I was as much encouraged to see this play by the lead - Simon Russell Beale - as the content - a biography of the Georgian actor, Samuel Foote. In the event, the content was interesting and admirably delivered. It covered the difficulties the theatre faced at the time from the censorship of the Lord Chamberlain as well as introducing notable names from the theatrical world including David Garrick. Foote's own life was fascinating and the amputation of his left leg was done with a clever combination of humour and wince-making detail. S R B was as expected brilliant and well supported by the others, especially, I thought, Dervla Kirwan.
The text by Ian Kelly, was cleverly written, quite bawdy without being embarrassing. The two acts of the play had, for me, quite different tones. The first was largely light but culminated in the riding accident that necessitated the amputation. The second half was a good deal darker, dealing with the psychological as well as the physical impact of the amputation.
Friday, 16 October 2015
Tuesday, 13 October 2015
12 October 2015. La Musica at the Young Vic.
This play features just two people - a couple who have divorced and are meeting in one of their old haunts to decide what to do with their remaining possessions. The innovative production at the Young Vic comprised two parts - in the first, the couple sat with their backs to us at a raised level and their faces were relayed by video onto two large screens. In the second half, they came to ground level and the audience moved their chairs to surround the small pit accommodating them.
This was essentially a play of words rather than actions. The couple went over the events that culminated in them splitting up. Both had been unfaithful. Both seemed to be looking to re-create the early excitements of an affair. They regretted moving out of their hotel meetings to settle down in a house. She wanted to have a baby and stop wasting time. Both seemed to retain a passion for each other.
I came away feeling quite downcast by the seeming familiarity and accurate capturing of the gloom and ragged endings of the end of a relationship. Overall, roughly as the FT said, this was an extremely introspective play, well staged and well acted.
This was essentially a play of words rather than actions. The couple went over the events that culminated in them splitting up. Both had been unfaithful. Both seemed to be looking to re-create the early excitements of an affair. They regretted moving out of their hotel meetings to settle down in a house. She wanted to have a baby and stop wasting time. Both seemed to retain a passion for each other.
I came away feeling quite downcast by the seeming familiarity and accurate capturing of the gloom and ragged endings of the end of a relationship. Overall, roughly as the FT said, this was an extremely introspective play, well staged and well acted.
1-4 October. Venice Biennale
Having returned home and looking back, my overall feeling about the curated part of this Biennale is 'more is less'. Both the Pavilion at the Giardini and the curated section of the Arsenale were stuffed full - to the extent that my memory is quite clouded by the overall abundance.
The next room included a wind chime by Chritian Boltanski as well as The Propeller Group’s ballistic in glass – where the discharge of the US M16 and the Russian AK47 (Kalashnikov) weapons had been caught and frozen in glass.
The room also contained cut out faces by Kay Hassan and the opportunity to spend 10 euros on a catalog by Marco Fusinato.
Lorna Simpson contributed graphite portraits of women.
The huge curated exhibition spread across the Giardini and
Arsenale greets visitors at the Giardini Pavilion with a row of black drapes –
which sets the tone somewhat. In the entry lobby is a carefully arranged pile
of old suitcases and various versions of ‘The End’ in frames around the wall. The
suitcases, the work of Fabio Mauri, represent journeys, in particular forced and fatal journeys. Mauri was born in 1926 and was so affected by the war that he suffered severe psychiatric problems.
Turning
left is a brief video of a man coughing up blood which was arresting to say the
least. I did not really get much out of the next few rooms until I arrived at
the one with a large tree lying on the floor, a series of mirrors embedded in
it.
This work was by Robert Smithson who was also responsible with Nancy Holt
for a video featuring wheat. Alexander Kluge presented three sets of film
labelled ‘News from Ideological Antiquity: Marx-Eisenstein-Capital’ and Thomas
Hirschhorn had a room full of what seemed to be suspended packaging rubbish.
Then, there were a series of one-minute films by Samson
Kambalu, featuring various unlikely events like a man confronting a cash
machine horizontally. The following room contained Rirkrit Tiravanija’s
drawings of revolution pictures and then the next very large room housed Teresa
Burga’s work. Next to cause me to halt for its duration was the film (The end
of carrying all) by Wangechi Mutu of an African lady carrying a load on her
head that got larger and larger until it slid down the edge of the cliff,
causing a small volcano. The same artist provided the arresting sculpture
‘she’s got the whole world in her’.
A small side room had an interesting film by Mika Rottenberg
called Time and a Half that showed a pair of tapping fingers in slow motion.
The following room had a series of painting by Ellen Gallagher, plus totems by
Huma Bhabha and a large abstract by Emily Kame Kngwarreye.
Adjoining this were
housed three huge canvases with the words ‘come out to show them’ typed
repetitively and in overlay.
Another room had a set of paintings by Kerry James
Marshall, resembling Rorschach.
Next door were a series of skulls by
Marlene Dumas.
A participatory room organised by Hans Haacke displayed the
attitudes (mainly liberal) of visitors to various exhibitions and invited
visitors to this room to complete a poll, coming back instantly with the
results so far. For virtually every item, I seemed to be in the median group,
which was illuminating.
Andreas Gursky presented photographs of stock exchanges and
Vietnamese weavers showing the scale and sort of symmetry of workers.
In another
room Rosa Barba presented a looped film with an enormous and complicated
projector.
Next door was a music room by Charles Gaines.
Then came for me the standout room. This was a three screen
installation by John Akomfrah, called Vertigo Sea, showing scenes from the
oceans – both man’s intervention and nature left alone. With shocking images of
olden day shooting and skinning of polar bears and hunting of whales, the film
was upsetting but also beautifully presented and crafted.
The final room was by Jeremy Deller with images of the
message given to zero hours contract worker not wanted that day (Today you have
a holiday) as well as a mock up of an arm with the tracking contraption Amazon
forces workers to wear and a jukebox playing the sounds of industrial machinery
and processes.
The Giardini pavilion had as its hub ‘the arena’, theatrical
space which hosted various events throughout the day. One such was a reading
out loud of Das Kapital, described as ‘an epic live reading’ and ‘the linchpin
of the ARENA program’.
The arena also hosted the singing of factory songs,
conceived by Jeremy Deller and the reading of the ‘diary of a photographer’,
the photographer in question being Abdallah Farah who shot hundreds of reels of
film in Beirut between 1997 and 2005. The readings are descriptions of the
previously undeveloped photographs.
The rest of the curated exhibition was in the Arsenale and
had a somewhat different feel to that in the Giardini and gave the impression
of being even more crowded. The first room had some interesting neon signs by
Bruce Nauman. One cleverly overlaid DEATH onto EAT.
This led to a room
containing amongst other items some vast trumpets by Terry Adkins and a bust of
Mao on a stack of amplifiers by Melvin Edwards.
The room also contained
‘impossible bouquets’ by Taryn Simon – assemblages of flowers that never flower
at the same time.
The next large room contained the double sided film by Steve
Mcqueen, ‘Ashes’. On one side of the screen was the life of Ashes on his boat;
on the other was the carving of his tombstone and burial. The audio told the
story of how he had found some drugs one day on the beach, an event that led to
his killing.
The same large room contained a collection by Lili Reynaud Dewer
of pink cloth posters with comments about aids on them.
Next to this were
some clever/amusing slogans by Karo Akpokiere.
Oscar Murillo provided cloths that had been put on the desks of schoolchildren around the world and upon which they had written their thoughts.
Ayoung Kim was responsible for a Kuwait film and Saadane Afif had The Laguna’s Tribute, to be performed at sunset at Zattere. Tables of sunrise and sunset were provided with the piece to be performed each month.
Oscar Murillo provided cloths that had been put on the desks of schoolchildren around the world and upon which they had written their thoughts.
Ayoung Kim was responsible for a Kuwait film and Saadane Afif had The Laguna’s Tribute, to be performed at sunset at Zattere. Tables of sunrise and sunset were provided with the piece to be performed each month.
The same huge room also contained a church slate roof and a video
of the derelict church. This piece by Theaster Gates was really quite sombre.
Nearby was a two screen showing of a nonsense language by Sonia Leber and David
Chesworth and also a rant on church by Sonia Boyce.
Moving though, the next room contained games without rules
by Boris Achour as well as some clever anagrams by Newell Harry.
This room also contained a bell from Iraq, installed by Hiwa K as well as the participatory piece by Adrian Piper which invited guests to sign up to a pledge such as “I will always be too expensive to buy”. This had won the Golden lion and was interesting to participate in, for the feelings it provoked.
This room also contained a bell from Iraq, installed by Hiwa K as well as the participatory piece by Adrian Piper which invited guests to sign up to a pledge such as “I will always be too expensive to buy”. This had won the Golden lion and was interesting to participate in, for the feelings it provoked.
The next room included a wind chime by Chritian Boltanski as well as The Propeller Group’s ballistic in glass – where the discharge of the US M16 and the Russian AK47 (Kalashnikov) weapons had been caught and frozen in glass.
The room also contained cut out faces by Kay Hassan and the opportunity to spend 10 euros on a catalog by Marco Fusinato.
Lorna Simpson contributed graphite portraits of women.
The next room included an anthology of films by Harun
Farocki as well as Maja Bajevic’s clever tapestries of stock/commodity prices.
Mika Rottenberg’s ‘no nose knows pearls’ and some giant printing stamps, entitled Urban Requiem by Barhelemy Toguo were also in this room alongside cloths for a Putin demonstration by Yakimanskaya Gluklya and upside down figures by Georg Baselitz.
Gulf Labor coalition contributed a huge poster provoking one to question where the labor came from that was building the Guggenheim in Abu Dhabi.
Throughout all these room were a set of flickering lights by Philippe Pareno while the pathway outside was bedecked with sackcloth.
Mika Rottenberg’s ‘no nose knows pearls’ and some giant printing stamps, entitled Urban Requiem by Barhelemy Toguo were also in this room alongside cloths for a Putin demonstration by Yakimanskaya Gluklya and upside down figures by Georg Baselitz.
Gulf Labor coalition contributed a huge poster provoking one to question where the labor came from that was building the Guggenheim in Abu Dhabi.
Throughout all these room were a set of flickering lights by Philippe Pareno while the pathway outside was bedecked with sackcloth.
Turning the corner brought one to a moving film about a
Korean factory worker by Im Heung-soon. This told the tale of a woman who had
worked impossible hours on the buses before getting her job in a factory. It
certainly gave pause for thought on the conditions people work under and how
lucky we Biennale visitors are.
The next room contained the thousands of portraits suspended above the viewer by Kutlug Ataman of people whose paths had crossed that of Sakip Sabanci, a Turkish businessman who died a decade ago. The room also housed a collection of portraits of passengers caught off guard by Chris Marker and the bricks one could buy, thereby contributing to a Chinese workers’ rights organisation by Rirkrit Tiavanija.
Finally, the room contained ‘a house divided by Gary Simmons.
The next room contained the thousands of portraits suspended above the viewer by Kutlug Ataman of people whose paths had crossed that of Sakip Sabanci, a Turkish businessman who died a decade ago. The room also housed a collection of portraits of passengers caught off guard by Chris Marker and the bricks one could buy, thereby contributing to a Chinese workers’ rights organisation by Rirkrit Tiavanija.
Finally, the room contained ‘a house divided by Gary Simmons.
The curated exhibition continued right at the far end of the
Arsenale in the Giardino delle Vergini. On the way there in the large sheds
were housed two phoenix by Xu bing. The sheds were those from which Marco Polo
set off and the Phoenix referred to this.
In the giardino itself, the videos, housed in individual sheds were all interesting but time precluded viewing them in full. One by Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc featured a turned down book proposal; another had Maria Eichhorn’s ‘Militant’, featuring a girl reading a book. The most arresting was by Abounaddara entitled ‘Syria: Snapshots of history in the making’. This was a really powerful film by those suffering the Assad regime.
In the giardino itself, the videos, housed in individual sheds were all interesting but time precluded viewing them in full. One by Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc featured a turned down book proposal; another had Maria Eichhorn’s ‘Militant’, featuring a girl reading a book. The most arresting was by Abounaddara entitled ‘Syria: Snapshots of history in the making’. This was a really powerful film by those suffering the Assad regime.
Also in the Giardino was an interesting installation by
Sarah Sze who had suspended objects in the trees and shrubs.
National Pavilions
Giardini
Great Britain featured a series of yellow phalli by Sarah
Lucas, the first of which, named Maradona, greeted visitors on the steps and
the first room. The show under the title ‘I scream Daddio’ also presented
manequins with cigarettes protruding from their vaginas. All in all not the
most uplifting pavilion.
Next door, Canada was far more engaging. The pavilion looked
a bit like a tree house and visitors walked in to a Quebec corner shop, that
seemed normal at first with a greeting wave from a Japanese toy cat. However,
walking through the shop all the labels were blurred by a clever vibration.
Walking though led one up steps to a level where intricate shutes had been
constructed for visitors to launch euro coins eventually to go into what was
like a giant pinball cascade. I’m not sure what it all meant but it was
certainly engaging.
France provided three trees that moved around autonomously
while next door the Czech/Slovak pavilion featured a large painting that was to be viewed in reflection. Entitled, Apotheosis and the creation of Jiri David, the work paid homage to an historic saga of the Czechs and Slavs by Alphonse Mucha from the first quarter of the 20th century.
while next door the Czech/Slovak pavilion featured a large painting that was to be viewed in reflection. Entitled, Apotheosis and the creation of Jiri David, the work paid homage to an historic saga of the Czechs and Slavs by Alphonse Mucha from the first quarter of the 20th century.
Nearby the Japanese pavilion had one of the more beautiful
exhibits with a huge cloud of red wool with thousands of attached keys dangling
into two boats.
Korea had a multi-channel film installation, entitled ‘The
ways of folding space and flying’. The excerpt I saw featured a striking girl
in a film playing inside and on the glass wall of the pavilion. Then came
Russia, which made use of the room with a glass floor. The pavilion was in the hands of Irina
Nakhova. It featured on the way in a cosmonaut whose eyes followed you around.
This led to the upstairs from which one was able to see the people in the room
below.
Venezuala featured a
film of three women coming on to a stage to breast feed in front of an
audience.
The adjoining Swiss pavilion was hard to fathom. Under the title ‘our product’, the centrepiece was a large tank to which one was led down a passage. It contained a liquid apparently matching a standardised northern European skin tone.’
The adjoining Swiss pavilion was hard to fathom. Under the title ‘our product’, the centrepiece was a large tank to which one was led down a passage. It contained a liquid apparently matching a standardised northern European skin tone.’
On the opposite side of the path, the Nordik pavilion
featured sound made by glass and water. Entitled
‘rapture’, this glass armonica caught one’s attention immediately with its
array of large broken windows. The sound is ethereal and apparently was banned
after the era of its being played by Mozart because it was thought to induce
sexual arousal in women.
Next door, Denmark’s pavilion was in the hands of Danh Vo,
with the title ‘Mothertongue’. The pavilion contained a dozen objects, some
with provocative titles such as ‘do you know what she did, your cunting
daughter?’ This for a small figure of Christ.
The US entry was by Joan Jonas with the title ‘ They come to
us without a word’. Consisting mainly of videos, each room represented a
particular creature – (Bees Fish), object (mirror), force (wind) or place (the
homeroom) .
In a row, the Netherlands caught one’s attention with a
stone outside with the words ‘veritas existentiae’ carved on it. It is a philosophical proposition by the
17th century French philosopher Pierre Gassendi that the truth of
existence is that what exists is what it is and nothing else. The pavilion
contained the remainder of the exhibition by Herman de Vries and included a
collection of sickles and a rather arresting circle of rose buds entitled 108
pound rosa damascene.
Then Belgium gave over their pavilion to their colonial past.
Spain seemed to feature a comment on Italy with a kiosk displaying headlines about Berlosconi .
Then Belgium gave over their pavilion to their colonial past.
Spain seemed to feature a comment on Italy with a kiosk displaying headlines about Berlosconi .
Finland’s pavilion housed a very dark room with an
installation by IC-98 entitled ‘Abenland (hours, years, aeons) with music for
double bass and electronics by Max Savikangas.

Germany had converted one of its rooms into something akin
to a club. One was invited to lie back in reclining chairs and watch the large
screen showing Hito Steyerl’s ‘Factory of the sun’. The Germans also hosted
Tobias Zelony’s series ‘the citizen’ that was concerned with the representation
of refugees in the media. The work included a newspaper by Africans responding
to Zielony’s invitation to offer their points of view. It made sobering
reading, including the item ‘if you want to die now, nobody will stop you’ that
relates the story of Jeano, Patrick and Ali’s departure from Libya for Italy.
The German pavilion also claimed to house on its roof three people who ‘unseen
by visitors’ will ‘carry out a mysterious job there’. Whether this was truth or
fiction remains a mystery!
The Hungarian Pavilion contained a quite simple but
memorable installation of pipes running above one’s head through the rooms with
large balls passing through them, propelled by fans – resembling the air tubes
used to pass the takings in supermarkets. By Szilard Cseke, ‘sustainable
identities’ with its intersecting routes was supposed to provide ‘an
opportunity to reinterpret personal identities on a global basis’. Being not entirely
sure what that means, I’m not entirely sure it had that effect on me but I
certainly found the installation engaging, as I did the breathing foil cushion
that continuously inflated and deflated.
Across the bridge, the Romanian pavilion hosted Adrian
Ghenie’s ‘Darwin’s Room’ – a collection of the artist’s portraits of Darwin as
well as his “exploration of 20th century history as an expanded
‘laboratory of evolution’”.
Rather confusingly, Romania also hosted work by several artists under the heading ‘Inventing the truth: On fiction and reality’ in a offsite location – the Palazzo Correr.
Rather confusingly, Romania also hosted work by several artists under the heading ‘Inventing the truth: On fiction and reality’ in a offsite location – the Palazzo Correr.
Next to the Romanian pavilion was Poland. They screened a
film under the title ‘18*48’of”N 72*23’01”W”. The coordinates refer to Cazale,
a village in Haiti inhabited by the descendents of Polish soldiers who had
somehow ended up there in Napoleonic times. The film at the Biennale records
the one-off performance of an opera, Halka, before the Polish descendents of
Cazale, the opera being something of a Polish national opera and telling the
story of a young virgin deflowered by her mighty landlord. The project was
inspired by Herzog’s Fitzcarraldo.
The Venice Pavilion celebrated the city’s creativity with ‘9
stories from Veneto: digital – not only digital’. This was followed by Egypt
and Serbia.
Austria’s entry seemed more architectural. The responsibility of Heimo Zobernig, he had installed a huge false ceiling in the pavilion that cast it with a gloomy shade.
Austria’s entry seemed more architectural. The responsibility of Heimo Zobernig, he had installed a huge false ceiling in the pavilion that cast it with a gloomy shade.
Arsenale
Walking through from the curated exhibition, the first
pavilion was Sweden. This housed the work of Lina Selander and consisted mainly
of video. Then came Slovenia with an interesting installation that became
animated with a female singer and two male accompanists. The title was ‘The
violent necessity for the embodied presence of hope’ but I cannot say how the
title and the work are related. Beside that was Albania and next was Chile with
an entry entitled, ‘poetics of dissent’. Kosova occupied the next space,
followed by Tuvalu. Their entry was memorable, consisting of a large lake
across which bridges had been provided for the visitor. This was a reference to
Tuvalu’s precarious relationship with global warming and rising sea levels.
Ireland’s entry was by Sean Lynch. Entitled ‘Adventure:
Capital’, it was a video projection with voiceover together with a series of
sculptures. From the blurb, it “follows a wandering spirit as s/he encounters
and narrates the hegemonic structures that anchor contemporary life’. It left
me a bit cold.
Ireland was followed by one of the stand-outs – Latvia. They
had constructed a tree-house where one sat and watched a video while the tree
house rotated. Taking two visitors at a time, this was an engaging part of an
engaging entry. Much of the entry by Katrina Neiburga and Andris Eglitis under
the title ‘armpit’ focused upon soviet-era garages converted into workshops.
The last in this part of the Arsenale was the Italian-Latin
American Institute pavilion that consisted of a long row of loud speakers, the
significance of which were lost on me.
An adjacent building, I think newly restored for this year, housed on
one level Argentina, the Vatican, Mexico and the UAE. Of these Mexico caught my
attention with their ‘possessing nature by Tania Candiani and Luis Felipe
Ortega. They provided a striking installation of a long steel screen that one
could gain a better vantage point by climbing some steps. The room also
contained a table and four chairs.
The other level of this building had the pavilions of South
Africa, Peru, Turkey, Singapore, Georgia and Macedonia.
Towards the far end of the Arsenale complex was Mozambique
and Indonesia, followed by China and Italy. All quite intriguing. Indonesia
housed an extraordinary creation by Heri Dono called a Trokomod. This dragon
like vessel was a hybrid of a Trojan horse and a Komodo – Indonesia’s iconic
dragon. Visitors were able to enter the Trokomod and see what was to be seen
through its periscope. Suspended from the ceiling around the trokomod were a
series of Perahu Arwah or spirit boats.
China’s entry, as usual had an indoor and outdoor section.
The outdoor was a long row of large bent rods that would be animated and make
music with the breeze. Guests were invited to add pieces of writing and attach
these, thereby altering the notes given off. Inside were a series of mainly
videos as well as references to old China. One of the videos was particularly
engaging, telling the tale of a woman visiting her grandmother.
The Italian exhibition did not quite work for me. It seemed
over complex and too clever for its own good.
Off site.
Thailand’s ‘Earth, Air, Fire & Water was a series of
gigantic stainless steel printing rollers representing the four elements as
well as a painting. It was only just off-site, housed in the café at the
entrance to the giardini.
Macao presented the memories of the artist Mio Pang Fei
whose life was, as he saw it, blighted by. being brought up under Mao. He
thought both older and younger people were luckier than he. The courtyard
contained a striking presentation of clothes and other objects from the time he
was referring back to, like Mao caps and jackets.
Hong Kong’s entry was a somewhat complex idea under the
title ‘the infinite nothing’ and presented as a series of video
installations.
Estonia’s entry was entitled ‘Not suitable for work, A Chairman’s tale. It featured
the case of someone who rose to be Chairman of his territory, only later to be
accused of homosexual acts and imprisoned. His life was cleverly presented on a
time line and one room contained two videos re-enacting possible episodes that
led to his downfall.
Cyprus was one of the recommended pavilions and contained a
room with three striking mosaics as well as a hugs pile of shredded Cyprus
Pound banknotes. The overall presentation under the title Two days after
forever’ apparently referred to ‘the invention of archaeology and its
instrumental role in forging the master narrative of history’. Although this
was rather lost on me, the individual items were engaging. Apart from the
mosaics and banknotes, there was also, in the courtyard, a Cypriot street sign,
representing a proposal to commemorate Ioustos Sigismoundos, a pioneer of
Cypriot graphology. The exhibition also contained pairs of shoes made from
material from fake designer handbags as well as a large fountain containing a
sheet of copper, apparently acting as a cathode.
The Philippines returned to the Biennale after an absence of
51 years with a three room exhibition at the Palazzo Mora. The first room
screened a film Genghis Khan. It had been made by a Filipino in 1950. The
second room contained A Dashed State – a sound and video installation,
referring to a part of the disputed South China Sea while the third room housed
Shoal – a vast red installation, referencing the Sierra Madre, a boat run
aground by the Philippine government in 1999 and maintained as a small garrison
– according to the literature.
Also within the Palazzo Mora was the Mongolia Pavilion
featuring the work of two artists under the title ‘other home’. Both artists
referred to the nomadic nature of Mongolian Life. The younger of the two,
Enkhold Togmidshiirev, ‘painted’ with unconventional materials like horse dung
and animal skin. He also set up his ger (a type of yert) as an installation.
The elder, Unen Enkh, presented sculptural works made with unusual materials
like felt and horsehair.
The Seychelles was the third country housed in the Palazzo
Mora. One of the artists, Leon Radegonde, presented works with burlap canvas,
referencing his ancestors. The other, George Camille, created creepers from
metal cable.
The floor above these pavilions also housed an exhibition,
Black Forest by Marcello Martinez-Vega
and in some rooms the floorboards had been removed allowing the visitor
to look down onto the installations. This vantage point was particularly
arresting for the Philippine’s Shoal. Black Forest itself was an installation
made up of objects and templates made for the creation of brushes and proved
for me less than memorable.
Outside, a Gormley-type man sat on the Palace parapet.
The same Palazzo also housed the Personal Structures: Crossing Borders exhibition with Marc Fromm's brilliantly doomed boatload of waving cats that reached the edge of the ocean and fell off the earth.
It also included more conventional piece and an extensive catalogue:
Outside, a Gormley-type man sat on the Palace parapet.
The same Palazzo also housed the Personal Structures: Crossing Borders exhibition with Marc Fromm's brilliantly doomed boatload of waving cats that reached the edge of the ocean and fell off the earth.
It also included more conventional piece and an extensive catalogue:
Iran hosted a large and I thought excellent pavilion. The
main part of the exhibition was under the title ‘the great game’ and included
the works of many artists from the countries covered by the title. One of the
cleverest entries was a windscreen wiper used to wipe away tears. I was also
taken by a surreal ‘Alice on wonderland’ type film about a rabbit, projected
cleverly onto the rough wall of the pavilion.
The pavilion also housed a sub-exhibition entitled Iranian highlights,
covering the work of four Iranian artists.
The Iraq pavilion was also absorbing. Under the name of
Rabab Ghazoul, In different rooms were videos of members of the public relating
to Tony Blair’s testimony to Chilcott. One video had them repeat the words;
another got them to comment on Blair’s body language – often very revealingly
(e.g., speaking down like a head teacher). The exhibition under the title
Invisible Beauty also contained some haunting head and shoulder portraits.
Guatemala hosted an entertaining collection of items,
including Charlie, a skull by Sabrina Bertolelli with multi coloured pencil for
hair and the same colours reflected in the teeth. The exhibition also included
a giant daschund and a Virgin Mary landing on mars in a sputnik.
Luxemburg’s pavilion seemed odd. By Filip Markiewicz, his
Paradiso Lussemburgo seemed to delight in insulting its host as a nation of tax
dodges – maybe true but he must have been lucky to get sponsorship. The exhibition
specialised in seemingly slick slogans such as that at the entry ‘the world is
a stage but the play is badly cast’.
Mauritius was housed in a lovely light-filled Palazzo and
was quite humorous with a sculpture by Nirmal Hurry of a circle of dogs sniffing each others’
bottoms. It also housed a clever orb of birds’ nests, labelled ‘home’ by Sultana Haukim and
representing the fragility of the earth as well as Tania Atoshina's distorted objects - rather reminiscent of Dali's clocks. The final entry to strike me was by Krishna Luchoomum and comprised a
washing line with the different clothes appropriate for different stages of
life, entitled ‘birth to death’. It started with a nappy and ended with a
shroud.
Montenegro’s entry was quite dark but perhaps that tone came
chiefly from a video of a dogfight.
San Marino made clever use of its space with a wolf greeting
visitors at the doorway and then a pack of wolves circling a copy of Michelangelo’s
Pieta on a plinth in the large cloistered courtyard. All of them had bloodied
mouths and conveyed an air of pack menace.
This was the second courtyard, the first containing a giant mushroom made of coloured ribbons.
San Marino had two further pavilions that I did not get to and the whole presentation went under the title ‘friendship project’, referring to bring together San Marino and Chinese artists. So, the wolves were by Liu ruo Wang and the mushroom was by Tony Margiotta.
This was the second courtyard, the first containing a giant mushroom made of coloured ribbons.
San Marino had two further pavilions that I did not get to and the whole presentation went under the title ‘friendship project’, referring to bring together San Marino and Chinese artists. So, the wolves were by Liu ruo Wang and the mushroom was by Tony Margiotta.
Portugal presented work by Joao Louro under the title ‘I
will be your mirror / poems and problems’. A complex exhibition that included a
ladder propped on the wall and the cover of a Samuel Becket book, the handout
contained the poem ‘I will be your mirror’ that I noticed one visitor had said
was the best bit of the Biennale.
Grenada’s entry was under the title ‘present nearness’ and
according to the promotional video it was to convey empathy but also hope. One
artist had collaborated with cocoa farmers in making their portraits but the
most striking entries were the clothes lying on the entrance to the pavilion
and the hues Mickey Mouse type figure inside.
Collateral Exhibitions
Ursula von Rydingsvard occupied a small park near the
Giardini. It contained a set of the tree truck like statues she assembles from
small cubes of wood, first seem at Yorkshire Sculpture Park.
Sean Scully had a show entitled ‘land sea’ which featured
his abstract works. This was an engaging display with small opposite large in
some rooms and a series on aluminium.
Scotland’s entry by Graham Fagan was also grouped under the
collateral heading. Housed in the Palazzo Fontana, one was led through the
rooms to one screening the Slave’s Lament by Robert Burns and sung by a Reggae
singer and musician, Ghetto Priest. Fagan’s exhibition also included ‘Rope
Tree’, a bronze sculpture cast from lengths of rope.
Highway to Hell was striking for its apparently beautiful objects that turned out to be pills as well as equally beautiful skulls.
Highway to Hell was striking for its apparently beautiful objects that turned out to be pills as well as equally beautiful skulls.
One of the most remarkable exhibits for me was the film by
AES+F at the Palazzo Nani Mocenigo. Showed on a gigantically long screen, this
animation completely captivated me with its setting against classical
music.
The Union of Fire and Water was housed up a high staircase
from which one could see the first exhibit, a lion made of brick in the garden,
blending so well that it had to be drawn to my attention that it was not a
permanent part of the Palazzo Barbaro. Inside, the main exhibition was reached
by negotiating a staircase maze. This led through to a series of interesting
rooms. One projected pictures on to the inside of a cupboard. Another projected
the words ‘do not fear’ through a light shone through ingeniously arranged
swords. There was also a video in several rooms – fire talks to me. The common
denominator of the exhibition was the link between Venice and Azerbaijan.
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