15th Shanghai Biennale Explores Communication Between Human and Non-Human Intelligence
The 15th Shanghai Biennale, titled 'Does the flower hear the bee?', is currently on view at the Power Station of Art in Shanghai through March 31. Curated by Kitty Scott, the exhibition examines modes of perception and communication across different forms of intelligence. The show features a major installation by Puerto Rico-based artists Allora & Calzadilla titled 'Phantom Forest' (2025), consisting of synthetic yellow flowers suspended in the museum's atrium. Visitors receive honey samples from New Zealand's True Honey Company, framing their experience through the metaphor of bees gathering nectar. Other notable works include Aki Inomata's 'How to Carve a Sculpture' (2018–), where beavers from Japanese zoos create wooden forms that are then replicated at human scale; Xu Tiantian's documentary 'Into the Island' (2024) about designing a museum on Meizhou Island; and Rirkrit Tiravanija's text piece 'untitled 2025' (2025) stating 'THE FORM OF THE FLOWER IS UNKNOWN TO THE SEED'. Indigenous perspectives are represented through works like Audie Murray's 'To Make Smoke' (2025), featuring charcoal smudges from ceremonial plant burning. The exhibition includes contributions from artists such as Chen Ruofan, Gözde Mimiko Türkkan, Francis Alÿs, Cansu Yıldıran, and Rohini Devasher, exploring themes of labor, environmental awareness, and knowledge systems. The biennial positions art institutions as spaces for navigating contemporary uncertainty and fostering new forms of sensory communication.
Key facts
- The 15th Shanghai Biennale runs through March 31 at Power Station of Art in Shanghai
- Exhibition theme explores communication between human and non-human intelligence
- Major installation 'Phantom Forest' by Allora & Calzadilla features synthetic flowers
- Visitors receive honey samples from New Zealand's True Honey Company
- Works include contributions from over 10 international artists across various media
- Curator Kitty Scott organized the exhibition around sensory perception themes
- Exhibition includes Indigenous perspectives from artists like Audie Murray
- Biennial addresses contemporary global issues through artistic investigation
Entities
Artists
- Allora & Calzadilla
- Aki Inomata
- Xu Tiantian
- Rirkrit Tiravanija
- Audie Murray
- Chen Ruofan
- Gözde Mimiko Türkkan
- Francis Alÿs
- Cansu Yıldıran
- Rohini Devasher
- Haegue Yang
- Shuvinai Ashoona
- d harding
- Kim Adams
- Abbas Akhavan
- Ryoko Aoki
- Carmen Argot
- Alvaro Barrington
- Lêna Bùi
- Tania Candiani
- Maxime Cavajani
- Carolina Caycedo
- Cheng Xinhào
- Sara Cwynar
- Dan Er
- Miguel Fernández de Castro
- Cristina Flores Pescorán
- Theaster Gates
- Abraham González Pacheco
- Brett Graham
- Hao Liang
- Ho Tzu Nyen
- Ngahina Hohaia
- Hu Xiaoyuan
- Huang Yongping
- Ulala Imai
- Brian Jungen
- Lotus L. Kang
- Amar Kanwar
- Christine Sun Kim
- Ragnar Kjartansson
- Jaffa Lam
- Lina Lapelytė
- Liu Shuai
- Sharon Lockhart
- Liz Magor
- Gordon Matta-Clark
- Ari Benjamin Meyers
- Kosen Ohtsubo
- Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham
- Lisa Oppenheim
- Plant South Salesroom
- Qiu Shihua
- R. H. Quaytman
- Walid Raad
- Shao Chun
- Shao Fan
- Heji Shin
- Tan Jing
- Shannon Te Ao
- Luke Willis Thompson
- Hajra Waheed
- Evelyn Taocheng Wang
- Ami Yamasaki
- Masaomi Yasunaga
- Gozo Yoshimasu
- Zhou Tao
- Kitty Scott
- Xue Tan
- Daisy Desrosiers
Institutions
- Power Station of Art
- True Honey Company
- DnA Design and Architecture
- Kodaikanal Solar Observatory
- Shanghai Biennale
- The Power Station of Art
Locations
- Shanghai
- Puerto Rico
- New Zealand
- Japan
- Meizhou Island
- Fujian
- Canada
- Turkey
- India
- Mexico
- Democratic Republic of Congo
- China