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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Art Collectors > There’s an Art Show Aboard a 236-Foot Yacht With Marina Abramović
Art Collectors

There’s an Art Show Aboard a 236-Foot Yacht With Marina Abramović

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 5 June 2026 12:34
Published 5 June 2026
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If, unfortunate reader, you’re licking your wounds after being outbid on the $181.2 million Jackson Pollock at the New York auctions last month, take heart: you, too, can still buy access to art that will be seen only by the world’s precious few wealthiest. That’s because now there is a hyper-exclusive, “museum-grade” art show aboard a 236-foot “superyacht,” and you may yet be able to reserve a suite there.

In its maiden voyage, the Floating Art Hotel has taken to Monaco Bay, where it is currently anchored facing the famed Monte-Carlo casino (frequented by the likes of James Bond) for the duration (through June 8) of the Grand Prix Formula 1 motor race, the most prestigious such race in the world.

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Described by the organizers as a “world-first concept in art and hospitality,” it was conceived as a “traveling private members’ club at sea.” After Monaco, it will move to what the organizers call “the world’s most influential cultural destinations,” which are, apparently, Miami, Hong Kong, and Abu Dhabi. 

There are just 14 private suites, so there’s a guest list of “collectors, founders, and cultural figures” that is, you guessed it, “strictly curated.” The environment is, naturally, “designed for depth and discretion.” On preview day on Thursday, suites were fully booked; the organizers declined to disclose prices, and say they expect them to be fully subscribed by the weekend, though they’re currently at 80 percent capacity.

The Floating Art Hotel, Monaco Edition, 2026.

Guests have it all: five-star hospitality, a (wait for it) “curated” wellness program, and exclusive access to Formula 1 races, which they can view from the terrace atop the luxurious Les Caravelles Building, with direct sightlines to the Sainte Dévote corner, a notoriously tight right-hand turn. Patrons staying in the Owner’s Residence gain exclusive Paddock Club and Pit Lane access on Saturday and Sunday, and “private tenders operate day and night between the yacht and the city,” say the organizers, “ensuring seamless, crowd-free movement throughout.”

The exhibition, “States of Motion,” was developed just for the vessel, and, we are told, approaches movement “not as image but as condition.” (High concept! So apropos!) The roster includes several globally recognized figures: performance giant Marina Abramović, Arte Povera titan Pier Paolo Calzolari (“poor art” on a yacht!), politically incisive Iranian artist Shirin Neshat, and Argentinian multidisciplinary artist Tomás Saraceno, who describes his projects, in part, as moving beyond the “Capitalocene,” a concept that argues that the root cause of the planetary climate crisis is the capitalist system.

The Floating Art Hotel, Monaco Edition, 2026.

The organizers told ARTnews in an email that the works predominantly come direct from the artists’ studios, with some lent by galleries or dealers. Abramović’s studio declined to comment to ARTnews beyond saying she wasn’t involved. Neither Saraceno’s studio nor Neshat’s gallery immediately responded to questions about whether they signed off on the project.

The Monégasque edition of the Floating Art Hotel has a starry list of supporters, including Beluga, Bureau of Innovation, Komos Tequila, Armand Philippe, Prices Candles, Prunier Caviar, Soho House, Vibi Venezia, and Steve’s.

“I spent years producing campaigns for some of the world’s biggest brands, and I kept thinking: what if we applied this level of craft to something that actually brings people together?” said Floating Art Hotel founder Gaelle Jaunay Calendini in press materials. “Art, sport, the sea—and the right people in the same room. The magic happens from there.” 

French-born, Los Angeles–based Calendini presents herself as a former video artist-turned-“producer extraordinaire” who has worked on commercial shoots and events. She prides herself on telling clients when they’re making bad decisions, “and inch’allah [sic] as they say!”

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