Shame Parade
Newcastle University academic’s Venice Biennale exhibition to open
Published on: 8 May 2026
Fine Art lecturer Angel Cohn Castle is presenting Shame Parade at the 61st International Art exhibtion with her artistic partner Davide Bugarin.
Shame Parade
The duo is representing Scotland at the acclaimed event and their work will be shown from Saturday 9 May to Sunday 22 November 2026 at Olivolo, Castello 59/C 30122, Venice.
From Scottish castles to Filipino cemeteries, Bugarin + Castle explore overlapping geographies and time periods in a contemporary queer and trans reimagining of public shaming rituals. Their narrative unfolds not in a single scene, but in a carnival-like procession of subversion and defiance. Working across architecture, moving image, sculpture, and performance, their practice draws vibrant connections between queer and trans lives in Scotland and internationally, including diasporic connections to the Philippines. Their work focuses on shared resonances as well as differences, shaped by personal and cultural histories.
Across multiple artworks, Shame Parade reimagines centuries-old European shaming rituals, known as rough music, charivari and scampanate, where spectacle, sound, and costume were used to discipline social transgressors. The artists transform these customs into a contemporary language, bringing together fourteenth-century court transcripts, satirical eighteenth-century engravings, karaoke ballads, medieval armour and Filipino vehicle art. Through this process, they construct a layered world where historic voices and contemporary culture loop together in scenes that are both defiant and tender.
The sculpture, At Certayne Tymes fuses mechanical, anatomical, and vocal elements, while Submit to Sound, a moving image work, layers voice feminisation exercises and songs made with Manila-based band Kalye Teresa. Traversing both gallery spaces, the sculptural intervention, Nocturnal Amusements, poses the question, “Are You Discreet?” a knowing provocation to the viewer. Shame here is not banished, but stretched to new emotional registers where defiance, play, and intimacy coexist. Bugarin + Castle offer no moral resolution. By mapping shame and transformation across continents and through time, they create a politically charged space where power and identity remain in motion.
![Full size EAD IMAGE Bugarin + Castle, Mr. Mimic [Submit to Sound], 2026, Photo (detail), Courtesy the Artists and Scotland + Venice © Bugarin + Castle Full size EAD IMAGE Bugarin + Castle, Mr. Mimic [Submit to Sound], 2026, Photo (detail), Courtesy the Artists and Scotland + Venice © Bugarin + Castle](/media/wwwnclacuk/pressoffice/images/news/july2024/LEAD IMAGE Bugarin Castle, Mr. Mimic [Submit to Sound], 2026, Photo (detail), Courtesy the Artists and Scotland Venice © Bugarin Castle (2).jpg)
Uneasy and passionate
Bugarin + Castle said:
“For the uneasy and passionate, from an uneasy and passionate duo. The unruly woman, the cuckold, the prostitute, the sodomiser, and other social transgressors were publicly mocked in historic shaming parades. We are interested in how both sound and cross-dressing were used not for expression but as tools of control.
“ These raucous events are the genesis of our exhibition that traverses the historic and contemporary, Scotland and the Philippines. We make the work in a context today where the lives of those such as trans people and sex workers are being debated and impacted in courts and parliaments, often without those people being heard. The work does not tidy shame away, nor does it cling to it. Instead, we lean into the complexity, stickiness and collision of sound, voice and shame.”
Bugarin + Castle’s recent interactive film Sore Throat, shot in Edinburgh and Manila, explored colonial monsters and sound in queer Filipino spaces, showing in a solo exhibition at Fruitmarket as well as at Tate Modern and international venues. Via custom software, gallery audience voices were unknowingly recorded and replayed within the film, implicating them as antagonists in its narrative. Bugarin + Castle also perform in drag as Hairy Teddy Bear and Pollyfilla, through Pollyanna, a Scottish queer arts company founded by Castle, now in its 10th year. The artists are based in Glasgow.
Ambitious work
The exhibtion is curated by Mount Stuart Trust and commissioned by Scotland + Venice.
Dr Morven Gregor, Curator, Mount Stuart Trust and Sophie Crichton Stuart, Chair of Mount Stuart Trust, who founded the Mount Stuart contemporary visual arts programme in 2001, said: “We are excited to curate the work of Bugarin + Castle for Scotland + Venice in 2026. Shame Parade will be the artists' most ambitious presentation to date, reflecting their global outlook and practices across performance, film, architecture, sculpture and design. Their skill in animating historical research to foreground contemporary questions exemplifies the approach of Mount Stuart's Contemporary Visual Arts Programme. As the Programme celebrates its 25th anniversary in 2026 by presenting Bugarin + Castle in Venice, we look forward to bringing Shame Parade to Bute in 2027."
Mount Stuart Trust, on the Isle of Bute, is led by Dr Morven Gregor, working with the artists and a series of partners. Following Venice, the exhibition will return to Mount Stuart on Bute next Summer, before touring to venues throughout Scotland and a UK tour supported by Art Fund. Forma, a contemporary arts organisation working across the UK and internationally, are producers of the film element of the project and are working with Mount Stuart as Production Manager of the exhibition in Venice.
The project was chosen to represent Scotland by a panel including Sepake Angiama, Director, Iniva, Norah Campbell, Head of Arts Scotland, British Council, Simon Groom, Director, International & National Partnerships, National Galleries of Scotland, Emma Nicolson, Head of Visual Arts, Creative Scotland and Lucia Pietroiusti, Head of Research & Emergence at Hartwig Art Foundation, Amsterdam. In selecting them, Scotland + Venice embraces a vision of Scotland that is outward-facing, interconnected, and attuned to the complexities of a shifting world, as well as supporting two artists to make their most significant body of work to date.
Last year, Owen Hopkins, Director of the Farrell Centre, curated Geology of Britannic Repair, a collaboration between curators from Britian and Kenya at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Press release adapted with thanks to Scotland + Venice.