When you arrive in Venice at 1AM after a delayed flight, your reward for traipsing through the city is getting to Piazza San Marco and having it ALL TO YOURSELF. |
The view from the traghetto on our way to the Biennale |
Have ticket.....time to see some art! |
First up, the Swiss pavilion. I'll let the pictures do the talking. |
Next up, the Danish pavilion, which had a theme of something like "the power of the spoken word" |
The part I found most amazing was this carved wooden floor.... |
....which had pictures of many people (politicians and religious leaders) who are anti-gay, anti-islamist, etc. We all know who this is! |
Geert Wilders, one of the 32 faces on the floor, the Dutch politician who is known for his anti-Islamic statements. DD, my travel partner, being the English teacher, stated, that we walked on these faces because they have hit their ceiling and we need them as a "floor" to improve the world. Heady words indeed. |
Moving down the way, we have the Venezuelan and Russian Pavilions. |
After the intensity of the Swiss and Danish pavilions, it was nice to have a light-hearted moment. |
This wall art is made completely of folded paper! The Russian pavilion, had little that I found interesting. But the pavilion itself was BEAUTIFUL. |
The Nordic Pavilion |
The Nordic Pavilion is jointly owned and operated by Norway, Sweden, Finland and I think Iceland. This year Sweden presented. |
Next up, Japan! |
I stepped inside and was hit with this graphic motion picture. I wasn't sure if the curved surface was real or an illusion. |
I was totally engrossed by the piece. DD thought it might have been some sort of reference to the earthquake and tsumani that occurred this spring. |
Right next door, in a pavilion totally enclosed by glass windows, was Korea (South Korea) |
One of my favorite pieces of the entire Biennale, was a movie and set of pictures of Korean soldier is flower camouflage. More to come... |
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