Taking place in the heart of Venice in Corte Nova from April 30 – May 10, 2026, during the 61st International Art Exhibition—La Biennale di Venezia, Marea is conceived in close partnership between McGill and local Venetian residents and students, creating a community-focused model of artistic resilience at a time of great challenges for Venice.
Marea is has received official support from Venice’s Municipality and is officially endorsed by the Italian National Commission for UNESCOand the Italian Ambassador to the United States, Ambassador Mariangela Zappia.
Following last year’s intervention, Quei de la Corte Nova, Marea will launch on April 30, 2026 and be on view through May 10, 2026.
Taking place in the heart of Venice in Corte Nova from April 30 – May 10, 2026, during the 61st International Art Exhibition—La Biennale di Venezia, Marea is the result of my close partnership with local Venetian residents and students, creating a community-focused model of artistic resilience at a time of great challenges for Venice.
A sea of approximately 100 new paintings will fill the existing laundry lines that, for generations, have crossed Corte Nova in Sestiere di Castello — a rare authentic Venetian calle. One of the most photographed and picturesque streets in the city, Corte Nova has maintained its residential identity and neighborhood connectivity despite the devastating impacts of overtourism and climate change. Filling the length of the street, the paintings recall the waves of the Venetian Lagoon and the lives and traditions of the residents who inhabit this street, a powerful metaphor for our interconnection with water. Marea offers a timely, evocative, and uplifting message of unwavering Venetian vitality, spirit, and resiliency in the form of transformative creative action.
Marea is a new public participatory art intervention that continues my collaborative and community-engaged creative practice. Presented by Associazione Water Projects, Marea is being realized together with local Venetian students and Corte Nova residents, including project partner and Venetian cultural heritage advocate Massimilliano Smerghetto, project manager Marcella Ferrari and project assistant Cecilia Bima.
Marea is has received official support from Venice’s Municipality and is officially endorsed by the Italian National Commission for UNESCO and the Italian Ambassador to the United States, Ambassador Mariangela Zappia.
“With Marea, Melissa McGill addresses in a poetic and participatory ways crucial issues, such as the impact of climate change and mass tourism on Venice’s tangible and intangible heritage, proposing a public art intervention rooted in collaboration with local communities. It is a project that, through Venice and its calling for dialogue, explores urban resilience and the relationship between culture, environment, and collective identity. Marea is poetry and beauty; it is commitment and community.”
Mariangela Zappia – Italian Ambassador to the United States of America
Marea (tide in Italian) confronts the fact that Venice is being flooded— with waters due to climate change and with people due to mass tourism. Taken together, these forces have had disastrous consequences for generations of Venetians, local traditions, and the physical city itself. In a city where tourists now drastically outnumber residents, Corte Nova is one of the last remaining streets in all of Venice to retain its historical, residential identity, epitomized through its iconic laundry lines.
Since the very first time I came to Venice in 1991, Corte Nova moved me. Its laundry lines suspended between homes form a web that reflects the people who live there, full of stories, rhythms, and memories. Over the years I have personally witnessed the profound changes happening in Venice, as it loses aspects of its most authentic identity, yet the sight of laundry hanging out to dry has always given me hope: it is a sign of life and resiliency. I began to think about ways that I could use my work as an artist to activate, celebrate, and demonstrate the vitality of Venetian community, and also inspire more global conversation around the challenges confronting not only Venice but cities around the world.
Venice is like a second home to me— I lived there from 1991 to 1993, a formative time in my creative development, and I have returned every year since. As a visual artist and “waterstoryteller”, I have long drawn profound inspiration from the City of Water and close Venetian collaborators; inextricable partners in a shared, creative practice of exploration of the emotional and ecological dimensions of water and community.
Marea marks the next chapter in this story—deepening relationships with Venetian friends, communities and institutions that I have worked with for years, and expanding the conversation globally.
To realize Marea, McGill is working with the residents of Corte Nova and students from the esteemed local art and design school Università luav di Venezia to create the approximately 100 paintings that will suffuse the street. Using hues of distinctive greens and blues, captured through McGill’s color studies of the Venetian Lagoon, watery brushstrokes will be painted on different sizes of bedsheets, representing the lives of the residents and honoring Venetian vibrancy. The paintings will fill Corte Nova to create an immersive watery environment, one collectively alive, “breathing” in the breeze, and evoking the fragile future of the city.