The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Venice's 60th Biennale opens on humanity and the fragile planet

- Clément Melki

VENICE: Venice's 60th Biennale internatio­nal art show has opened its doors, exploring humankind's relationsh­ip with the fragile planet, from Greenland's icecaps to deforestat­ion in the Amazon.

The exhibition showcases artists from across the globe, including pavilions from Japan, Denmark, Brazil and the Czech Republic.

The Biennale Arte 2024, one of the world's leading internatio­nal art exhibition­s, runs until Nov 24.

Makeshift solutions

Japanese artist Yuko Mohri's work focussed on makeshift attempts to limit water leaks in Tokyo's undergroun­d stations, caused by frequent floods and earthquake­s.

In a tribute to human invention, Mohri featured objects used to collect water in vain, including plastic bottles, buckets and pipes.

Decomposed fruits were linked to electrode wires, which control sound by adjusting the degree of humidity, appealing to all the visitor's senses.

The artist aimed to show how “human creativity can really bring about some hopes and solutions when a lot of things are critical”, said Sook-Kyung Lee, curator of the Japan pavilion.

To highlight the universali­ty of the climate threat, the artist collected her materials from flea markets in Venice, which has also suffered from flooding.

Melting ice

Denmark's pavilion displayed the work of photograph­er Inuuteq Storch in six series, including “Soon Will Summer Be Over”, which documents the effects of climate change, colonisati­on, Inuit hunting and fishing traditions in the far north of Greenland.

Visitors find nostalgic everyday scenes of the remote land where the sun never sets in the Summer.

Both colour and black-andwhite photograph­s of land, skies and icecaps take visitors through the seasonal cycle in a reminder of the vulnerabil­ity of the poles.

“Climate change definitely has a presence,” said Louise Wolthers, art historian and curator.

“He (Storch) tells us that hunters cannot practise so much the traditiona­l hunting methods anymore because of climate change and the melting of ice and the more extreme weather conditions.”

‘Unscrupulo­us men’

At the entrance to Brazil's pavilion, roots and seeds flowed from an imposing mound of earth to evoke different life forms: human veins, tree sap and Brazilian rivers seen from the sky.

Atop the installati­on, an old television showed a woman saying: “You have not learned from your mistakes and the forests continue to be torn down to serve unscrupulo­us men.”

“I like to establish a contact between human beings to talk about the importance of an environmen­tal issue, to think about it in a global way,” said artist and Indigenous activist Olinda Tupinamba.

Life and death of a giraffe

A collaborat­ive project from the Czech Republic, entitled “The heart of a giraffe in captivity weighs 12 kilos less”, looks back at the tragic fate of Lenka, captured in Kenya in 1954 and transporte­d to Prague Zoo, where she survived for just two years.

With this installati­on, Czech artist Eva Kotatkova wanted to recreate the giraffe's insides and skeleton to attract public attention to the human relationsh­ip with nature and the violence inflicted on animals.

The exhibit is also mean to provoke reflection, asking “what is my role in this story?”, Kotatkova said.

The project resonates with the central theme of this year's event, “Stranieri ovunque-Foreigners Everywhere”, in which some 90 countries are represente­d.

Artist Ruth Patir's video installati­on had been due to open at Israel's national pavilion, but she said last week that her exhibit would remain closed until a ceasefire was in place and the hostages held captive by Hamas had been released. — AFP

 ?? Photos — AFP ?? Visitors looking at an installati­on by artist Yuko Mohri at Japan’s pavilion at the Venice Biennale art show.
Photos — AFP Visitors looking at an installati­on by artist Yuko Mohri at Japan’s pavilion at the Venice Biennale art show.
 ?? ?? People visiting France’s pavilion hosting artworks by artist Julien Creuzet during the pre-opening of the Venice Biennale art show.
People visiting France’s pavilion hosting artworks by artist Julien Creuzet during the pre-opening of the Venice Biennale art show.
 ?? ?? A child playing around an installati­on called ‘the Migrant garden’ by artist Sandra Gamarra Heshiki in Spain’s pavilion at the Venice Biennale art show in Venice.
A child playing around an installati­on called ‘the Migrant garden’ by artist Sandra Gamarra Heshiki in Spain’s pavilion at the Venice Biennale art show in Venice.

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