The three aforementioned biennials, all of which are based outside the nation’s capital, significantly trigger the emergence of artistic expressions developed from situated knowledge. At the 17th Biennale Jogja, some participating artists embedded their works in the everyday spaces of local residents, such as the works of the artist-photographer Anang Saptoto, who in recent years initiated an artistic platform called “Panen Apa Hari Ini” (PARI) connecting art practices with agriculture. Through this platform, Anang Saptoto invited creative workers, farmers, and food producers to design various activities related to food sovereignty and community-based resolutions. During the Biennale Jogja, PARI connected a group of farmers and young architects to create a bamboo pavilion and solar panel installation in the middle of a papaya field owned by a farmer named Sadir Sudirman. Through these works, PARI connected various groups that had never been connected before, sparking an exchange of knowledge on an equal ground among them.
Similarly, various programs initiated by both Biennale Jatim and Biennale Makassar were capable of gathering and creating human mobility and knowledge on a broader geographical scale (between cities or even between islands) and thereby seem to have surpassed cultural initiatives that have come from the local governments where both biennials operate.
A program in the 5th Biennale Makassar titled “Songkabala Laelae,” initiated by the artist collective Gymnastic Emporium, is an effort to create social choreography through an artistic practice that enables artists and island residents to collaborate based on knowledge of the local environment, daily practices, and social issues. This program developed into a small festival where Gymnastic Emporium, whose members include directors, historians, visual artists, and musicians, reach further to become choreographers connecting potential artistic expressions that already exist in society. Furthermore, Biennale Makassar also publishes books that document narratives of local knowledge, such as traditional healing practices, culinary traditions, and even stories of the city’s development within the federated network they organize.
A different context of social choreography occurs in Biennale Jatim through various workshops and residencies that pair young artists with residents as collaborators. Besides bringing art practices closer to the living spaces of the community, artists can also engage in the exchange of situated knowledge that enriches their artistic practices. For instance, a performative work composed by artist Niina Brannen together with residents of Kampung Ketandan in Surabaya, or artist-researcher Alex De Little, who created a sound repertoire resulting from exceptional collaboration with residents and an artist collective in Nganjuk, a small town in East Java.
Based on such programs, biennials have the potential to kindle interconnections among artists, art collectives, and between artists and the public. We can also envision the dispersion of subtle traces created during immersive encounters, the formation of ideas through human mobility, community engineering, and knowledge production that may persist long after the biennial has concluded. This is what I envisage as a social choreography, where the biennial transforms into a dynamic space capable of shaping temporary structures and forging new relationships within society.
One recurring theme evident in the current arrangement of art biennials in Indonesia is the growing emphasis on the idea of the public and citizenship (kewargaan), and how this principle is manifested in art biennials that strategically embed their programs inclusively and democratically within local communities. This tendency ultimately transforms into a subversion of cultural programs initiated by the government, which are still traditionally confined to formal territories as conventionally understood. It can be observed from how the majority of government-initiated art programs often culminate solely as presentations at government-owned art centers, thereby failing to establish direct connections with the living spaces of the community.