Scenes from the Biennale
GERMANY: "2038: The New Serenity"; commissioned by Federal Ministry of the Interior, Building and Community; curated by 2038 (initiated by Arno Brandlhuber, Olaf Grawert, Nikolaus Hirsch, Christopher Roth). (Photo © Flavia Rossi)
Germany emptied its pavilion, minus scannable QR codes; Spain filled its pavilion with thousands of papers suspended in space; the United States built a four-story, wood-framed installation in front of its neoclassical pavilion. Here we present some views of the national pavilions and the main exhibition, How will we live together?, that comprise the 2021 Venice Architecture Biennale.
The normally crowded vernissage and raucous openings were considerably smaller and more subdued than in previous years, obviously given the pandemic, but World-Architects nevertheless dispatched a small team to check out the exhibition curated by Hashim Sarkis and look at some of the national pavilions. More coverage of the twice-postponed Biennale is forthcoming — both on World-Architects and on our national platforms — but first we present some on-the-ground photographs of the six-month event that opened to the public on May 22 and runs until November 21, 2021.