The Doughnut (W)Hole Pavilion
The search for what is missing, for what has been lost, has long captured the attention of artists. How do you capture the presence of an absence? How do you contend with the holes? Sometimes the artistic solution is fairly straightforward. The Family of King Henry VIII (artist unknown), for example, is a dynastic painting which sought to reunite Prince Edward with his mother, Jane Seymour, who died when Edward was two weeks old. Sometimes the work is more abstract, such as Rothko’s large canvas invitations to be enveloped by the void, to almost feel it on your skin.

Psychologists believe that confronting what is lost or what is missing is driven by one surprising emotion – hope. The hope that something will be found, illuminated, resolved, healed.

Taking its cue from the paradox at the centre of a doughnut – the presence of an absence – the pavilion brings together 14 international artists exploring how holes shape wholes, how what is missing becomes, or always was, as meaningful as what is present.

In the age of AI, this question takes on new urgency. Machine learning models appear as overwhelming wholes built from fragments, gaps, and exclusions. The Doughnut (W)Hole Pavilion asks: what role does absence play in constructing the digital images, texts, and worlds we increasingly inhabit – as ‘technology has become the substrate of social, economic, political and aeshtetic lives’ (Serakai_studio, promoting Yuk Hui, 2025)?

The participating artists span photography, moving image, sound, games, and generative installation: Maria Ahmed, Kasper Bergholt, Ben Millar Cole, Evangelia Danedaki, Sarah Deane, Sarah-Jane Field, Alan Knox, David Koh, Merve Kurtuluş, Duncan Petrie, Angel Qin, Heidi Reece, Sarah Sweeney, and Min Jung Tsai.

The Doughnut (W)Hole Pavilion opens this November as part of the 7th edition of The Wrong Biennale, the world’s largest celebration of digital art, reaching millions globally and a member of the International Biennial Association. Alongside the online pavilion, an in-person “embassy” event will take place at Hapax Living Room, London, on 1–2 November 2025.


Confirmed Artists


Maria Ahmed investigates historic and contemporary languages of the image through collage and appropriation, with a practice encompassing photography, books and moving image. Her most recent artist’s film, Epistemologies, was screened by Turku Video Arts festival in Finland in March 2025. Maria’s self-published artist’s books have been shortlisted for international book awards, including Images Vevey, Belfast Photofestival, Skinnerboox/ Fotografia Europea and Fiebre. Maria’s interactive moving image work The Smooth Space is the Habitat of the Nomad was commissioned by Format photography festival in 2022, as part of Kipya Ki (What’s New?).

Kasper Bergholt is a Copenhagen-based artist and photographer who returned to the visual arts in 2023 after a 15-year hiatus. His work has since appeared in exhibitions and collaborations across Melbourne, London, New York City, Atlanta, Helsinki, Budapest, Warsaw, Minneapolis, Chongqing, Taipei, and Glasgow. He holds a Master of Arts degree from the University of Copenhagen and has been awarded the university’s rare gold medal.

Evangelia Danadaki is an artist and researcher working with video, performance and film. Her work is situated at the intersection of visual art, feminist philosophy and psychoanalysis, conceptualising imaging as a practice of plurality and affection. Currently, she is a PhD candidate at the University of Leeds, in the School of Fine Art, History of Art and Cultural Studies as a recipient of the Amanda Burton Scholarship, and an Associate Editor at Parallax. Recent work has been presented at the Association for Art History (University of York, 2025), the American Comparative Literature Association and the Samuel Beckett Society Conference (University of Edinburgh, 2025 and California State University, 2024).

Sarah Deane is a visual artist exploring how personal and cultural histories are remembered, forgotten, and reimagined—particularly through the lives of women. Through photography, collage, and archival materials, she layers, fragments, and reconstructs images to revisit personal and cultural histories, with a focus on memory, place, and transformation. She was recently awarded a bursary from Galway Arts Centre and Galway Culture Company, as well as funding from Galway County Council, to experiment with AI in her visual arts practice. Her work All that is solid… received Honourable Mentions in the AI categories of the Tokyo International Foto Awards and the B&W International Photography Awards.

Sarah-Jane Field works with text and image. Recent work includes generated images in Prompt Magazine (2025), a meditation titled Prompt-Engineer for Lexiconia, a research project creatively exploring terms used to describe generative AI processes (2024), and Beyond Romanticism: Relationship Advice for the Now for Source (2023). In 2022, her project why is there an astronaut in a field of flowers/ was exhibited and awarded by Format Photography for Future Focus, Quad Gallery, Derby. Sarah-Jane is co-producing The Doughnut (W)Hole Pavilion for The Wrong Biennale 7th Edition alongside curator Kim Shaw.

David Koh is a Singaporean-American artist exploring the intersection of technology, humanity and cultural identity through hybrid digital-physical works, interactive media installations and web-based art. He earned his MA in Fine Art from Central Saint Martins in 2023. David has exhibited internationally, including in Germany, Italy, USA, France and Mexico. He co-curated De-Oriented, featuring emerging Southeast Asian artists (London, 2022) and was an artist in residence at Objectifs photography centre (Singapore, 2022). His work was recently profiled in Art & Market magazine.

Merve Kurtuluş an Istanbul-based artist exploring the intersection of artificial intelligence, visual culture, and critical theory. Currently pursuing an MA in Art History at Istanbul Technical University, their thesis examines the art of artificial intelligence. They also lead workshops on AI-assisted creativity, translating technical processes into accessible artistic methods. Merve draws on a decade of experience as a copywriter and creative director. Their work has appeared in Cakes of Codes (Istanbul, 2025), Sacred Data at Cluster Photography & Print Fair (London), Post Narrative with Mehmet Sinan Kuran, and at Soho House Istanbul for Istanbul Blockchain Week.

Ben Millar Cole is a photographer exploring the intersection of visual arts and technology. Collaborating with AI since 2017, he is drawn not to seamless simulation but to the creative potential of errors, breakdowns, and unexpected outcomes. His work reimagines photographic traditions through AI, blending digital image-making, sculptural composition, and print processes to examine how human and machine creativity intertwine. Ben’s work has been exhibited at the California Museum of Photography, Palmer Gallery, and Rencontres d'Arles, and received the 2023 Wallpaper* AI-Generated Design Award. Their photobook One Horse Landed won the Belfast Photobook Prize and was featured in European Photography magazine.

Duncan Petrie is a London-based photographer, writer, and web developer originally from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His work explores the presence of nature within human environments and imagines what the world might look like in our absence. Balancing humour and beauty, Duncan creates at the intersection of his many interests, blending curiosity with visual storytelling. Recently, he has focused on completing projects inspired by the indie or poetic web—an anti-corporate, deeply personal corner of the internet built from blogs, webrings, and experimental single-page sites. In 2025, Petrie exhibited in group shows at Getxophoto, the Photobook Café, and the Glasgow Gallery of Photography.

Angel Qin’s practice unfolds within Libidoscape – a post-human, sensorial ecology where environments and everyday objects are eroticized, embodied, and enlivened. This framework reimagines intimacy and subjectivity by positioning the human within a network of desires shared with the non-human. Working across moving image, performance, and object-based installation, Qin creates perceptual fields where identity, ecology, and technology intersect. In both artistic and curatorial contexts, Qin seeks to craft experiences that are intellectually rigorous and sensorially immersive, adaptable to institutional, public, and commercial settings. Her work has been presented internationally, including at Tate Modern and the London Art Fair, and has been featured in Frieze, Vogue Italia, and Aesthetica Magazine.

Heidi Reece is a photographer from Merseyside who recently completed a degree in Photography. Her practice blends the bizarre and humorous through staged imagery, portraiture, documentary, and still life. Reece’s work often challenges the conventions of documentary photography, exploring how the artificial and the authentic can merge to create new, imagined realities. Her recent project, Dear Uncle Eddy, was selected by Raquel Villar-Pérez for inclusion in Source Magazine. Originally presented as a photobook, the series reflects Reece’s fascination with narrative and constructed truth. She now aims to expand the project into an immersive exhibition, transforming it from a contained book into a living, dynamic experience.

Sarah Sweeney explores photography and documentary media through digital manipulation, transforming fragments of recorded memory into new visual and sonic confabulations. Working with found materials—Flickr feeds, eBay wedding albums, paparazzi photos, and voice memos – she reconfigures these digital remnants like a skin grafter, blending memory and invention. Her manipulated works twist and elongate bodies and landscapes, making visible the unseen forces of desire, anxiety, fantasy, and loss—emotions often absent from curated photo streams and social media archives. Sarah’s recent accomplishments include a residency at CultureHub, a Media Arts Assistance Fund grant via Wave Farm, and recognition as a finalist for the Arte Laguna Prize. She has presented on ethics and AI at Colby College, appeared on Radia, and led a listening session with seniors through DOROT. 

Min Jung Tsai is a Taiwanese artist who works across time-based media, interactive installation, projection mapping, performance, ceramic, sculpture, and drawing. Her practices involve religion, existence, feminism, and unusual daily life. She explores the territories of sociology, performance and place with a particular interest in gender politics. Min Jung has a Master’s degree from the University of the Arts London, Central Saint Martins Department of Fine Arts, and a bachelor’s from National Taiwan Normal University, School of Fine Arts. Trained as a painter, Min Jung has been involved in art projects in the UK and abroad as well as exhibitions at galleries and art fairs such as the National Gallery Prague; Five Years Gallery, London; Tate Modern, London; Ping Tung Art Museum, Ping Tung; Dequn Art Gallery, Taipei.



Programme

We are building a programme which includes the following so far:


  1. An IRL opening event at Hapax Living Room in London, 1st November 2025

  2. Followed by artist talks and workshops at Hapax Living Room, 2nd/3rd November 2025

  3. A commissioned essay by participating artist and writer Sarah-Jane Field responding to the exhibition 

  4. A publication compiled and edited by the artists’ cohort. Additional events and activities are in development.


More in the pipeline!

Selectors
We were honoured to have Dr. Flora Dunster, Sam Mercer, Christiane Monarchi and The Doughnut (W)Hole’s own curator, Kim Shaw, helping us with selection.  

Dr. Flora Dunster:
Dr. Flora Dunster is co-author of Photography: A Queer History (2024) and Course Leader of MA Contemporary Photography: Practices and Philosophies at Central Saint Martins. She completed a CHASE/AHRC-funded PhD from the University of Sussex and was a Paul Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, with her writing published in journals including Third Text and The Routledge Companion to Global Photographies. She has presented her research at international conferences, including the Association for Art History and at institutions, The Photographers' Gallery and Studio Voltaire.

Sam Mercer: Sam Mercer is an artist, curator and producer who has been Producer of the Digital Programme at The Photographers' Gallery since 2014, where he curates projects for the Media Wall and online platforms. He has co-curated significant programmes including Data / Set / Match, which sought new ways to present and interrogate scientific image datasets, and Imagin(in)g Networks investigating ecological and political aspects of digital networks. He completed an M-Res Art: Moving Image from Central Saint Martins in 2014 and works collaboratively with artist groups including Common Study.

Christiane Monarchi: Christiane Monarchi is the founding co-editor of Hapax Magazine and founding editor of Photomonitor, which has published over 1,400 features online since 2011. Through Hapax Magazine, she commissions international lens-based artists to create new photographic work that departs from their established practice, with content appearing only in print and not online. She regularly reviews artists' portfolios, mentors emerging photographers, and currently serves as a Trustee of the Centre for British Photography, having previously served on the boards of several photography institutions, including Photofusion.

Kim Shaw: Kim Shaw is an American artist and curator based in London. She is the former Director of Brixton-based NPO Photofusion (2015–2024), where she was responsible for delivering the organisation’s objective of supporting under-represented artists alongside delivering Photofusion’s artistic programme. She has chaired a number of panels, including On the Making and Materiality of Photography at London Art Fair and On Photography at The Photographer’s Gallery. She has been nominated for the Royal Photographic Society’s 100 Heroines. In 2024 she completed her MA in Contemporary Photography, Philosophy and Practice at Central Saint Martins. Her personal practice, which often takes the form of institutional critique, includes photography, sculpture and installation. Kim is the lead curator of The Doughnut (W)hole.

About
The Wrong Biennale


The Wrong Biennale is an expansive, decentralised art event that unites artists, curators, institutions, and the public through a global exhibition of exhibitions. Organised and hosted both online and offline by independent curators, it showcases selected digital artworks within pavilions and embassies worldwide. The Wrong has earned widespread recognition and accolades from the global press, art community, and public. It has received awards such as SOIS Cultura and an honorific mention from the European Commission’s S+T+ARTS prize. The Wrong is an institutional member of the International Biennial Association.
From an article titled What’s Right About the Wrong Biennale? in The New York Times (2018); “Counting its viewership in the millions, The Wrong just might be the world’s largest art biennale — the digital world’s answer to Venice. To visit, art lovers needn’t purchase a plane ticket, book a hotel or queue outside galleries: Admission requires only internet access...
The Wrong’s magic lies in the sense of discovery yielded by a simple click.”