Our Mission Statement

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The Kochi-Muziris Biennale seeks to invoke the latent cosmopolitan spirit of the modern metropolis of Kochi and its mythical past, Muziris, to create a platform that will introduce contemporary, global visual art theory and practice to India. It will attempt to showcase and debate new Indian and international aesthetics and experiences and enable a dialogue among artists, curators, cultural practitioners and the public.

The Kochi-Muziris Biennale seeks to create a new language of cosmopolitanism and modernity that is rooted in the lived and living experience of this old trading port, which, for more than six centuries, has been a crucible of numerous communal identities. Kochi is among the few cities in India where pre-colonial traditions of cultural pluralism continue to flourish. These traditions pre-date the post-Enlightenment ideas of cultural pluralism, globalisation and multiculturalism.

They can be traced to Muziris, the ancient city that was buried under layers of mud and mythology after a massive flood in the 14 th century. The site was recently identified and is currently under excavation. It is necessary to explore and, when necessary, retrieve memories of this past, and its present, in the current global context to posit alternatives to political and cultural discourses emanating from the specific histories of Europe and America. A dialogue for a new aesthetics and politics rooted in the Indian experience, but receptive to the winds blowing in from other worlds, is possible.The Kochi-Muziris Biennale seeks to establish itself as a centre for artistic engagement in India by drawing from the rich tradition of public action and public engagement in Kerala, where Kochi is located. The emergence of Kerala as a distinct political and social project with lessons for many developing societies owes also to aesthetic interventions that have subverted notions of social and cultural hierarchies. These interventions are immanent in the numerous genres and practices of our rich tradition of arts. In a world of competing power structures, it is necessary to balance the interests and independence of artists, art institutions, and the public.It seeks to reflect the new confidence of Indian people who are slowly, but surely, building a new society that aims to be liberal, inclusive, egalitarian and democratic. The time has come to tell the story of cultural practices that are distinct to the Indian people and local traditions, practices and discourses that are shaping the idea of India. These share a lot with the artistic visions emerging from India’s neighbourhood. The Biennale also seeks to project the new energy of artistic practices in the subcontinent.It seeks to explore the hidden energies latent in India’s past and present artistic traditions and invent a new language of coexistence and cosmopolitanism that celebrates the multiple identities people live with. The dialogue will be with, within, and across identities fostered by language, religion and other ideologies. The Biennale seeks to resist and interrogate representations of cosmopolitanism and modernity that thrive by subsuming differences through co-option and coercion.The Kochi-Muziris Biennale seeks to be a project in appreciation of, and education about, artistic expression and its relationship with society. It seeks to be a new space and a fresh voice that protects and projects the autonomy of the artist and her pursuit to constantly reinvent the world we live in.

Founded in 2011, Kochi-Muziris Biennale is India’s first ever biennial of international contemporary art and its story is unique to India’s current reality—its political, social and artistic landscape. It began as a government initiative, when the Department of Cultural Affairs of Government of Kerala approached two artists—Riyas Komu and Bose Krishnamachari—to help organize an international platform for art in India. The challenge was proportionate to the ambition of the project. A biennial had never gotten past the conceptual stage in India before. There was no existing infrastructure necessary for an exhibition of this scale...
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The Kochi-Muziris Biennale seeks to invoke the latent cosmopolitan spirit of the modern metropolis of Kochi and its mythical past, Muziris, to create a platform that will introduce contemporary, global visual art theory and practice to India.

It will attempt to showcase and debate new Indian and international aesthetics and experiences and enable a dialogue among artists, curators, cultural practitioners and the public.

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The Kochi-Muziris Biennale seeks to create a new language of cosmopolitanism and modernity that is rooted in the lived and living experience of this old trading port, which, for more than six centuries, has been a crucible of numerous communal identities.

Kochi is among the few cities in India where pre-colonial traditions of cultural pluralism continue to flourish. 

2/9

These traditions pre-date the post-Enlightenment ideas of cultural pluralism, globalisation and multiculturalism. They can be traced to Muziris, the ancient city that was buried under layers of mud and mythology after a massive flood in the 14 th century.

The site was recently identified and is currently under excavation. 

3/9

It is necessary to explore and, when necessary, retrieve memories of this past, and its present, in the current global context to posit alternatives to political and cultural discourses emanating from the specific histories of Europe and America.

A dialogue for a new aesthetics and politics rooted in the Indian experience, but receptive to the winds blowing in from other worlds, is possible.

4/9

The Kochi-Muziris Biennale seeks to establish itself as a centre for artistic engagement in India by drawing from the rich tradition of public action and public engagement in Kerala, where Kochi is located.

The emergence of Kerala as a distinct political and social project with lessons for many developing societies owes also to aesthetic interventions that have subverted notions of social and cultural hierarchies. 

5/9

These interventions are immanent in the numerous genres and practices of our rich tradition of arts. In a world of competing power structures, it is necessary to balance the interests and independence of artists, art institutions, and the public.

It seeks to reflect the new confidence of Indian people who are slowly, but surely, building a new society that aims to be liberal, inclusive, egalitarian and democratic. 

6/9

The time has come to tell the story of cultural practices that are distinct to the Indian people and local traditions, practices and discourses that are shaping the idea of India.

These share a lot with the artistic visions emerging from India’s neighbourhood. The Biennale also seeks to project the new energy of artistic practices in the subcontinent. 

7/9

It seeks to explore the hidden energies latent in India’s past and present artistic traditions and invent a new language of coexistence and cosmopolitanism that celebrates the multiple identities people live with.

The dialogue will be with, within, and across identities fostered by language, religion and other ideologies. The Biennale seeks to resist and interrogate representations of cosmopolitanism and modernity that thrive by subsuming differences through co-option and coercion.

8/9

The Kochi-Muziris Biennale seeks to be a project in appreciation of, and education about, artistic expression and its relationship with society.

It seeks to be a new space and a fresh voice that protects and projects the autonomy of the artist and her pursuit to constantly reinvent the world we live in.

9/9

People of KBF

Bose Krishnamachari

President & Biennale Director
Artist/Curator

Bonny Thomas

Treasurer
Writer/Cartoonist

Lizzie Jacob

Secretary
Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Kerala

NS Madhavan

Joint Secretary
Writer/Former IAS officer

Adeeb Ahamed

Trustee
Managing Director, Lulu Financial Group

Amrita Jhaveri

Trustee
Founder, Jhaveri Contemporary

Jitish Kallat

Trustee
Artist/Curator

Shabana Faizal

Trustee
Co-Founder & Vice Chairperson, The Faizal & Shabana Foundation

Tony Joseph

Trustee
Architect

Tourism Director

Trustee - Government Nominee
Tourism Directorate, Govt. of Kerala

Sreekala S Panikar

Trustee - Government Nominee
Joint Secretary, Dept. of Finance, Govt. of Kerala

Aarti Lohia

Philanthropist, Art Collector
Head & Trustee, SP Lohia Foundation

KV Thomas

Former Member of Parliament
Government of India

MA Baby

Former Minister of Education & Cultural Affairs, Government of Kerala

Adoor Gopalakrishnan

Film-maker

Anish Kapoor

Artist

Shashi Tharoor

Member of Parliament

PK Hormis Tharakan

(Former) Secretary (R)
Cabinet Secretariat, GOI

KJ Sohan

Former Mayor of Kochi

Tasneem Zakaria Mehta

Honorary Director
Bhau Daji Lad Museum, Mumbai

Alex Kuruvilla

Managing Director
Conde Nast India

G Vijayaraghavan

Founder CEO, Technopark
Former Member, Kerala State Planning Board

V Sunil

Co-founder, Motherland

Mariam Ram

TNQ Publications

Bose Krishnamachari

Biennale Director

Mario D’Souza

Director of Programmes & KMB 2022 Curatorial Team Member

Dr. Shwetal A. Patel


International Partnerships & Programmes

Ananthan Suresh

Programme Manager (Discursive and Public Programmes)

Bindhu Chester

Accountant

Benson William

Inventory In-charge

Blaise Joseph

Programme Manager – ABC

Anupama KT

Video Editor

Swanoop John

Photographer

Manvi Bajaj

Programme Manager (Curatorial)

Vinod Ramaswamy

Production Manager

Sana Paul

Executive Assistant to the President and Biennale Director