Disruptive design biennial breaks taboos through an exploration of water and the human body
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Disruptive design biennial breaks taboos through an exploration of water and the human body

The self-described ‘disruptive’ Mayrit Biennial of Design and Architecture in Madrid is the brainchild of designer Miguel Leiro, a Madrileño who spends his time producing idiosyncratic furniture and organizing stellar people with provocative ideas. During a whirlwind of celebratory openings and late-night parties in late May, set in and outside the M30, the motorway that encircles the city center, the 2024 biennial brought together locals and visitors from museum professionals to young entrepreneurs that came together in a wholesome and cooperative exchange of views on contemporary design that felt fresh and open to dialogue and interpretation.

Mayrit Biennial 2024: ‘Wet Dreams’

Soft Flesh at Cinema Parentesi 

(Image credit: Courtesy Mayrit Biennial)

Together with curator Joel Blanco—design researcher by day and performer by night—Leiro tapped architect and Wheelwright Prize recipient Marina Otero Verzier to develop the theoretical framework and title of the 2024 biennial, “Wet Dreams”, a more optimistic follow up on the 2022 edition, dubbed “Drowned Worlds”.