Palazzo Grassi, Venice, Italy
March 29, 2026–January 10, 2027
Michael Armitage will be the subject of a major solo exhibition at the Palazzo Grassi, with a selection of over one hundred and fifty works, including newly created pieces. The included works emphasize his dense and vibrant pictorial language, staging figures in rich compositions with remarkable chromatic intensity, at the crossroads of several aesthetic canons. His choice of subject matter and interpretive undertones share the same expressive power. The painter does not shy away from violent and harsh themes, believing that art cannot ignore reality but must instead grapple with it: the consequences of war, corruption and instability in equatorial regions, the migration crisis, the weight of societal judgment, and abuses of power form the backdrop of some of his poignant works.
Based between Kenya and Indonesia, Armitage draws inspiration from a wide range of sources: historical and contemporary news, political demonstrations, literature, cinema, local rituals, colonial and modern architecture, flora and fauna, and global art history. At the heart of his iconography is East Africa, and Kenya in particular, which he explores with both critical, satirical insight and visionary depth. While some scenes are precisely located or situated in time, notably when the artist followed a team of journalists covering the opposition movements and their violent repression during the 2017 elections in Kenya, or when he depicts incidents related to the 2020-21 lockdown, others remain more elusive and universal. This ambiguity leads Armitage into fluid territories. The exhibition, spread across two levels of the Palazzo Grassi, gradually delves deeper into this exploration of inhabited landscapes and visions. Armitage’s scenes become denser, even blurred, leaving room for our own interpretation.When viewing a painting by Michael Armitage, the eye hesitates, skitters and darts away.
Several narratives and lines of horizon cohabitate, real and fictional spaces are entangled, and different versions and viewpoints are superposed. Treated with a mix of violence and gentleness, the compositions retain their flamboyance despite their subjects’ harshness. Armitage gives free rein to his visions, creating haunted or even hallucinatory landscapes.
Among his motifs are real and imagined figures, drawn from contemporary African literature as well as Greek mythology, who embody a certain inner state and testify from external conditions. At other times, anonymous individuals are depicted, as in the series on migration, which attempts to represent in large-scale tableaux the perilous journey of migrants across Africa, the often-deadly sea crossing to Europe, and the disillusionment of those who succeed. Drawing on sometimes direct references to scenes from films by the Senegalese director Sembene Ousmane (1923-2007), to characters from the Kenyan writer Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s novels (1938-2025), or to painting compositions by Francisco de Goya (1746-1828), Diego Velazquez (1599-1660), or by modernist African artists such as Jak Katarikawe (1940-2018) and Peter Mulindwa (1943-2022) among others, Armitage brilliantly condenses these inspirations into a form of synthesis to create a new language for our time.
Michael Armitage: The Promise of Change is curated by Jean-Marie Gallais, curator, Pinault Collection, in collaboration with Hans-Ulrich Obrist, art director, Serpentine Galleries, for the catalogue, and Caroline Bourgeois, advisor, Pinault Collection, and Michelle Mlati, art historian.
Learn more at Palazzo Grassi.
