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Slovenia: Soundtrack for an Invisible House

Neja Tomšič, Martin Bricelj Baraga, Nika Grabar, Miloš Kosec

May 9 – Nov 22

Arsenale
Art Fair

Arsenale

Campo de la Tana, 2169, CA 30124

May 9 - September 27: 11am-7pm (last admission 6:45pm); September 29 - November 22: 10am-6pm (last admission 5:45pm); Arsenale Fridays & Saturdays until 8pm (last admission 7:45pm, through September 26); Closed Mondays except May 11, June 1, September 7, November 16

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About

The Republic of Slovenia presents Soundtrack for an Invisible House from May 9 – November 22, 2026 at the 61st International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, curated by Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez and developed by the Nonument Group (Neja Tomšič, Martin Bricelj Baraga, Nika Grabar, and Miloš Kosec). Installed in the Arsenale Exhibition Spaces, the project transforms a forgotten architectural trace into a resonant space for listening, reflection, and historical re-examination. Soundtrack for an Invisible House is rooted in a little-known episode of European history: the construction in 1917 of a temporary wooden mosque by the Austro-Hungarian Army in Log pod Mangartom, near Slovenia's northwestern border. Built to serve Bosnian Muslim soldiers fighting on the Isonzo Front during World War I, the mosque functioned as part of the empire's military infrastructure, where religion was mobilised in the service of politics, propaganda and power. After the war, the structure disappeared, leaving behind only a handful of photographs and, until recently, no visible trace in the landscape. Unearthed through archaeological excavations in 2022 and officially recognized as a memorial site in 2025, the mosque today exists as a "nonument": a site, whose meaning transformed due to political and social changes. In this case, an invisible structure whose absence speaks powerfully of political, religious, and territorial histories. Taking this site as its point of departure, the Nonument Group explores how religion has been—and continues to be—mobilized in the service of war, propaganda, and power, while also tracing the shifting identities of European Muslim communities across the 20th and 21st centuries. Through Soundtrack for an Invisible House, the Slovenian Pavilion offers a contemplative space that connects past and present, asking urgent questions about the entanglements of religion, power, and conflict in today's world.

Tags

installationcontemporarygroup exhibitionVenice BiennaleEuropean historyaudio/soundarchitecturememorialSlovenia
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