Silence and Spectacle: Maurizio Cattelan’s Wordless Gala, Chicago

(Middle) Artist Maurizio Cattelan with guests. Photo by Noah Sheldon courtesy of the Renaissance Society.

The contemporary art gala is, more often than not, a grueling marathon of forced pleasantries and rubbery chicken. But on Wednesday, April 8, the Renaissance Society in Chicago managed to entirely short-circuit this exhausting social choreography. For the 2026 iteration of its annual artist-led benefit, dubbed RenBen, the institution handed the reins to Maurizio Cattelan. Predictably, the Italian provocateur turned the evening into an exercise in withholding, orchestrating an event officially titled “The Silent Party!”.

Taking over two floors of the historic Chicago Athletic Association, Cattelan transformed the hotel into a cinematic, wordless labyrinth. Upon arrival, the 400 attendees were stripped of their primary social crutch—their voices—and were instructed to circulate in complete silence for the first two hours. Communication was reduced entirely to scribbles on notepads distributed at the door.

La Tosca Chicago. Photo by Matthew Reeves/BFA.com courtesy of the Renaissance Society.

Cattelan, long known for his sharp conceptual precision and knack for inducing highly controlled social chaos, recognized that a hotel is already a site loaded with embedded codes of privacy, performance, and intimacy. By removing table chatter and the traditional seated dinner format, he created a fascinating breach in the standard gala script. What could have been a painfully austere environment instead became intensely observant, unexpectedly flirtatious, and genuinely funny, as guests were forced to gesture, linger, and frequently miscommunicate.

Rather than standard catering, the culinary experience operated as a parallel performance piece. Working with Jason Hammel and the Boka Group, the event featured a roaming, room-service-style procession of Midwestern cicchetti—bites substantial enough to keep the crowd moving. In a quintessential Cattelan touch, bottles of Franciacorta were simply left to chill in the hotel’s bathtubs, making brilliant use of the venue’s plumbing.

Artwork by William Chyr. Photo by Noah Sheldon courtesy of the Renaissance Society.
Photo by Noah Sheldon courtesy of the Renaissance Society.

As attendees wandered the silent corridors, they encountered a series of room-to-room artistic interventions. The evening was animated by activations from a diverse roster of artists, including Davide Balula, Ghislaine Leung, Moriah Evans, William Chyr, Josh Dihle, Shir Ende, Max Guy, and Isabelle Frances McGuire. Live performances from groups like Nordic Thunder and Cosmic Underground Theater, alongside portraiture by Jacob Ryan Reno, punctuated the quiet. The guest list itself was a who’s who of the city’s cultural vanguard and beyond, with artists like Nick Cave, Brendan Fernandes, and Aliza Nisenbaum mingling silently alongside major collectors and curators. The evening’s execution was even aided by six sets of twins who helped bring the concept to life.

(L-R) Maurizio Cattelan and Myriam Ben Salah. Photo by Noah Sheldon courtesy of the Renaissance Society.

Once the verbal floodgates opened, the disciplined hush instantly devolved into a boisterous Italian dance hall. The release was celebrated with vast quantities of communal risotto, a sprawling three-and-a-half-meter tiramisu, and live music from La Tosca Chicago. Ultimately, the wordless experiment was a resounding, record-breaking success, raising nearly $600,000 to keep the museum’s ambitious exhibitions and public programs entirely free.

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