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Neighbours. A Manifesto, a Play for Two Pavilions, and Ten Conversations | Karin Sander, Philip Ursprung | 9783038603337 | PARK BOOKS

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Neighbours

A Manifesto, a Play for Two Pavilions, and Ten Conversations

Auteur:Karin Sander, Philip Ursprung (eds.)

Uitgever:PARK BOOKS

ISBN: 978-3-03860-333-7

  • Paperback
  • Engels
  • 224 pagina's
  • 19 mei 2023

A reflection on the neighborhood between the Swiss and Venezuelan pavilion at the Venice Biennale and on how we can learn through exchange with neighbors rather than competing with one another.

The Swiss Pavilion at the 18th International Architecture Exhibition of the Venice Biennale exhibits itself and the relations to its immediate surroundings. The exhibition is a conversation over the shared boundary of the pavilions of Switzerland (1952, designed by Bruno Giacometti) and Venezuela (1954, designed by Carlo Scarpa), the only two in the Giardini not fully detached: they share one wall. Artist Karin Sander and art historian Philip Ursprung temporarily open this wall and dismantle the gates from the Swiss Pavilion, thus revealing unanticipated connections between the two neighbours, both distant and close.

The complementing book Neighbours offers a manifesto, a play with the two buildings as dramatis personae, and three brief topical essays. Ten conversations with architectural historian Kurt W. Forster, photographers Paolo Gasparini and Guido Giudi, and Venezuelan architects Elisa Silva and Margarita López-Maya round off this volume.

A reflection on the neighborhood between the Swiss and Venezuelan pavilion at the Venice Biennale and on how we can learn through exchange with neighbors rather than competing with one another.

The Swiss Pavilion at the 18th International Architecture Exhibition of the Venice Biennale exhibits itself and the relations to its immediate surroundings. The exhibition is a conversation over the shared boundary of the pavilions of Switzerland (1952, designed by Bruno Giacometti) and Venezuela (1954, designed by Carlo Scarpa), the only two in the Giardini not fully detached: they share one wall. Artist Karin Sander and art historian Philip Ursprung temporarily open this wall and dismantle the gates from the Swiss Pavilion, thus revealing unanticipated connections between the two neighbours, both distant and close.

The complementing book Neighbours offers a manifesto, a play with the two buildings as dramatis personae, and three brief topical essays. Ten conversations with architectural historian Kurt W. Forster, photographers Paolo Gasparini and Guido Giudi, and Venezuelan architects Elisa Silva and Margarita López-Maya round off this volume.

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