Parties

In Venice, Chanel’s Next Prize Dinner Celebrated Ten Artists of Tomorrow

Her tone shifted as she continued: “Yet we are attuned to the discord among so many nations present, and to the animosity between them. It is a heartbreaking paradox, but perhaps also a call: a reminder that art, at its best, can bridge divides and invite us to imagine new ways forward.” Quoting words once uttered by Gabrielle Chanel, Peel concluded: “Only thoughts of the future occupy my mind.” And in that spirit, she turned the room toward what lies ahead: “the power of human imagination, and the possibilities that creative minds can unlock”.

The evening also served as the elegant debut of a new Chanel Culture Fund Fellowship, launched in partnership with the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. Designed to support both the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice and the Guggenheim Museum, the initiative deepens Chanel’s long-standing commitment to institutional collaboration, curatorial inquiry, and cultural exchange, bridging generations, geographies, and a fair share of time zones.

After dinner, served at oval tables dressed with elegant whimsy, their floral centerpieces in perfect cahoots with the playful Laguna-B glassware, the scene began to loosen its collar. Conversation lingered, and the mood shifted gently from polished dîner to something more conspiratorial, as Peel unveiled an impromptu coup-de-théâtre: Patti Smith took the room hostage with a cappella performance of Because The Night, her words edged with poetry and incantation.

Then, as if on cue, Grammy-nominated trumpeter and 2026 Next Prize laureate Ambrose Akinmusire swept in with an improvisational jazz set alongside Grammy-winning jazz musician Sullivan Fortner. In the softly lit garden, dancing and conversation stretched well into the night. Curators Massimiliano Gioni and Hans Ulrich Obrist mingled with Diane von Fürstenberg, Margherita Missoni, and Peter Marino; artists Cao Fei, Michael Armitage, and David Salle chatted with gallerists Sadie Coles and Philomene Magers.

Eventually, the distinction between audience and performance thinned altogether, replaced by the late-night choreography of people simply unwilling to leave.