Season 9

This episode features Abbas Akhavan, a Tehran-born artist based between Montreal and Berlin, who is representing Canada at this year’s Venice Biennale. In a conversation recorded a few days before the opening, Akhavan discusses art as an ethics of encounter, the limits of language and representation, and the challenge of engaging non-human life without collapsing it into symbol or metaphor. Reflecting on institutional pressure, artistic refusal, and the importance of maintaining balance within one’s practice, he describes art as “a rehearsal, not re-enactment.” Framed by a reading from Charles Siebert’s 2016 New York Times Magazine feature “What Does a Parrot Know About PTSD?,” the conversation explores trauma, presence, and the possibility of holding intimacy without possession. Host Sky Goodden also reflects on attending a strike organized by the Art Not Genocide Alliance during the Biennale’s preview week, during which the Canadian Pavilion was one of many that closed in solidarity. 

Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews.

Thanks to this episode’s sponsors, Coach House Books and Esker Foundation, for supporting our work.

About the Guest

About the Guest, and more

  • Abbas Akhavan (b. 1977, Tehran) has lived in Canada for the past thirty years and is currently based between Montréal and Berlin. Recent and upcoming solo exhibitions include the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2026); Morris & Helen Belkin Art Gallery, Vancouver (2025); Bangkok Kunsthalle (2025); Copenhagen Contemporary and Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek (2023); Chisenhale Gallery, London (2021); and The Power Plant, Toronto (2018). His work has also appeared in major international exhibitions including the Gwangju Biennale, Toronto Biennale, Sharjah Biennial, and the Liverpool Biennial. Akhavan received an MFA from the University of British Columbia and a BFA from Concordia University, and is the recipient of the Sobey Art Award (2015), the Abraaj Group Art Prize (2014), and the Berliner Kunstpreis (2012).

More by the Guest

This is Abbas Akhavan's first piece for Momus.

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