From 13 May to 9 November 2025, the Triennale di Milano will once again serve as an international forum for design, art and social discourse. The 24th edition of this long-standing exhibition is entitled ‘Inequalities’ and addresses one of the most pressing issues of our time: inequality – both global and local – in all its forms.

This exhibition is the final part of a curatorial trilogy that began in 2019 with ‘Broken Nature’ and will continue in 2022 with ‘Unknown Unknowns‘. This year’s edition is curated by a team led by architect and Triennale President Stefano Boeri, supported by renowned international curators such as Norman Foster, Beatriz Colomina, Mark Wigley, Hans Ulrich Obrist and Theaster Gates.
With contributions from 43 countries and numerous site-specific installations, the exhibition explores themes such as urban inequality (‘Cities’), solutions to the housing crisis (‘Towards an Equal Future’), health equity (‘The Republic of Longevity’) and the intersection of architecture and microbiology (‘We the Bacteria’). It features work by world-renowned designers such as Kazuyo Sejima, Alejandro Aravena, Elizabeth Diller, Boonserm Premthada and Amos Gitai.
Special projects such as ‘471 Days’ by Filippo Teoldi, which visualises the Gaza war through data imagery, and ‘Radio Ballads’, originally initiated by the Serpentine and focusing on mental health, further enrich the exhibition. ‘Inequalities’ will be accompanied by an extensive programme of symposia, talks, performances and publications. The visual identity, designed by Pentagram, translates the theme into pixelated patterns and bold colour contrasts. With this edition, the Triennale Milano once again positions itself as a platform for critical dialogue and a laboratory for creative responses to the social and structural challenges of the future.




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