At the 2012 Biennale
of Architecture I was delighted to discover the Arsenale, something that had
eluded me on previous visits to Venice. A cluster of armories and shipyards
housed within formidable walls, the Arsenale is where the extensive array of Venetian
naval and merchant ships were built and serviced. Quite by accident, I stumbled
on the Porta Magna “main gate” (c. 1460). It’s a magnificent structure, but
what I loved most about it were the graduated unsymmetrical archaic sitting and reclining lions (four
in all). I read subsequently that two are from Greece. One, known as the
Piraeus Lion, boasts runic symbols on it carved by Scandinavian mercenaries who
invaded Venice in the 11th century.
Inside is the recently
restored boat “garage” for the Doges’ barges. It reminded me of the scull
boathouse at college. On steroids. I passed by it on the way to the Casa Scaffali
(house of shelves) situated within a lovely garden. Here I found the Tod
Williams Billie Tsien exhibition Wunderkammer,
which I had come to Venice to see. The two invited 35 esteemed colleagues to select
objects that spoke to them and the work they do, place them in a gray painted
wood box provided by Tsien and Williams and ship them to Venice. Originating
from Williams and Tsien’s New York office the boxes were sent out across the
globe collecting each architect’s contribution. In Venice, the boxes and
objects became a collection, representing the commonalities and differences all
the individual architects share. This collection of architectural DNA played
directly into Curator David Chipperfield’s notion of Common Ground.
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