The terrain at 3,600 metres above sea level is such that any stroll here requires one to bargain with breathing itself. However, in August, the area is set to witness the world’s highest biennale of art as the sā Ladakh Biennale makes its return from August 1-10, 2026. It will convert the corridor between Leh and Kargil into an enormous open-air exhibit under the title of ‘Signals from Another Star’, curated by Vishal K Dar and Tsering Motup in 8 locations like Basgo, Lamayuru and Kargil.
The new 2026 iteration has grown to include about 24 artists in total, integrating foreign artists like Jitish Kallat, Anna Jermolaewa, Peter Kogler, and Agnieszka Kurant with native artists including Tundup Dorjay, Chemat Dorjey, and Stanzin Samphel. These artists will work right within the landscape without having any galleries, using materials like stone, clay, and wool to create installations in response to melting glaciers, weather changes, and tourism pressures.
Organisers have termed the highest art biennale in the world as a regenerative forum that takes into account the vulnerable ecosystem of Ladakh with its dearth of water and scant soil. In such a scenario, the artworks will eventually disappear as they go back to nature, and visitors are encouraged to travel slowly through the Leh-Kargil route and support local guest houses and drivers.
As a part of the collaboration with the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art, Nepali artist Amrit Karki is invited to join the one-month residency and later produce a work inspired by Ladakh's high-altitude terrain. The larger project conceptualises art as an ongoing dialogue between the land and its inhabitants at eight designated sites. It also examines the capacity of culture to sustain mountain economies without compromising their sustainability.
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