Somiya NagemArt & PhotographyNewsThe Gaza Biennale is coming to London tonightTaking place outside the ICA, the event is both a celebration of Palestinian artists and a protest against the complicity of British cultural institutionsShareLink copied ✔️January 14, 2025Art & PhotographyNewsTextJames GreigThe Gaza Biennale5 Imagesview more + The first UK event of the Gaza Biennale will take place tonight (January 14) outside of the ICA, London. The Gaza Biennale is a collective project involving over 60 Palestinian artists, many of whom are still based in Gaza and producing work under intolerable conditions. The Biennale is intended to be displayed both in Gaza itself and in partner institutions and galleries around the world. Tonight, featured artwork will be projected onto the walls of the ICA. The event is led by Gaza Biennale - Jinnaah UK (‘jinaah’ means ‘pavilion’ or ‘wing’ in Arabic’) and supported by Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM), a transnational, grassroots movement of Palestinian and Arab young people, along with The White Pube, Cultural Workers Against Genocide and Workers for a Free Palestine. As well as being an opportunity to celebrate the work of Palestinian artists, the Biennale is intended as a protest against the ICA, which tonight is hosting a private view for New Contemporaries, a new exhibition sponsored by Bloomberg Philanthropies. Led by billionaire Mike Bloomberg, this philanthropic organisation is “directly implicated in facilitating settlement infrastructure in the West Bank”, according to PYM. Last year, dozens of filmmakers signed a petition calling upon the New York Film Festival to cut ties with Bloomberg Philanthropies for the same reason, alleging that the organisation had funded a programme which trained mayors and city officials representing more than 40 West Bank settlements, which were found illegal by the International Court of Justice in 2024. Tonight, protesters will invite those attending the Bloomberg-sponsored event to join them instead outside the ICA for the Gaza Biennale. It will last from 6pm to 9pm, and the organisers advise people to dress warmly and bring a flask of tea. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThe waitress who disrupted the British Museum’s ball shares her storyThe Renaissance meets sci-fi in Isaac Julien’s new cinematic installationMagnum and Aperture have just launched a youth-themed print saleArt Basel Paris: 7 emerging artists to have on your radarInside Tyler Mitchell’s new blockbuster exhibition in ParisAn insider’s portrait of life as a young male modelRay Ban MetaIn pictures: Jefferson Hack launches new exhibition with exclusive eventArt to see this week if you’re not going to Frieze 2025Here’s what not to miss at Frieze 2025Portraits of sex workers just before a ‘charged encounter’Captivating photos of queer glamour in 70s New YorkThis erotic photobook archives a decade of queer intimacy