Richseen Private Journeys · Italy

Venice Biennale

Venice Biennale · Art · Architecture · La Serenissima
6–8 Days · Venice
From USD 13,000+ per person
"The Venice Biennale — the world's oldest and most prestigious international art event, where the national pavilions of the Giardini and the vast halls of the Arsenale make the argument for contemporary art as the most direct reflection of the world's current cultural condition."
The Journey

Venice,
La Serenissima at the Biennale

The Venice Biennale is the world's oldest and most prestigious international art exhibition — founded in 1895, held in odd-numbered years (Art Biennale) and even-numbered years (Architecture Biennale), and representing the single occasion on which the contemporary art and architecture world's most significant national statements are assembled in one city simultaneously. The Giardini della Biennale in Castello — the garden park where 30 national pavilions have been built since 1895, each designed by the exhibiting nation's architects over more than a century — constitutes the most architecturally diverse single public space in Italy: the Finnish pavilion by Alvar Aalto (1956), the Nordic pavilion by Sverre Fehn (1962), the Japanese pavilion by Takamasa Yoshizaka (1956), and the American pavilion by Robert von Mayer (1930) are five of the thirty permanent buildings whose architectural quality the Biennale's garden setting makes most legible.

The Venice Biennale experience extends beyond the Giardini to the Arsenale — the medieval shipyard complex whose Corderie (the rope factory building, 316 metres long) and the Artiglierie halls provide the most dramatically scaled exhibition spaces in Italy, housing the International Exhibition curated by the Biennale's appointed artistic director. The collateral events scattered across Venice's palazzi, churches, and foundations — the Palazzo Grassi, the Punta della Dogana, the Fondazione Cini on San Giorgio Maggiore, and the private palazzo exhibitions that the Biennale's opening days concentrate across the city — extend the programme into a city-wide cultural event whose full scope requires a week to navigate coherently.

This 6-to-8-day itinerary combines priority access to the Giardini pavilions and the Arsenale International Exhibition with a private curator-led tour, private collection visits to the Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana (the Pinault Collection, the most significant private contemporary art collection in Italy), and the Venice cultural programme — the Accademia, San Marco, and the private boat exploration of the lagoon — that the Biennale's concentration of international cultural visitors makes most accessible. Aman Venice, the Belmond Hotel Cipriani, or The Gritti Palace provide the address that the city's most discerning visitors have been using for decades.

Signature Moments

Six Encounters
with Venice

The Giardini pavilions, the Arsenale's 316-metre Corderie, the Pinault Collection, and the private boat across the lagoon at dusk.

01
The Giardini — Thirty National Pavilions, One Hundred Years of Architecture
The Giardini della Biennale — the garden park in Castello where thirty national pavilions have been built since 1895, each designed by the exhibiting nation and together constituting the most architecturally diverse single public space in Italy. The Alvar Aalto Finnish pavilion (1956); the Sverre Fehn Nordic pavilion (1962); the Carlo Scarpa Venezuelan pavilion (1956); and the British pavilion whose neoclassical exterior and contemporary interior produce the most instructive single argument about the relationship between heritage and contemporary practice. Each pavilion presents a curated national statement whose quality and ambition vary by edition and by the nation's cultural investment in the Biennale.
02
The Arsenale — The Corderie's 316 Metres of International Exhibition
The Arsenale — Venice's medieval shipyard complex, where the Corderie (the 316-metre rope factory building, whose construction in 1303 predates almost every other structure of comparable scale in Europe) and the Artiglierie halls house the International Exhibition curated by the Biennale's appointed artistic director. The Corderie's unbroken length produces a single-room installation sequence whose cumulative effect — one work leading to the next across 316 metres of continuous space — is the most dramatically scaled exhibition experience available in Italy and the one most consistent with the Biennale's curatorial ambitions.
03
Pinault Collection — Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana
The Pinault Collection across two Tadao Ando-designed Venice venues — the Palazzo Grassi on the Grand Canal (the 18th-century palace converted by Giorgio Massari in 1749 and now housing the collection's major rotating exhibitions) and the Punta della Dogana at the tip of Dorsoduro (the 17th-century customs warehouse converted by Ando in 2009). The most significant private contemporary art collection in Italy, whose Venice presence alongside the Biennale creates the most concentrated single-city contemporary art experience available anywhere. Private access arranged through Richseen's relationship with the Pinault Foundation.
04
Private Curator Tour — The Biennale Read by Someone Who Knows It
A private curator-led tour of the Biennale — the Giardini and Arsenale navigated by a specialist whose knowledge of the edition's curatorial argument, the individual national pavilion decisions, and the specific works whose significance makes them the programme's essential viewing transforms the experience from a walk through 300 works to a legible argument about what the international art world currently considers most urgent. The tour that makes the Biennale comprehensible as a statement rather than overwhelming as an exhibition.
05
Private Boat — The Venice Lagoon at Dawn and at Dusk
A private boat across the Venice lagoon — the city from the water, at the angle and pace that makes its island geography comprehensible and at which the relationship between the Grand Canal palazzi, the Dorsoduro waterfront, and the open lagoon with Murano and Burano visible beyond produces the visual composition that the Grand Tour painters were attempting to document. The lagoon at dawn before the vaporetti traffic converts the canals from navigable waterways into congested corridors; the Bacino di San Marco at dusk when the light on the Basilica's mosaic facade changes for the last time each day.
06
Venice Beyond the Biennale — Accademia, Scuola di San Rocco, San Marco
The Gallerie dell'Accademia for the Venetian painting tradition that the Biennale's contemporary programme responds to: Bellini, Giorgione, Titian, Tintoretto, and Veronese in the sequence that traces the Venetian school from the 15th century to the 18th. The Scuola Grande di San Rocco — Tintoretto's 50-year decorative programme (1565–1588) for the confraternity's walls and ceiling, the most sustained single artistic project in Venice and the one whose scale and ambition the Biennale's International Exhibition most directly echoes in secular form. San Marco at first light before the tourist queues arrive.
Key Highlights

What Makes This Journey

01 🎨
Biennale Access — Giardini, Arsenale, and Collateral Events
Priority access to the Venice Biennale — the Giardini national pavilions, the Arsenale International Exhibition in the 316-metre Corderie, and the collateral events across Venice's palazzi and foundations. Private curator-led tour of the programme's most significant presentations; private access to the Pinault Collection at Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana. The Biennale experienced as a coherent cultural argument rather than an overwhelming sequence of exhibitions.
02
Private Venice — Water Transfers, Lagoon Boat, and the City at Pace
Private water transfers throughout Venice — the hotel water entrance, the Biennale venue approaches by private boat, the lagoon excursion to Murano and Burano, and the Grand Canal at dawn before the tourist traffic begins. Venice experienced at the pace and from the perspectives that the private boat makes possible: the Accademia bridge from the water; the Ca' d'Oro façade from the Grand Canal; and the Bacino di San Marco at dusk when the Basilica's mosaic facade catches the last horizontal light.
03 🏛️
Three Palace Hotels — Aman Venice, Cipriani, or The Gritti
Six nights at the address that the Biennale's most discerning visitors have been using for decades — Aman Venice in the Palazzo Papadopoli on the Grand Canal; the Belmond Hotel Cipriani on the Giudecca island opposite San Marco; or The Gritti Palace at the Santa Maria del Giglio vaporetto stop with the Grand Canal terrace. Three addresses whose individual quality makes the choice between them itself a statement about what the guest values in Venice.
Sample Itinerary

Key Moments & Movements

The Venice Biennale Art runs May to November in odd-numbered years; the Architecture Biennale May to November in even-numbered years. This framework covers a 6-to-8-day Venice stay. All transfers are by private water taxi from Marco Polo Airport and between hotels and venues throughout the visit. Richseen confirms Biennale access, curator tours, and private collection visits in advance of travel.

Every Richseen Biennale journey is individually constructed. Private curator tours and Pinault Collection access are confirmed through established relationships. Hotel availability during the Biennale opening weeks requires advance booking of 12 months or more.

Day 1
Venice Arrival — Private Water Transfer · Hotel · San Marco at Dusk
Arrive at Marco Polo Airport with private water taxi transfer to the hotel — the approach to Venice by water, with the city's skyline emerging from the lagoon across the 4-kilometre crossing. Check in and settle; the private boat available throughout the stay for all transfers. Afternoon: the Piazza San Marco before the evening crowds consolidate — the Basilica's 11th-century Byzantine mosaic façade, the Campanile, and the Procuratie arcades whose coffee culture has been operating since Florian opened in 1720. Dinner at the hotel or at a confirmed reservation in the Dorsoduro — the neighbourhood where the Biennale's concentration of international visitors makes the restaurant demand most acute during the opening weeks.
Aman Venice / Belmond Cipriani / The Gritti Palace
Day 2
Biennale Day 1 — Giardini Pavilions · Private Curator Tour
The Giardini della Biennale — the garden park in Castello whose thirty national pavilions constitute the programme's most architecturally significant element. The private curator-led tour begins at the Central Pavilion (the Biennale's own building, housing a section of the International Exhibition) and moves through the national pavilions in the sequence the curator identifies as most coherent for the current edition: the major national statements from the pavilions whose investment in the Biennale makes them most significant, and the smaller nations whose specific pavilion choices make the most focused individual arguments. Water taxi return to the hotel; dinner at a confirmed address.
Giardini della Biennale · Venice
Day 3
Biennale Day 2 — Arsenale International Exhibition · Collateral Events
The Arsenale — the 316-metre Corderie and the Artiglierie halls housing the International Exhibition curated by the Biennale's appointed director. The exhibition that makes the overarching cultural argument of the edition; the works whose individual significance the curator's selection has endorsed. Afternoon: the collateral events in the palazzi — the Fondazione Giorgio Cini on San Giorgio Maggiore (accessible by private boat across the Bacino di San Marco); the Palazzo Grassi for the Pinault Collection; and the Scuola Grande di San Rocco for the Tintoretto cycle whose scale provides the historical reference point for the Arsenale's ambitions.
Arsenale · Collateral Venues · Venice
Day 4
Pinault Collection · Accademia · Punta della Dogana
Morning: the Gallerie dell'Accademia — the Venetian painting tradition from Bellini and Giorgione through Titian, Tintoretto, and Veronese in the sequence that traces the school whose colour and light the Biennale's contemporary programme responds to. The Bellini Pala di San Giobbe; the Giorgione Tempest; the Titian Presentation of the Virgin. Afternoon: the Punta della Dogana — Tadao Ando's 2009 conversion of the 17th-century customs warehouse at the tip of Dorsoduro, where the Pinault Collection's most significant contemporary acquisitions are exhibited in the building that makes the best available argument for adaptive reuse in Venice. Private access confirmed through Richseen's Pinault Foundation relationship.
Accademia · Punta della Dogana · Venice
Day 5
Venice Lagoon — Private Boat · Murano · Burano · Torcello
A full lagoon day by private boat — Murano for the glass furnaces that have been operating on the island since Venice banned glassmaking from the city centre in 1291 (fire risk), where the Barovier & Toso furnace provides the most historically continuous single manufacturing visit available in the Venetian lagoon. Burano for the painted houses and the lace tradition that the island's women have maintained since the 16th century; the boat lunch on the water. Torcello — the lagoon island whose 7th-century Byzantine cathedral predates Venice itself and whose mosaic Last Judgment (12th century) provides the most complete single account of Byzantine iconographic programme available outside Ravenna. Return to Venice for the Bacino di San Marco at dusk.
Venice Lagoon · Murano · Burano · Torcello
Day 6
Venice at Pace — San Marco First Light · Peggy Guggenheim · Final Dinner
San Marco at first light — the Basilica before the 10am opening of the tourist queue, in the hour when the mosaic surfaces are most visible in the angled morning light and the Piazza belongs to the city's own residents. The Peggy Guggenheim Collection on the Grand Canal — the 20th-century modernist collection whose palazzo terrace is the most directly accessible point on the Grand Canal available to the public, and whose permanent collection (Picasso, Pollock, Kandinsky, Dalí, Magritte, and Ernst) provides the 20th-century context that makes the Biennale's contemporary programme most legible as a continuation. The farewell dinner at the hotel's Grand Canal terrace or at a confirmed reservation — the final evening in Venice, when the Biennale's programme has been navigated and the city itself is the remaining subject.
Venice Cultural Programme
Day 7–8
Optional: Verona / Vicenza Extension or Departure
Optional Northern Italy extension: Verona (1 hour by train) for the Arena di Verona — the 1st-century Roman amphitheatre whose summer opera season runs concurrently with the Biennale, providing the most dramatic operatic setting in Italy within day-trip distance of Venice. Vicenza (45 minutes) for the Palladio trail — the Villa Rotonda, the Teatro Olimpico, and the Basilica Palladiana whose architectural influence on Western building from the 17th century to the present makes Vicenza the single most consequential architectural day trip available from Venice. Alternatively: private water taxi to Marco Polo Airport for onward departure.
Venice / Marco Polo Airport
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

Palazzo Papadopoli, Grand Canal, Venice
Venice — 6 Nights (Option A)
Aman Venice
Calle Tiepolo 1364, Santa Croce, Venice
Aman Venice in the Palazzo Papadopoli — the 16th-century palace on the Grand Canal whose two private gardens (the larger of the two is among the largest private gardens in Venice) and the 14 suites whose frescoed ceilings, terrazzo floors, and canal views provide the most spatially distinguished accommodation in the city. The private water gate for direct Grand Canal access; the Arva restaurant; and the Aman service philosophy applied to the palazzo environment whose historical fabric the renovation was designed to enhance rather than replace. The address whose combination of architectural quality and operational excellence has made it the reference luxury hotel in Venice since 2013.
Giudecca Island, Venice
Venice — 6 Nights (Option B)
Belmond Hotel Cipriani
Giudecca 10, Venice
The Belmond Hotel Cipriani on the Giudecca — the island hotel whose pool, gardens, and restaurant terrace look directly across the Bacino di San Marco to the Doge's Palace and San Marco's campanile, providing the view that defines Venice from outside its own geography. Opened in 1958 by Giuseppe Cipriani (founder of Harry's Bar), the hotel has maintained its position as the most consistently excellent luxury address in Venice through six decades of international ownership. The private launch connects the Giudecca to the hotel's San Marco landing stage in four minutes; the Oro restaurant; and the Olympic-sized outdoor pool that is the most requested single amenity in the Venice luxury hotel market.
Campo Santa Maria del Giglio, Grand Canal, Venice
Venice — 6 Nights (Option C)
The Gritti Palace
Campo Santa Maria del Giglio 2467, Venice
The Gritti Palace — the 15th-century palazzo of Doge Andrea Gritti on the Grand Canal, operated as a hotel since 1895 and restored to its current standard by The Luxury Collection in 2013. The Club del Doge restaurant terrace on the Grand Canal — the most photographed hotel terrace in Venice, where the view of the Santa Maria della Salute directly across the water and the gondola traffic below produce the quintessential Grand Canal experience. The Gritti's position at the Santa Maria del Giglio vaporetto stop places the Accademia, the Peggy Guggenheim, and the Punta della Dogana all within a five-minute walk along the Zattere.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🎨
Biennale Access
Giardini and Arsenale — Private Curator-Led Programme
Priority access to the Venice Biennale across the Giardini and Arsenale, with a private curator-led tour of the programme's most significant presentations. The curator's navigation of the thirty national pavilions, the Central Pavilion, and the 316-metre Corderie International Exhibition transforms the experience from an overwhelming sequence of works to a coherent argument about what the international art world currently considers most urgent. The tour includes the specific pavilions and works whose significance the curator identifies as essential to the edition's overall statement.
🏛️
Pinault Collection
Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana — Private Access
Private access to the Pinault Collection at Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana — the most significant private contemporary art collection in Italy, presented in two Tadao Ando-designed Venice venues whose architectural conversion is itself part of the collection's argument about the relationship between historic fabric and contemporary art. The Palazzo Grassi's major rotating exhibitions and the Punta della Dogana's permanent installation: the institutional complement to the Biennale whose presence alongside it creates the most concentrated single-city contemporary art experience available anywhere.
Private Boat
Venice Lagoon — Murano, Burano, Torcello, and the City at Dawn
A private boat across the Venice lagoon — Murano for the glass furnaces, Burano for the painted houses and lace tradition, and Torcello for the 7th-century Byzantine cathedral whose mosaic Last Judgment predates the Venetian Republic. The Grand Canal at dawn before the vaporetti begin; the Bacino di San Marco at dusk. The private boat that makes Venice most legible as an island city in a lagoon rather than as a sequence of tourist sites connected by narrow calli — the geographical context that the city's pedestrian infrastructure cannot provide.
🖼️
Venice Cultural
Scuola di San Rocco · Accademia · Peggy Guggenheim
The Venetian painting tradition across three institutions — the Accademia for the school from Bellini to Tiepolo; the Scuola Grande di San Rocco for Tintoretto's 50-year decorative programme (1565–1588) whose scale and ambition the Biennale's Arsenale most directly echoes; and the Peggy Guggenheim Collection for the 20th-century modernist works whose acquisition history makes the palazzo on the Grand Canal the most personally documented private museum in Italy. The three institutions that provide the historical context within which the Biennale's contemporary programme makes its argument.
Visual Journey

Through the Lens

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