Be Part of the World's Largest Art Biennale | Moons, Castles, Trees | Copenhagen ChronotopesCOPENHAGEN, DENMARK — The Wrong Biennale, the world's largest art biennale and "the digital world's answer to Venice" — The New York Times, returns for its 2025–2026 edition with a powerful new curatorial project: Moons, Castles, Trees | AI Chronotopes.
By: Copenhagen Chronotopes Art Gallery COPENHAGEN, Denmark - July 18, 2025 - PRLog -- Curated by Danish artist and photographer Kasper Bergholt in collaboration with the Copenhagen Chronotopes Art Gallery, this international sub-exhibition invites visual artists working in both digital and physical mediums to explore poetic, dream-infused spaces at the intersection of technology and imagination.
A Global Art Event Like No Other Founded in 2013, The Wrong Biennale has become a decentralized, rhizomatic network of exhibitions across hybrid, virtual, and physical platforms. To date, over 10,000 artists have participated, making it a truly global organism of contemporary digital expression. With no central venue and no submission fee, the Biennale stands as an open and inclusive force in the international art world. A Thematic Invitation: When AI Dreams Inspired by Nick Cave's 2024 song Cinnamon Horses, the curatorial theme evokes ethereal worlds: horses that dance beneath strawberry moons, wander castle ruins, and emerge in turpentine trees. These surreal visions serve as a launching point for the exhibition's central question: "What happens when AI dances, strolls, is found?" Participating artists are invited to respond through still images, be it a single artwork or a cohesive series of up to six. All image-making techniques are welcome: from photography, painting, and mixed media to generative art, graffiti, calligraphy, and more. This is an invitation to reimagine visual storytelling through the lens of synthetic creativity and temporal displacement. 'Moons, Castles, Trees' in bullets
About the curator Kasper Bergholt is a Copenhagen-based artist who returned to the visual arts in 2023 after a 15-year hiatus. His work has since appeared in exhibitions and collaborations across Melbourne, London, New York City, Atlanta, Helsinki, Budapest, Warsaw, Minneapolis, Chongqing, Taipei, and Glasgow. Bergholt holds a Master of Arts degree from the University of Copenhagen and has been rewarded the university's rare gold medal. Media Contact Copenhagen Chronotopes Art Gallery Email: join@chronotopes.net Website: https://chronotopes.net Join the Movement Artists ready to interpret and shape the future of image-making and temporal aesthetics are encouraged to submit their works before September 15th 2025. End
|