When the 23rd Biennale of Sydney takes over the city next March, attendees will be forgiven for having water on their minds. The returning art event famously showcased Ai Weiwei's 60-metre inflatable boat back in 2018, but in 2022 it's calling its entire program Rīvus, which means 'stream' in Latin. The Biennale is embracing its titular notion in a number of ways, too. Announcing not just its theme but its first 59 participants for the event, organisers also revealed that it'll use its array of artworks and activities to form conceptualised wetlands and imagined ecosystems. The plan isn't just to feature these watery places in paintings, sculptures and installations, but to "follow the currents of meandering tributaries, expanding out into a delta of interrelated ideas," as a statement by the Biennale's 2022 Curatorium explains. This year, Artistic Director José Roca, Art Gallery of New South Wales Head of Learning and Participation Paschal Daantos Berry, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia curator Anna Davis, Information and Cultural Exchange First Nations programs producer Hannah Donnelly and Artspace curator Talia Linz are overseeing the Biennale program, which'll run from Saturday, March 12–Monday, June 13, 2022. And if you're wondering what their theme will entail in a practical sense, specific artwork details haven't been revealed as yet; however, the Curatorium advises that the lineup will include "river horror, creek futurism, Indigenous science, cultural flows, ancestral technologies, counter-mapping, queer ecologies, multispecies justice, hydrofeminism, water healing, spirit streams, fish philosophy and sustainable methods of co-existence". The first roster of participants charged with bringing all of these notions to life spans folks from six continents and 33 countries — complete with a heavy local component — and includes artists, designers, architects and scientists. Yes, that's a diverse range of skill sets, ranging beyond visual arts into other fields, which is why the Biennale has opted for the term 'participants'. [caption id="attachment_807271" align="aligncenter" width="1920"] Julie Gough, Manifestation (Bruny Island), 2010. Installation view of Littoral (2010), curated by Vivonne Thwaites, Carnegie Gallery Hobart. Courtesy the artist. Photograph: Julie Gough. Copyright © Julie Gough.[/caption] Exactly where the event will take place is yet to be revealed, except in one instance, with the Biennale setting up shop by the harbour at The Cutaway at Barangaroo Reserve for the first time — fittingly given the watery theme. And if it feels like Sydney only just enjoyed the last Biennale, there's a reason for that. After the 2020 event was forced to take an unforeseen break due to the pandemic, it wrapped up later last year than initially planned. FIRST BIENNALE OF SYDNEY 2022 LINEUP A4C Arts for the Commons Ackroyd & Harvey Robert Andrew Ana Barboza and Rafael Freyre Badger Bates Milton Becerra Cave Urban Hera Büyüktaşcıyan Tania Candiani Yoan Capote Casino Wake Up Time Carolina Caycedo Alex Cerveny Erin Coates Cian Dayrit Melissa Dubbin and Aaron S Davidson Matias Duville Clemencia Echeverri Embassy of the North Sea Juliana Góngora Rojas Julie Gough Rex Greeno and Dean Greeno David Haines and Joyce Hinterding Sheroanawe Hakihiiwe Dale Harding Joey Holder Marguerite Humeau Aluaiy Kaumakan Pushpa Kumari Eva L'Hoest Mata Aho Collective Clare Milledge Yuko Mohri Moogahlin Performing Arts with Aanmitaagzi Big Medicine Studio New Landscapes Institute New-Territories _ S/he _f.Roche Leeroy New Wura-Natasha Ogunji Mike Parr Marjetica Potrč Caio Reisewitz Tabita Rezaire Duke Riley Abel Rodríguez Teho Ropeyarn Diana Scherer Dineo Seshee Bopape Komunidad X Sipat Lawin Kiki Smith Paula de Solminihac STARTTS (NSW Service for the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture and Trauma Survivors) and Jiva Parthipan Jenna Sutela Imhathai Suwatthanasilp Leanne Tobin Barthélémy Toguo Sopolemalama Filipe Tohi Hanna Tuulikki Gal Weinstein Zheng Bo The 23rd Biennale of Sydney will run from Saturday, March 12–Monday, June 13, 2022. Entry will be free, as always. We'll keep you posted on the whole artist lineup and exhibition program when they're announced. Top image: Carolina Caycedo, Yuma, or the Land of Friends, 2014, digital print on acrylic glass, and satellite images, 580 x 473 cm. Installation view at the 8th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art, Museen Dahlen (2014), Berlin. Courtesy of the artist.