At a time when arts funding in the USA is dwindling, artwork triennials have taken successful. Cleveland’s Entrance Worldwide folded in 2024 after two editions, and Prospect New Orleans is skipping its seventh version subsequent yr.
A brand new arrival, nevertheless, affords an uncommon strategy and an unlikely origin story. Opening Saturday (6 June) and persevering with till 7 September, the Medina Triennial is known as after its off-the-beaten-track location, a city of 6,000 in Western New York. It was initiated by the New York State Canal Company—a subsidiary of the New York Energy Authority—as a part of a $300m drive to spice up tourism and leisure exercise alongside the Erie Canal, which marked its bicentennial in 2025.
Established as a nonprofit, the triennial appointed Kari Conte and Karin Laansoo as curators and drew up a price range of lower than $2m, financed by regional foundations and abroad grantmakers reminiscent of Outset within the UK and the Mondriaan Fund within the Netherlands. As a seed funder, the New York Energy Authority is a uncommon instance of a public establishment investing in tradition as it could in infrastructure.
“It’s a loopy concept that I believe nobody within the discipline of artwork would have had,” Conte tells The Artwork Newspaper. “We hope this could be a mannequin across the nation for different companies that aren’t essentially cultural companies.”
Few at the moment have heard of the village of Medina, which is an hour by automobile from Buffalo or Rochester, and two hours from Toronto. Fewer know how one can say it: not like its namesake in Saudi Arabia, the center syllable is pronounced “die”. Within the nineteenth century, although, Medina was a significant cease for boats plying the Erie Canal. Slicing throughout New York State to attach the Midwest with the Atlantic Ocean, the canal fuelled commerce with Europe and lifted the fortunes of New York Metropolis and Nice Lakes cities reminiscent of Chicago and Detroit. Medina was additionally well-known for its sandstone, used broadly to pave streets and assemble buildings.
In shaping the triennial, the curators drew on previous expertise—Conte has labored with the Helsinki Biennial and the Aichi Triennale, and Laansoo with Performa, the New York Metropolis efficiency artwork biennial—in addition to analysis into different examples, significantly the Echigo-Tsumari Artwork Triennale. Launched by Japan’s Niigata prefecture to revitalise its rural areas, that competition equally emphasises native participation and a powerful reference to nature. The largest distinction is that the Medina Triennial is smaller in scale, the complete presentation contained inside a walkable half-mile radius.
Mary Mattingly planting her Floating Backyard, a piece developed throughout the triennial’s residency programme Photograph: Dawson Andrews, courtesy Medina Triennial
Titled All That Sustains Us, the triennial’s first version is impressed by the work of Mierle Laderman Ukeles, the unsalaried artist-in-residence on the New York Metropolis Division of Sanitation since 1977. Ukeles’s 1969 manifesto for “upkeep artwork” sought to foreground the labour of ladies and employees that retains cities and households working. In an analogous vein, Conte and Laansoo assembled 39 artists and collectives from world wide and commissioned and chosen works that relate to how social, ecological and infrastructural methods are sustained in Medina and the Erie Canal.
“This isn’t a triennial that has a bunch of summary work on the wall,” Conte says. “There are types and concepts that the neighborhood is aware of.”
The artwork is unfold throughout ten websites, together with two parks, a YMCA, a church and a former highschool for the principle exhibition. The triennial hub, housed in a historic constructing that was once a resort, options furnishings product of wooden reclaimed from the Erie Canal. Along with internet hosting its personal programmes, the hub supplies an artwork library and a gathering house for locals and guests.
Many commissioned items have been created in collaboration with native residents and regional establishments. Two Waters by Tania Candiani, for instance, is a video through which the wordless vocalisations of lots of of locals evoke the movement of Oak Orchard Creek and the Erie Canal by the village. And on the primary day of the triennial, Lina Lapelytė will debut Faithfully Recording on the Medina Railroad Museum, a reside efficiency through which singers and development employees construct a sculpture from reclaimed Medina sandstone.

Tania Candiani, manufacturing nonetheless for Two Waters,2026 Courtesy the artist
Via the triennial’s residency programme, artists have developed works in session with Medinan consultants and enterprise homeowners. Final autumn, Mary Mattingly planted a Floating Backyard on a barge with college students from the Rochester Institute of Know-how and residents, who contributed timber from their backyards and private tales of relationships with crops. This previous spring, Michael Wang collaborated with maple farmers to provide Sugarbush Power, a canned maple-sap drink distributed at Medina outlets.
To stage the triennial, Conte’s and Laansoo’s staff labored carefully with the village, looking for approval for websites, signage and constructing alterations. They performed talks at colleges, church buildings and different organisations, enlisted lots of of volunteers and harnessed the abilities of youth from the Iroquois Job Corps, a neighborhood commerce college—though specialists commuting from Buffalo and Rochester nonetheless needed to be engaged for the set up of works.
The curators have been pleasantly stunned by the general public’s help regardless of their restricted publicity to up to date artwork. “The village of Medina is happy for the triennial,” says mayor Deborah Padoleski. “The members have opened the eyes of the residents of our small village to artwork types that we have been beforehand unaccustomed to!”
For Scott Hocking’s sculpture on the Medina Theater, the constructing proprietor stepped in to facilitate logistics. For Evelyne Leblanc-Roberge’s set up on the Medina Memorial Hospital, its advertising director volunteered to assist with publicity.
“The neighborhood reveals up whenever you least anticipate it,” Laansoo says. “We stand exterior the hub, and any person will stroll by and supply one thing that we precisely want, which might by no means occur in an enormous metropolis. No person’s asking: ‘Is it artwork?’ They’re asking: ‘What can we do? How can we become involved? In some ways, we made a triennial along with them.”
Medina Triennial 2026, 6 June-7 September, Medina, New York









