—to confront architecture as a structure of power. His work is an act of deconstruction of the Shed, making tangible the ephemerality and instability defining marginal existences. Architecture is reduced to its structural vulnerability, a commentary on the dysfunction of urban control. Janet Cardiff & George Bures Miller, an established artistic duo, enact a fundamental sensory shift: they replace the hegemony of vision with that of listening.
The early segment of 2026 focuses on the deconstruction of social bonds and bodily intimacy in the civilization of controlled isolation. The 2027 program projects the inquiry onto the plane of political ecology and de-hierarchized sensoriality.
Their “sound walks” transform visitors into acoustic explorers, reconstructing reality through layers of personal and collective memory. It is the creation of augmented reality through the immaterial medium of sound. The section concludes with an exploration of primordial materiality and ancestral resistance. Hicham Berrada turns the Shed into a laboratory of natural processes, where magnetism and chemical reactions become autonomous performances, investigating the landscape as an entity in perpetual transformation. Finally, Cecilia Vicuña counters the structural violence of supermodernity with ancestral knowledge and humble materials—wool, quipu. Her art is a political act of ecological memory, transforming the exhibition space into a living archive that resists oblivion and commodification.
Pirelli Hangar Bicocca’s 2026-2027 program can be seen as a critical pathway using art to explore the frictions of the small world—intimacy, body, relationships—and the large world—architecture, power, ecology. The institution itself becomes a social accelerator, generating temporary sites of intense identity, relationality, and critical history, ensuring its relevance through the promise of inclusion (as evidenced by its Public Program and accessibility protocols), which underpins its ethical and social legitimacy.
Installation view, “The Secret Hotel,” Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria, 2005
Installation view, Nationalgalerie im Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin, 2009
Installation view, Menil Collection, Houston, 2015
Installation view, “Hyundai Commission. Cecilia Vicuña: Brain Forest Quipu,” Tate Modern, London, 2022
Ritual performance, documenta 14, Athens, 2014
Ritual performance, documenta 14, Athens, 2014
Installation view, “Thank You Memory: From Cidre to Contemporary Art,” Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art, Aomori, 2020
“Aki Sasamoto: Delicate Cycle,” SculptureCenter, New York, 2016
Single-channel video, color, sound, 23’29”. Original soundtrack by Matt Baude
Installation view, “74803 Jours,” Abbaye de Maubuisson, SaintOuen-l’Aumône, France, 2017
Installation view, “Voyage d’Hiver,” Jardin du château de Versailles, Francia, 2019
Installation view, “Luogo e Segni,” Punta della Dogana, Venice, 2019
Installation view, “Nutopi/Nowtopia,” Rooseum, Malmö, 1995
Installation view, “Dom-Ino (Une démonstration d’automne),” Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris, 1998
Installation view, Secession, Vienna, 2002
Performance, “Vibrant Natures. On Decay and Rebirth,” Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rivoli-Turin, 2024
Installation view, “Letture parallele III. Coreografie,” Galleria Christian Stein, Turin, 1975
Installation view, Manifesta 15 Barcelona Metropolitana, 2024
Installation view, Palacio de Cristal, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, 2022