MEDINA, NY.- The Medina Triennial, a new contemporary art triennial, announces key artist commissions, sites, and the theme for its inaugural edition, taking place June 6September 7, 2026. CoArtistic Directors Kari Conte and Karin Laansoo have invited artists from across five continents to present site-responsive installations and public programs throughout Medina, New York.
Titled All That Sustains Us, this ambitious, free, village-wide exhibition features more than 100 artworks by 35 artists and collectives. It marks the first recurring exhibition of this scale to take place in a U.S. community of this size, positioning small-town geographies as vital sites of cultural and critical imagination. Grounded in place and shaped through deep community engagement, the Triennial features new commissions alongside recent and historical works across 12 indoor and outdoor sites.
The curatorial framework of the Triennial sits at the intersection of art, ecology, architecture, and rural contexts and considers maintenance not only as a physical act of upkeep, but also as a social, political, and environmental process shaped by fragility and resilience. The Triennial brings together artistic practices that examine how civic and ecological systems are structured by labor, regulation, extraction, and repair. At its core, the Triennial asks: What essential efforts and commitments are required to sustain life in our fractured world?
Commissioned artworks include Ash Arder's INT. HOME(S) (2023/2026), an expanded sculptural installation made from parts of a 1987 Cadillac Sedan de Villeher family's childhood carfeaturing a new multi-channel video that traces the artists Detroit childhood and her relationship with the automobile. Tania Candianis Two Waters (2026) is a large-scale filmed performance created with composer Rogelio Sosa and hundreds of local volunteers, inspired by Medina's aqueduct, where the Erie Canal crosses above Oak Orchard Creektwo waters that never touch. Futurefarmers (Amy Franceschini, Michael Swaine, and FS Bàssïbét) present 48 Collections from the Erie Canal (2026), a three-part installation that begins with a local legend and expands outward through collective memory. Working with residents, the artists gathered oral histories and archival fragments, translating them into sound and video works, as well as a series of glass sculptures that encase canal sediment. Matt Kenyon's The TELL (2026) reimagines a champagne tower using glass, Medina sandstone, and roses of Jerichoplants that revive with just a drop of water. Asad Razas site-specific new work, Reflection (2026), redirects the Erie Canal's water into the Medina Triennial Hub. By physically rerouting water that once powered extraction and trade, the work confronts the canals histories of labor and environmental transformation. The installation foregrounds the canal as a living system shaped by human intervention, repurposing its infrastructure for the play of bodies and light. Kärt Ojavee collaborates with local farmers on Between Blossom and Core (2026), an installation exploring scent extraction from Honeycrisp apple blossoms and scent-mapping of Medina's orchards, soils, and industrial sites.
Triennial sites range from post-industrial buildings to public spaces and locations on the Erie Canal. The Medina Triennial Hub, located in a former sandstone hotel overlooking the canal, will serve as a welcome center as well as the home of the Triennials residency and education programs. The main exhibition site is 25,000 square feet of the Medina High School building, which has been closed to students and the public for more than three decades and recently celebrated its 100th anniversary. Artist works will be presented at the Medina Railroad Museum grounds, Medina Memorial Hospital, Rotary Park, State Street Park, and Sacred Heart Church, as well as installations directly on the Erie Canal.