The Venice Biennale’s International Architecture Exhibition is the event that sets the agenda for the industry. Its opening weekend, which wrapped on Sunday, is a who’s who of architecture, with exhibition curators and industry heavyweights in town to look at the work on show and exchange ideas – and party in the Lagoon city. Monocle was in that number. Here are my takeaways from the opening few days.
Simple gestures
Many of this year’s pavilions rely on text and film to explore complex topics, such as architecture’s relationship to place, politics and technology. This made those participants who deployed models and physical installations stand out from the crowd. A pick of the bunch was the Swiss pavilion, which offered a reminder of the power of simple physical gestures. Its installation, “Neighbours”, saw the fence between its structure and the Venezuelan pavilion next door removed and placed to one side, commenting on the real and perceived barriers that architects – and indeed nations – can put in place.
Context matters
“I’ve realised that the building is not the solution; in fact, sometimes it’s the problem,” Rahul Mehrotra, Indian architect and chair of the department of urban planning and design at Harvard, told Monocle. His display, which analysed his practice’s relationship between research and construction, encouraged architects to lose their ego and consider the broader context in which their work takes place.
A Pritzker
What do you call a group of Pritzker Prize winners? A “pritz” of architects, perhaps? Spotted in the grounds of the biennale were the likes of Shigeru Ban and Kazuyo Sejima, greeting fans and friends alike. Of note was an exchange between 2022 winner Francis Kéré and a young Angolan architect, who stopped the Burkina Faso-born designer in his tracks to thank him for putting African architects on the map.
Architecture as landscape
Part of the Ukrainian pavilion is an installation of mounded earthworks inspired by the Serpent’s Wall, a network of 10th-century fortifications near Kyiv. In the gardens of the biennale, the installation provided a moment of refuge from the bustling crowds and underlined the fact that architecture isn’t confined to concrete, bricks and glass.
Local economy
Which of the Venice Biennale’s flagship international exhibitions – art or architecture – do Venetians prefer? The bartenders, it seems, are leaning towards the latter. “I’ve found that architects drink a lot of wine,” says Lorenzo, chef at Vino Vero wine and bàcari bar. “At the art biennale, they usually just sit around and don’t order drinks. It’s why I prefer the architecture biennale: these people are good for business.”
Nic Monisse is Monocle’s design editor. For more from the Venice Biennale, tune in to this week's episode of ‘Monocle On Design’.