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Artist's Shocking Biennale Art: Urine, Bells & Performance
19 May
Summary
- Artist Florentina Holzinger uses nudity, bells, and body waste in her Venice Biennale show.
- Performers engage in dangerous stunts, body piercing, and suspended acts for hours.
- The installation highlights sustainability and the value of different labor types.

Florentina Holzinger, representing Austria at the Venice Biennale, has created a highly provocative exhibition titled 'Seaworld Venice.' The performance art installation challenges audiences with acts involving nudity, body piercing, and performers submerged in filtered urine. Holzinger aims to provoke discussion on sustainability and the societal valuation of different types of labor.
Her company performs eight hours daily, regardless of weather, pushing the boundaries of performance art. Elements include performers suspended by body piercings, dangerous stunts, and the controversial use of filtered human waste. Holzinger sees the installation as a response to the biennial's focus on sustainability, forcing a confrontation with environmental realities.
The exhibition also features jetski stunts, contortion acts, and performers tending to the unusual 'toilet' facilities, which themselves are part of the artistic statement. Holzinger noted how visitors often disregard signage and treat performers impersonally, leading to her Instagram account being temporarily suspended due to shared content. This highlights her concerns about the consumption of art through screens.
Holzinger's work often tackles heavy themes such as the Catholic Church's control over women's bodies, blending them with elements of the absurd and humor. Performers, many with backgrounds in circus and stunt work, demonstrate extreme physical commitment, with some bearing numerous scars from past performances. Despite the intense subject matter, Holzinger insists on incorporating comedy and hope, stating she doesn't take herself too seriously as an artist.