In July 2025, a group of 8 international curators visited Liverpool for the Liverpool Biennial x British Council Curators’ Week. Here, 3 of them share how the Biennials Connect programme has helped to shape their own practice and the learnings they will take forward from it.

An in-conversation with Liverpool Biennial Head of Programme and Partnerships Miranda Stearn, and Lilian Munuo

Here, in conversation with Liverpool Biennial Head of Programme and Partnerships Miranda Stearn, Lilian Munuo shares her thoughts on the experience, and what it means for her current work in Tanzania.

What made you want to participate in the Biennials Connect programme? What were your hopes and expectations? 

My interest in the Biennials Connect programme came from my ongoing commitment to working at the intersection of artistic practice, curatorial thinking, and disability justice. As an artist, curator, and disability inclusion practitioner, my work is rooted in lived experience and long-term engagement with questions of access, authorship, and whose knowledge is valued within cultural spaces. Growing up with a mobility disability shaped how I understand institutions, not only in terms of physical design, but also in how narratives, power, and legitimacy are constructed. 

The 2025 Liverpool Biennial theme, BEDROCK, resonated deeply with my practice. The concept of BEDROCK focused on foundational layers of migration, labour, faith, resistance, colonial histories, and social infrastructures, and how these underlying forces continue to shape the present. Instead of treating history as something fixed or distant, BEDROCK invited reflection on what lies beneath contemporary cultural life and whose labour, bodies, and belief systems have historically been rendered invisible. This approach aligned strongly with my own work, which I have returned to origins, by looking at how colonial and religious frameworks have shaped understandings of disability, healing, and worth.

I also applied to the Biennials Connect programme hoping to learn how large-scale international exhibitions can meaningfully engage with local contexts while remaining accountable to global inequalities. I was particularly interested in how biennials can embed accessibility not as an afterthought, but as a foundational curatorial principle. I also hoped to strengthen my curatorial language, expand my international network, and encounter models that could inform my work in Tanzania, where conversations around disability are often dominated by charity or medical narratives rather than cultural participation and agency. 

What stood out for you in terms of the experience? What were the highlights? Any challenges? 

One of the most significant aspects of the experience was how the Biennials Connect programme approached access as part of its foundation rather than as a reactive concern. This was evident well before my travel, through early and thoughtful engagement with an accessibility consultant. These conversations were not assessments of limitation, but collaborative planning, allowing me to communicate my access needs clearly. The access rider functioned as both a practical and ethical tool, shaping decisions in advance and reinforcing access as a shared responsibility. As a result, my experience of the programme was uninterrupted, grounded, and fully participatory, an experience that felt quietly transformative precisely because it removed the need for constant negotiation. 

This approach to access mirrored the wider ethos of the 2025 Liverpool Biennial and its theme, BEDROCK. Just like the Biennial invited audiences to consider the foundational structures that shape social life, the programme demonstrated what it means to build access into the foundations of cultural practice. I didn’t experience accessibility as a visible “intervention,” but as an underlying condition that allowed relationships, conversations, and ideas to unfold naturally. This enabled me to engage with the programme on equal footing, my focus being on artistic exchange instead of logistics. 

Within this context, the work of Amy Claire Mills resonated strongly with me, particularly her engagement with the concept of “third spaces.” Her work explored informal, in-between spaces that exist outside of home and institutional frameworks, spaces where disabled people can gather, rest, and create without the pressures of productivity or normative performance. Encountering this work while participating in the programme, which already created such a space in practice, gave the concept tangible meaning. The Biennials Connect experience itself began to feel like a third space: structured yet flexible, intentional yet responsive, offering room for presence rather than performance. 

What became clear through this alignment was that accessibility is not only about physical entry or accommodation, but about creating environments where people can show up fully. Third spaces, as Mills articulates them, are not supplementary to cultural life; they are essential to it. Seeing this idea reflected both conceptually in the exhibition and operationally in the programme reinforced my understanding of access as a curatorial strategy, one that shapes how knowledge is shared, how relationships form, and whose ways of being are considered valid. 

Instead of presenting challenges, this experience offered a model. It demonstrated how accessibility, when rooted in the outset, can transform not only individual participation but the overall quality of exchange. This integration of care, planning, and conceptual clarity remains one of the most impactful elements of the programme for me. 

What did you take away from the experience? How do these insights relate to your practice as a curator and/or artist, and to the context you are working in?

One of the key insights I took away from the Biennials Connect programme is that accessibility functions most powerfully when treated as a curatorial methodology rather than a technical requirement. This experience showed me that access is not only about removing barriers, but about shaping conditions for participation, trust, and sustained engagement. 

This insight aligns closely with my own practice as both an artist and curator. Through my initiative ‘Beyond the Label’, I work to create platforms where disabled people are not positioned as subjects of representation, but as authors, collaborators, and knowledge-holders. The programme affirmed my belief that disabled bodies carry critical insights into how societies are structured, and that these insights are essential to reimagining cultural institutions. 

The concept of BEDROCK also shaped my commitment to working with foundational questions. In my practice, I currently engage with faith, healing, colonial memory, and disability as interconnected systems. These are not abstract themes, but lived realities that continue to shape how disabled people are perceived and treated, particularly in my country context. The Biennial reinforced the importance of addressing these underlying structures rather than focusing solely on surface-level inclusion. 

In Tanzania, disability is still frequently framed through charity, medical intervention, or spiritual healing. Cultural spaces that allow disabled people to exist as artists and thinkers remain limited. The insights gained from the programme, particularly around third spaces and relational practices, encourage me to continue building alternative cultural environments that prioritise agency, rest, and self-definition. 

What is next for you? What are you working on, and how has this experience influenced your plans?

I am currently developing several interconnected projects that continue to engage with foundational, or bedrock, questions around access, belief, and belonging. One of my main focuses is growing ‘Beyond the Label’ into a sustainable initiative and a creative hub in Tanzania. The aim is to create an accessible space for art-making, film, research, and community engagement, with disabled people at the centre of decision-making and authorship. 

Alongside this, I am undertaking a residency in Leipzig focused on artistic research within the Moravian archives. My research examines historical disability models, the role of the church in Tanzania, and its influence on charity-based approaches to disability, while asking how communities might transition toward the social model of disability. I am also in residence with DaDa in Liverpool through the Rushton Residency, where I am working with contemporary voices of disabled people, focusing on lived experience in the present and the social model of disability. 

The opportunity to engage closely with fellow curators in the Biennials Connect delegation has been impactful. Exchanging perspectives with practitioners working across different geographies, disciplines, and institutional contexts sharpened my understanding of socially engaged practice as both a local and transnational field. These conversations, often informal, reflective, and grounded in lived experience, reinforced the value of critical frameworks, shared language, and sustained peer learning in shaping ethical and effective curatorial work. 

As a result of this exchange, and of the programme as a whole, I feel motivated to pursue a Master’s degree focused on socially engaged practices. The Biennials Connect experience clarified my desire to deepen the theoretical grounding of my work while remaining firmly rooted in practice. It affirmed that my lived experience, community-based projects, and ongoing research are not separate from academic inquiry but form a strong foundation for it. Pursuing further study feels like a natural next step in strengthening my ability to contribute to socially engaged, access-led curatorial practice across different contexts. 

The Biennials Connect experience also reinforced the importance of planning, collaboration, and care across all my projects. Experiencing accessibility has strengthened my resolve to advocate for similar standards in the initiatives I lead, particularly in contexts where access is still perceived as optional or unattainable. 

Being part of the delegation affirmed my desire to continue building bridges between Global South practices and international cultural platforms, while remaining grounded in local realities. Ultimately, the experience encouraged my belief that meaningful cultural work begins at the foundations, by designing spaces, processes, and futures that anticipate difference rather than reacting to it.