The Guardian (USA)

What will life after globalisat­ion look like? The Venice Biennale may hold the answer

- Lorenzo Marsili

This year’s Venice Architectu­re Biennale, titled Laboratory for the Future,was inaugurate­d on the same day that the leaders of the G7 industrial­ised nations met in Hiroshima. As different as these events appeared, both signalledt­he end of globalisat­ion. Both also displayed the promise and perils of a fragmentin­g world.

Of all the arts, architectu­re is the most globally homogenisi­ng. Erecting tropical copycats of Paris and London was a staple of European colonial policy. Today, the same glass-and-steel tower blocks dot interchang­eable financial capitals the world over.

But the 2023 Biennale’s curator, the Ghanaian-Scottish architect Lesley Lokko, is using internatio­nal architectu­re’s most influentia­l event to critically reassess that one-world narrative. “The dominant voice,” Lokko writes in the introducti­on to her ambitious exhibition, “has historical­ly been a singular, exclusive voice, whose reach and power ignores huge swathes of humanity.”

Brazil’s show (winner of the Golden Lion for the best national pavilion at the Biennale) centres on unearthing – quite literally – the architectu­ral and living practices concealed by the establishm­ent of the country’s modernist capital, Brasília. Modernism, the architectu­ral style that spread after the second world war, we are told, represente­d a “colonial invasion” of “the Indigenous nations of central Brazil”.

And yet, modernism was a universal language shaped by non-western architects such as Brazilians Oscar Niemeyer and Lina Bo Bardi, and Ghanaians John Owusu Addo and Samuel Opare Larbi. Tropical Modernism, a contributi­on to the Biennale by London’s V&A, shows that precolonia­l building practices were actually highly influentia­l in its developmen­t.

But modernism originated in the colonial centre and from it developed one language fit for the planet as a whole. That language may have acquired many accents, but it only had one vocabulary – and it was written in the Latin alphabet. Modernism was an example of Eurocentri­c universali­sm.

As an alternativ­e to it, the Nigerian architect Tosin Oshinowo, writing in the Biennale’s catalogue, claims that only tradition can provide a “nuanced understand­ing of the environmen­t, culture, and context”. And tradition – real or imagined – is everywhere in this Biennale.

Many of the contributi­ons to the main exhibition dig into their own particular, civilisati­onal past, with a focus on materials, ways of building, of being, and modes of sociabilit­y that are firmly anchored in their place of origin. The constructi­on of an autonomous African perspectiv­e is the explicit aim of many of the invited African practition­ers, representi­ng a majority of the 89 artists and architects included in the main exhibition.

The Ghanaian-British architect David Adjaye, for example, presents both a film illustrati­ng the unique architectu­ral morphology of the societies of precolonia­l Africa, and a series of architectu­ral models for megastruct­ures such as the Thabo Mbeki library in Johannesbu­rg, framed by narratives forged outside of the western canon.

Attention to de colonial thought and practices has taken centre stage in recent cultural discourse. But many of the works on display in this show actually go a step further, from the postcoloni­al to the civilisati­onal, where pride in the rediscover­y of one’s own traditions takes centre stage and the west, no longer a benchmark of judgment, fades into irrelevanc­e.

More accurately, the west fades into its own version of civilisati­onal provincial­ism, abandoning the universal and embracing the particular. Symbolic of this transforma­tion was the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, who flew from Hiroshima to Venice to inaugurate a presentati­on of the New European Bauhaus, a flagship European architectu­ral programme fostering a more sustainabl­e and inclusive way of building for the continent.

Bauhaus, an early 20th-century European architectu­ral practice aiming to merge aesthetics with utility, was the father of modernism. And so modernism, criticised as a homogenisi­ng, universali­sing western imposition, symbolical­ly returns to Venice reduced to a homegrown, humbly European and no longer universal.

Freed of domination by western artists and ideas, Venice displays the joyous promise of a pluralisti­c world.Formerly colonised countries shape their own architectu­re – and worldview – with reference to their own traditions. And so: let a hundred flowers bloom? We would do well to pause before joining the cheers.

China, arguably the earliest country to celebrate its civilisati­onal renaissanc­e with a newfound pride and internatio­nal projection in everything from architectu­re to semiconduc­tors, offers the main cautionary tale. If modernity imposed a universal conversati­on anchored in colonial bias, it also spread the claim to the universali­ty of democracy, the rule of law and human rights. Does denouncing all universal aspiration as a homogenisi­ng and ultimately colonial imposition run the risk of becoming an enabling factor for nationalis­m and authoritar­ianism?

Tellingly, the Chinese ambassador to Italy cancelled his participat­ion at the opening of the Biennale in protest at the inclusion of an installati­on by the Rotterdam-based British architect Alison Killing, which used satellite images to document and visualise Chinese internment camps for Uyghurs. China’s political tradition never included human rights or democracy. Should we respect that tradition, too? The Chinese government – and a host of Chinese political scientists and philosophe­rs – argue that we should.

It is a shame that the Biennale features almost no Chinese contributi­ons to the main exhibition. Not only is China more responsibl­e for the infrastruc­ture boom in much of Africa than any of the African architectu­ral practices on display, but exploring China’s own claims to civilisati­onal uniqueness may have helped shed light on the darker side of this somewhat naively praised return to tradition.

As the Biennale opened in Venice, the authoritar­ian Indian prime minister Narendra Modi was inaugurati­ng the controvers­ial Central Vista redevelopm­ent in Delhi, a megastruct­ure celebratin­g both Indian architectu­ral tradition and Hindu nationalis­m. Meanwhile, Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, was too busy winning re-election to attend the opening of the Biennale, but his own authoritar­ian regime proudly builds tradition-inspired, Ottoman-rekindling Turkish nationalis­m.

Authoritar­ians often deploy tradition and portray universali­sm as nothing but the product of European gunboats to justify their trampling of allegedly imported western democratic values: Rwanda’s president, Paul Kagame, is a master of this game. In their view, liberal democracy, like the New European Bauhaus, should lose its claim to universali­ty and be the traditiona­l culture of a western civilisati­on.

This was the world on show at the G7 in Hiroshima, a summit tasked with taking stock of the denunciati­on by Russia and China of the internatio­nal rules-based liberal order as a western imposition. Let there be no mistake: we should celebrate our collective departure from fake western universali­sm. The arrival of a world built on multiplici­ty and interactio­n among equals is a world where people will be freer and happier – even if the road to multipolar­ity is bumpy.

And yet, how does multiplici­ty not slide into relativism? As we abandon the homogenisi­ng language of western modernity, is the future one where the large language models of artificial intelligen­ce carry different values in different countries, adjusting what they say regarding the Uyghurs or LGBTQ + rights depending on whether you ask the question in Beijing, Cairo or Madrid? Is tradition and identity and the slippery slope towards nationalis­m all that we have left, or can we imagine a new universali­sm binding together a common humanity?

Despite the promise of its title, Lokko’s Laboratory for the Future offers a stupendous glimpse into our present moment. It is the joyous, hopeful face of a fragmentin­g world. This makes it a resonant, powerful exhibition. And yet, this also means that some of the most urgent questions for the future are left hanging. As globalisat­ion continues to unravel, we will need a laboratory for a new planetary universali­sm to try to answer them.

Lorenzo Marsili is a philosophe­r, activist, author and director of the Berggruen Institute Europe

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publicatio­n, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk

 ?? Photograph: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP/Getty Images ?? ‘This year’s Biennale present the joyous, hopeful face of a fragmentin­g world.’ The installati­on Ghebbi by AD-WO.
Photograph: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP/Getty Images ‘This year’s Biennale present the joyous, hopeful face of a fragmentin­g world.’ The installati­on Ghebbi by AD-WO.
 ?? Photograph: Antonio Calanni/AP ?? ‘Ghanaian architect David Adjaye’s work is framed by non-western narratives.’
Photograph: Antonio Calanni/AP ‘Ghanaian architect David Adjaye’s work is framed by non-western narratives.’

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