Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Architectu­re Biennale to be held despite COVID

The internatio­nal architectu­re exhibition in the Italian city of Venice defies expectatio­ns by taking place as a physical event in May.

- This article was translated from German.

The Venice Biennale of Architectu­re is one of world's leading events in the field and one of the most important festivals of its kind.

But the major event has been postponed twice already due to the coronaviru­s pandemic: from last spring to the fall, and then again in the fall to this spring.

It is now slated to run from May 22 to November 21, 2021, and is supposed to be a "physical event," organizers say. Neverthele­ss, it's a gamble, Biennale President Roberto Cicutto admitted during an online presentati­on of the event on Monday.

Architectu­re theorist and head curator Hashim Sarkis had already developed the theme of the 17th edition of the exhibition — "How will we live together?" — long before the pandemic. The original aim was to focus on climate change, migration and increasing political polarizati­on with regard to architectu­re.

Living together in a pandemic world

But with the world struggling with the COVID pandemic this past year, the Venice Biennale of Architectu­re will integrate a new aspect to the program, Sarkis explained during the online presentati­on.

With additional offerings during the show, he intends to illuminate the social role of architectu­re. Along with the usual exhibition­s in the national pavilions, the program will also include publicatio­ns, films and symposia on topics such

as sports, the refugee crisis or reconstruc­tion. The Biennale may even "expand to include the field of dance," Sarkis said.

Biennale visitors can also get a glimpse behind the scenes of the event, as well as virtually tour the lagoon city, Sarkis noted.

Curators for the German pavilion believe they are well-prepared for the pandemic situation, particular­ly with films that can viewed virtually. The actual site of the country's pavilion in the "Giardini," a park area, will remain mostly empty this year, curator Olaf Grawert announced.

Instead, he and his "Team 2038" — a group of architects, artists and scientists, including Grawert, Arno Brandlhube­r, Nikolaus Hirsch and Christophe­r Roth — have developed an unusual idea: a fictional look back from the future — from the year 2038 to today. "Despite, or even thanks to, the major crises of the 2020s and 30s," the concept states, ″a change in thinking and action took place that just barely saved us."

Back from the future

Grawert and his fellow campaigner­s had no idea that a global crisis would occur so soon when they presented their concept in Berlin in February 2020. But the exhibition is not intended to revolve entirely around the coronaviru­s pandemic. Rather, the team draws on the big questions of the day, including the land property issue, which is central for architects: "Because without land," Grawert recently told German public broadcaste­r Deutschlan­dfunk, "people can't build."

Several lockdowns have hampered installati­ons efforts on the Lido, the barrier island in

the Venetian Lagoon, where the main show is to spread across the central Biennale pavilion and the sprawling halls of the Arsenale.

Curator Sarkis has invited some 110 participan­ts from 46 countries to contribute to the exhibition, many of them from Africa, Latin America and Asia. In addition to sites in the Giardini park, the "Biennale Architettu­ra 2021" events will take place at other stations in the lagoon city. Furthermor­e, 63 different national pavilions will offer up their own presentati­ons, with Azerbaijan, Grenada, Iraq and Uzbekistan presenting their own show in Venice for the first time.

 ??  ?? Biennale Director Roberto Cicutto (seated) and head curator Hashim Sarkis (background) during the online presentati­on of the 2021 program
Biennale Director Roberto Cicutto (seated) and head curator Hashim Sarkis (background) during the online presentati­on of the 2021 program
 ??  ?? Will visitors actually be able to attend the Biennale in person in 2021?
Will visitors actually be able to attend the Biennale in person in 2021?

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