1964 was a watershed moment in which American art came to the fore and abstract painting turned into the standard bearer of Western liberalism in Europe. The curator of the US pavilion was Alan Solomon, and in the words of Italian-American gallery owner Leo Castelli, he “put together the best things to be found in American art after the great period of Abstract Expressionism”. A lack of space meant that the work of the eight exhibiting artists – Jim Dine, Jasper Johns, Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, Robert Rauschenberg, Frank Stella, John Chamberlain, and Claes Oldenburg – was shown at two different sites: the American pavilion in the Giardini and the former US consulate at San Gregorio in Venice.
1968 was the year of protests: just a few days before the Biennale Arte opened, students occupied their universities and art academies and took to the streets to demonstrate in support of the Prague Spring. Seen as a symbol of bourgeois culture, with an anachronistic statute, the Biennale became the demonstrators’ primary target.
In the early 1970s La Biennale’s biggest problem was still its statute. Debates at the governmental level on the issue began in early 1973, and on 26 July the Italian Parliament finally approved new regulations to modernise the former Fascist statute, in force since 1938. It was not until 20 March 1974, however, that the board’s eighteen members were appointed from across the political spectrum.
In 1977 La Biennale explored the theme of “dissent”. Then in 1978, the Biennale Arte adopted a deliberately non-political title: Dalla natura all’arte dall’arte alla natura (From Nature to Art and from Art to Nature).