Arch Hades photographed in her studio by Eva Herzog

In her newest exhibition ‘Return | Ritorno’, the poet and artist Arch Hades has transformed the historic site of Scoletta Battioro e Tiraoro di Venezia into a stage for her artworks. Displayed amongst the building’s architecture, paintings, and sculpture, Arch Hades has created an immersive environment of large-scale works and soundscape for the 61st Venice Biennale

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Return | Ritorno  unfolds across three floors of the Scoletta Battioro e Tiraoro di Venezia, a decommissioned church on the Grand Canal in Venice. Photograph by Eva Herzog

Arch Hades uses fibreglass and acrylic polymer to create a ‘marble’ finish for her piece I want to return to the past but no one will be there, as part of her Confessions Series. Photograph by Eliot Gelberg-Wilson

Return, 2025. The centrepiece of the exhibition is a monumental 22-panel painting spanning 13 metres which pays homage to Greco-Roman sculpture. Photographed by Eva Herzog

LUX Editor-in-Chief Darius Sanai with Arch Hades at the opening of Return | Ritorno for the 61st Venice Biennale

Arch Hades combines her poetry with visual art in her display of Sphinx, 2026. Photography by Eva Herzog

Arch Hades, Rain, 2025, exhibited alongside the site-specific work of Scoletta Battioro e Tiraoro di Venezia. Photography by Eva Herzog

Exhibition details:

Return | Ritorno  
Scoletta Battioro e Tiraoro di Venezia
Supported by Erarta Foundation 
7 May - 30 October 2026 

archhades.com

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A portrait of Jennifer Shorto, a textile and wallpaper designer who is inspired by antique textiles from across the world

Jennifer Shorto, textile and wallpaper creator for the famous and discerning around the world, chooses six pieces for the season from the quirkily magnificent collections of London-based jeweller Cora Sheibani

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1. Decorated Gugelhupf ring

Platinum with ebony, diamond, ruby and blue sapphire: there are only bold rings for me – ebony with gems shifts attention from my hands to drama. I am fascinated by wood with stones.

2. Transition earrings

Platinum with pink spinel and grey sapphire: these are classical yet unexpected – rigorous in line, playful in pink. They seduce me into wearing earrings again.

Read more: Bentley by LUNAZ review

3. Triple C&C necklace

Citrine and silex jasper, with 18k yellow-gold clasp: citrine is liquid sunshine, its luminous gold complements my skin and clothes, radiating warmth and vibrant energy.

4. Tetris brooch with jabot pin

18k champagne gold with smoky quartz and aquamarine: I love holding dresses and jackets together with brooches. Smoky quartz with aquamarine is a quietly stunning pairing.

Read more: A tasting of Joseph Phelps wines with Maison President David Pearson

5. Sorbet ring

18k rose gold with peach and purple Edison pearls: the colour clash of these gems is delicious – I’m thrilled to see these unusual pearls.

6. B&B earrings

18k yellow gold with Palmeira citrine and orange zircon: flattering and vibrant, they light up the face. Rigour keeps them timeless, never old-fashioned.

All corasheibani.com

jennifershorto.com

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Claudio Laager, photographed by Isabella Sheherazade Sanai

Claudio Laager is the General Manager of the Grand Hotel Kronenhof in Pontresina. A local to the Engadin valley, Laager brings a personal perspective to luxury hospitality, blending tradition with a hands-on approach that connects guests to the natural beauty surrounding the hotel. LUX speaks to him about the unique stay offered at the Kronenhof

LUX: How would you characterise the Kronenhof and Pontresina compared to the Kulm and St Moritz?

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Claudio Laager: Whereas St. Moritz attracts the international, lifestyle-focused set, Pontresina is a more typically Swiss holiday destination. People come here because of the beautiful nature and the original charm of the village. In St. Moritz you can buy luxury handbags in almost every store. Here in Pontresina, people are perfectly happy with the sports shops selling hiking and cross-country skiing equipment.

A view of the Grand Hotel Kronenhof from the surrounding snowy alps

LUX: What changes have you brought in under your management?

CL: When I took over the management in 2023, I decided to get closer to the guests and help them discover the beautiful landscape surrounding the Grand Hotel Kronenhof.

Read more: Umberta Beretta on the artists and philanthropists of Venice

As a local who grew up here, I know the best spots, and I regularly take guests out on excursions. Every Friday at dusk, for example, I take guests to the Val Bever for wildlife watching. It’s a different, authentic way to experience the Engadin valley.

LUX: Is summer in the Alps becoming more appealing for more people?

Hotel Kronenhof’s neo-Baroque Grand Restaurant, dating back to 1872

CL: Yes, summer in the Alps has so many advantages, not least the very mild, comfortable temperatures, especially compared to southern Europe at that time of year. It’s never crowded and wonderfully relaxed. Autumn is also a personal favourite of mine. During foliage season the forest takes on a golden glow and it’s quite something. We are one of the only five-star properties in the area to stay open in autumn, and we’re seeing more and more bookings and returning guests who have discovered the special allure of this time of year.

LUX: There are lots of luxury chain hotels opening now in the Alps. How is the Kronenhof able to compete?

CL: Well, I’m pretty sure it comes down to the uniqueness of the place itself, one of the oldest and most beautiful “Belle Époque” structures in the Alps, in a perfect location with breathtaking mountain views. That’s very hard to replicate. And then there’s the service element too. We strive for excellence, but we also look for personality in our staff. There has to be room for individuality.

A view of the alps from the lobby lounge

LUX: Is discreet luxury going to be lost with the rise of the social media generation?

CL: Not really. We’re actually seeing quite the opposite here. Guests come to disconnect and rediscover more analogue pleasures. For example, once guests are in-house, we prefer to communicate through handwritten notes. It’s a small detail, but it’s becoming an increasingly rare one.

Read more: Bentley by LUNAZ review

LUX: What is your exact favourite moment of the day, week, month and year to have a drink in your bar and what would you drink?

CL: My daily schedule doesn’t often allow me to wind down at work and have a drink. On my day off I usually enjoy simple beer or a good red wine.

kronenhof.com

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A portrait of Umberta Beretta – philanthropist, art collector and LUX Contributing Editor – in situ

Philanthropist, collector and LUX Contributing Editor Umberta Gnutti Beretta is one of the leading lights of the Italian contemporary cultural scene.  As the 2026 Biennale takes off, the guest editor of our Venice Biennale Special section, who has a must-see private art space at her family’s factory in Brescia, shares her thoughts on contemporary artists she admires who have studied and created in Venice.

She also nominates four luminaries in the city’s cultural scene, who in turn share their thoughts on their creative and collecting practices, and on the latest artistic transformation of La Serenissima

Venice is historically the home of the events within the contemporary art ecosystem. Although the exhibition takes place every two years, the reasons that position Venice as a central hub for artists extend far beyond this recurring occasion.

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The city welcomes artists not only as visitors or privileged observers, but also as students and researchers. The Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia has long represented a fundamental educational context for many contemporary artistic practices. Among the artists who have developed a significant part of their trajectory there and who I admire are Giulia Andreani, Iva Lulashi and Marta Spagnoli, just to name a few.

Back to Earth, 2024, by Anastasiya Parvanova

For some, Venice does not remain a temporary experience, it becomes an existential and professional choice, a place in which to live and create.

Within this context, a visit to the walk-up studio of Giorgio Andreotta Calò, a native of Venice, is a key to understanding the profound relationship between artistic practice, urban space and the lagoon environment. Giorgio Andreotta Calò has spent time in Berlin and Amsterdam, but his studio remains in Venice.

Another Venice native is Chiara Enzo, a young painter who brings into her painting the dampness and the dim light of her city. Trained, like many others, in the classrooms of the Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia, she has the ability to enchant you with her small canvases.

She was invited by curator Cecilia Alemani to take part in the Biennale The Milk of Dreams in 2022, and it was precisely there that I noticed her. I have not yet walked through her studio, but it sits firmly on my wish list: a room I do not yet know, and that I cannot wait to discover.

Calipso (Summer Solar Power), 2021, by Thomas Braida

And then there is Thomas Braida. He lives and works in Venice but was born in Gorizia, a borderland between Italy and Slovenia. He carries with him that silent geography. Extremely reserved in speech (he weighs his words), on canvas he opens up without restraint and his gesture becomes his narrative.

Anastasiya Parvanova comes from Bulgaria, where she studied visual arts and pedagogy. Venice welcomed her later, and she stayed.

Read more: Bentley by LUNAZ review

She paints spaces that do not exist, marginal presences, subjects that usually escape the eye, dreamlike universes. In her work, the invisible finds form. Just some of the fantastic painters to be discovered through the narrow calles of this magnificent city.

umbertagnuttiberetta.com

Adele Re Rebaudengo, President of the Venice Gardens Foundation

Adele Re Rebaudengo – President, Venice Gardens Foundation

The foundation of Adele Re Rebaudengo has restored both the Royal Gardens of Venice and the Convent Garden of the Most Holy Redeemer, with both open to the public

In 2010, I moved to Venice to devote myself gardens. In 2014, I co-founded the Venice Gardens Foundation to restore gardens in difficulty, bringing them back to their beauty.

The restored gardens of the Capuchin friars of the Church of the Most Holy Redeemer, Guidecca

This is not only to protect the city’s landscape, botanical and architectural heritage, but to affirm the fundamental role that gardens play in a community. Seeing gardens cared for by the Foundation now used again with joy and love fuels my commitment. As living beings, gardens should not be neglected, but accompanied along their path of growth with care and attention.

Read more: A tasting of Joseph Phelps wines with Maison President David Pearson

Italy is known for the art of gardening, a body of knowledge that combines aesthetics, culture and a passionate understanding of nature. It is a heritage of contemporary relevance, telling the story of the symbiotic relationship between ourselves and the landscape.

The restored Royal Gardens of Venice, adjacent to San Marco

Being heirs to this history brings a responsibility to preserve, expand and pass it on. Gardens are more than ornamental spaces: they unfold horizons – of life, memory and relationships, giving communities a greater opportunity for wellbeing than any other space.

In Venice, there are many gardens to rediscover, sheltered behind high walls, concealed within ancient palace courtyards or scattered among the narrow streets. They represent a precious presence for the city and help ensure its balance and harmony, but many require conservation work to continue to occupy their central place in the Venetian urban fabric. No community exists without a space to inhabit, because it is itself a dimension, a place; by restoring green areas, we give it the opportunity to take root. Even if gardens do not seem functional, they are essential.

venicegardensfoundation.org

Petra de Castro with Vladimir Kartashov in his Pietrasanta atelier

Petra de Castro – Patron, collector and writer

Among her current projects, Petra de Castro has a new book and is supporting Vladimir Kartashov’s installation “Sequences of Time” at San Clemente, Venice, during the Biennale

Each time I ask myself where my passion for literature, art and music comes from, the images that come to my mind are those when, aged seven or eight, I would spend twilight afternoons at the home of a very old couple, who had lost their newborn baby during the Second World War and had “adopted” me as a kind of granddaughter.

It was this couple who taught me that music must be listened to attentively, who would sit me by their gramophone to listen to Mozart and who took me to the opera to see Madama Butterfly.

Petra de Castro’s home with works by Jean-Marie Appriou and a ceiling painting by Kartashov (represented by Gowen, Geneva, since 2025)

They had me read the stories of Tolstoy out loud, and look at the paintings of Cézanne, Monet and Renoir, tell them what I saw in the paintings and then copy them.

Those days of a faraway past made me understand that the universe of literature, art, music and the humanities corresponded to my own emotional understanding. I went on to study French modern literature, German and Philosophy. I did theatre and played the piano.

Read more: Passenger Princess in the Aston Martin DBX S

I worked in dramaturgy at the Schauspielhaus Frankfurt. I did graphic and event design, and window settings for a renowned Swiss watch manufacturer. I wrote a book about Pier Paolo Pasolini’s summer journey of 1959, La Lunga Strada di Sabbia, to be published this September.

From being an art lover I became an art patron and collector, with a vision of a Gesamtkunstwerk of my own in Venice, for my private art collection, Antigone’s Tales, to find a home. The idea of storytelling within the works in my collection is very much interweaved with the history of Venice and with the theme of Vladimir Khartashov’s installation, “Sequences of Time”. This Gesamtkunstwerk will be my life’s achievement and I trust in the process.

Nicoletta Fiorucci – Founder, Nicoletta Fiorucci Foundation

Collector Nicoletta Fiorucci founded her eponymous foundation to promote experimentation in art focusing on radical, interdisciplinary and community-oriented ideas, with a Venice venue opened in 2025

I am drawn to artists who sense shifts in culture, intangible or unresolved. In a moment defined by speed and distraction, art can offer a tempo that encourages reflection instead of consumption. Artists help us rehearse possible futures and the foundation’s aim is to offer a space where artists feel supported to take risks.

The exterior of the Nicoletta Fiorucci Foundation, a former 15th-century palazzo in Dorsoduro

Living in Venice has always been my dream. The city has always been shaped by exchange: of goods, cultures, ideas. That openness feels essential to contemporary artistic dialogue.

Venice also embodies urgency – questions of climate change and preservation are tangible.

Read more: Grand Hotel Kronenhof Pontresina Review

The city demands sensitivity to vulnerability, water, light, material decay, to histories layered over centuries. This rhythm aligns with my desire to create exhibitions that unfold gradually.

The foundation is based in Dorsoduro, which has a quieter rhythm. That intimate scale has shaped the exhibitions. Visitors stay longer, artists feel comfortable inhabiting the space.

To Love and Devour, 2025, by Tolia Astakhishvili, exhibition view of a site-specific installation at the Nicoletta Fiorucci Foundation, curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist

Architecture, light and community become part of the exhibition. The experience feels like entering into a shared moment – that sense of closeness has been a rewarding discovery. I see the foundation’s role as contributing to the city’s ongoing narrative, and to an inclusive, forward-looking cultural environment.

Each project adds a layer to the foundation’s evolving identity. The new exhibition from May to November is by Lydia Ourahmane, curated by Polly Staple. Lydia’s practice often engages with invisible systems that shape everyday life.

Her work carries political depth and emotional subtlety – particularly resonant in Venice. I hope visitors will feel invited to slow down and reflect.

nf.foundation

A portrait of Luca Bombassei, an architect who synthesises the ancient and contemporary

Luca Bombassei – Architect, entrepreneur and collector

The practice and projects of Luca Bombassei operate at the intersection of past and future, exemplified in his recently acquired and restored apartment in the Palazzo Contarini Corfù, which overlooks the Grand Canal

Read more: Hotel Balzac Paris review

I love the past for its belief in knowledge, interested in the future as a space of experimentation, new ways of living, new cultural models. In my work, the two coexist.

A main bedroom view, with art by Alex Katz and Ettore Sottsass

What excites me is what sits between definitions. I’m working on initiatives where architecture becomes a framework for cultural exchange rather than a finished object; projects where the past is not idealised, but questioned and activated. I don’t work with nostalgia but with memory – there’s an important difference.

Collecting art and supporting projects is a way of staying intellectually alive, I’m drawn to works that take risks, which may feel uncomfortable at first, but are grounded in intelligence, craft and intention. My goal is not to build a “collection”, but a constellation of projects, places and relationships that reflect how I think and live. If there is a method it’s to avoid repetition, stay alert and accept that coherence is not a value in itself; what matters more to me is intellectual honesty.

A living-room view of Luca Bombassei’s Venetian apartment, with metal bookcase by Bombassei and painting by Nathlie Provosty

Living in Venice has taught me nothing truly belongs to you. A palazzo is not a trophy, it’s a responsibility. I’ve learnt that beauty is something you practise every day, through care, use and attention. Venice also teaches restraint: knowing when to intervene and when to step back.

The city itself is a lesson in adaptability – it has survived by absorbing change intelligently. Its future lies not in nostalgia, but in cultural work, education and long-term thinking. I believe Venice can be a laboratory for ideas, a place where history and contemporaneity challenge one another. That tension keeps the city, and my work, alive.

lucabombassei.com

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