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Professor Kathryn Yusoff selected to represent the UK at the 19th International Architecture Exhibition at La Biennale di Venezia 2025

Dr Kathryn Yusoff, Professor of Inhuman Geography at Queen Mary University of London has been selected as part of a team of architectural practitioners to represent the UK at the 19th International Architecture Exhibition at La Biennale di Venezia 2025.

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The British Council announces today that a team of architectural practitioners selected to represent the UK at the 19th International Architecture Exhibition at La Biennale di Venezia 2025.

The collaborative UK-Kenya curatorial team selected is:

  • Dr Kathryn Yusoff, Professor of Inhuman Geography at Queen Mary University
  • Owen Hopkins, Director of the Farrell Centre at Newcastle University
  • Kabage Karanja, Co-founder & Director of Cave_bureau based in Nairobi, Kenya
  • Stella Mutegi, Co-founder & Director of Cave_bureau based in Nairobi, Kenya

A panel of architects, educators and cultural professionals from across the UK and Kenya, chaired by the British Council’s Sevra Davis, selected the winning team from a shortlist of four proposals. The exhibition will explore architectures of repair, restitution, and renewal. Conceiving architecture as an earth practice that is implicated in empires of extractive geology, it looks to vernaculars as sites where the parallel and interconnected tasks of decarbonising and decolonising can be further explored and expressed.

The exhibition will include a range of sensory-based physical and digital installations, transforming the 2025 British Pavilion into a site of reinvention and reimagining for architecture and for the earth.

The 19th International Architecture Exhibition will be held from Saturday 24 May to Sunday 23 November 2025 (pre-opening May 22 and 23). The British Council has been commissioning the British Pavilion in Venice since 1937, showcasing the best of the UK's artists, architects, designers and curators. These exhibitions, and the Venice Fellowships initiative introduced in 2016, help make the British Pavilion a platform for discussion about contemporary art and architecture.

Dr Kathryn Yusoff, Professor of Inhuman Geography, in the School of Geography at Queen Mary University of London said:

 “I am delighted to be working with such a brilliant team who are committed to rethinking the relationship between architecture and the earth, and with the British Council who have supported this UK-Kenya collaboration. As the earth has been a praxis of struggle, we look forward to generating architectures of repair across the intertwined colonial geographies that approach the planetary from the ground up”

Professor Kavita Datta, Head of School of Geography and Professor of Development Geography at Queen Mary University of London said: 

“This is a fantastic and important achievement for Kathryn and her colleagues, cementing her position as an international scholar working on reparative justice. We – her colleagues in the School of Geography - eagerly await the Exhibition!”

Sevra Davis, Director of Architecture Design Fashion at the British Council said:

“The British Council is delighted to announce the appointed UK-Kenya team of Owen Hopkins, Kabage Karanja, Stella Mutegi and Kathryn Yusoff to develop and deliver the British Pavilion at the 19th International Architecture Exhibition at the Venice Biennale in 2025. As part of the upcoming 2025 UK-Kenya Season of Culture, this appointment marks the first time that the British Council uses our platform as a cultural relations organisation to celebrate international connection and collaboration through the British Pavilion in Venice. I look forward to working with the appointed team to develop and deliver an exhibition that speaks not only of an ‘architecture of repair’ but also celebrates cross-cultural knowledge creation. The exhibition will acknowledge the past while presenting an exciting vision for a more equitable future. I would like to thank all the teams that submitted proposals for the 2025 exhibition for the time and energy that went into the applications.”

Professor Aseem Inam of the Selection Committee said:

“The selected proposal is remarkably provocative, creative, and thoughtful. The proposal recognizes that architecture has been complicit in inequality and environmental degradation, but that it also offers opportunities for repair, restitution, and renewal. Through a collaboration between a Nairobi-based curatorial and architectural practice, a Newcastle-based curator and writer, and a London-based professor of inhuman geography, the team will curate and present restorative and ameliorative projects in the UK, Kenya, and elsewhere. We look forward to the realisation of this remarkable exhibit!”

The appointed curatorial team said:

“We are honoured to have been selected to curate the British Pavilion at La Biennale di Venezia 2025. Our UK and Kenya combined team intersects multiple disciplines and geographies, with a critical perspective on how to use this unique platform. The exhibition will map architectures from across the world defined by an embedded relationship to the ground, which are resilient in the face of climate breakdown, social, economic and political upheaval; and that offer refuge and empowerment for the most climate exposed communities. To frame this, we intend to conceptually reinscribe the British Pavilion by turning it inside out and unearth what these acts of repair might look like when framing a planetary vernacular."

Tom Porter, Country Director Kenya, at the British Council said:

“This landmark collaboration at the Venice Architecture Biennale presents a timely opportunity to celebrate creative collaboration between the UK and Kenya on a global stage. The programme will be a highlight of our UK Kenya Season 2025. The team’s ambition to explore repair, restitution, and renewal will inspire important conversations and bring nuanced perspectives to architecture's impact on people and our planet.

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