{"id":160198,"date":"2023-06-03T14:13:55","date_gmt":"2023-06-03T14:13:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/culture.org\/?p=160198"},"modified":"2023-06-02T14:16:03","modified_gmt":"2023-06-02T14:16:03","slug":"venice-architecture-biennale-explores-interplay-of-race-colonialism-and-climate-change","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/culture.org\/art-and-culture\/venice-architecture-biennale-explores-interplay-of-race-colonialism-and-climate-change\/","title":{"rendered":"Venice Architecture Biennale Explores Interplay of Race, Colonialism, and Climate Change"},"content":{"rendered":" \r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n
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The Venice Architecture Biennale, an event renowned for its sleek displays of contemporary architecture and design, has veered towards uncharted territories this year under the curatorship of Lesley Lokko, a Scottish-Ghanaian architect and academic.<\/span><\/p>\n Lokko’s exhibition bravely tackles the intertwined themes of race, colonialism, and climate change, presenting a stark contrast to previous exhibitions.<\/span><\/p>\n Historically, Western powers utilized slave labor and colonial expansion to construct magnificent architectural structures, often neo-Classical, symbolizing their political control.<\/span><\/p>\n This year’s Biennale, the 18th International Architecture Exhibition, offers a space for Africa and its diaspora to recast these narratives on their own terms and imagine alternative outcomes.<\/span><\/p>\n Lokko\u2019s display comprises two distinct narratives: one recounting historical injustices through the lens of architecture, and the other envisioning the future through an exuberant sci-fi perspective.<\/span><\/p>\n The former employs architecture as a mnemonic device to echo historical realities and traditional design practices. The latter reimagines an optimistic future using architecture as a time-traveling vessel.<\/span><\/p>\n A memorable installation, \u201cunknown, unknown: A Space of Memory,\u201d brings the tragic tale of Isabella Gibbons to life.<\/span><\/p>\n Gibbons, a slave at the University of Virginia in the 1850s, serves as the centerpiece of this installation.<\/span><\/p>\n Her painful experience in the neo-classical setting of Thomas Jefferson\u2019s architecture reflects the violent history of racial injustice in the architectural setting of the time.<\/span><\/p>\n The other segment of Lokko’s exhibition presents an optimistic, futuristic vision through the work of Nigerian-born, Brooklyn-based artist, Olalekan Jeyifous.<\/span><\/p>\n His Pan-African inspired installation imagines a continent where extractive imperialist infrastructures are supplanted by cooperative efforts to advance green technologies.<\/span><\/p>\n Lokko\u2019s overarching aim is to challenge the Western world’s preeminence in shaping global history, including architectural history, and dictating the vision of future cities. In her view, the narrative of architecture is incomplete.<\/span><\/p>\n Her ambition reflects in the exhibition\u2019s seemingly innocuous title, \u201cThe Laboratory of the Future,\u201d which she utilizes to make pointed statements about how design is influenced by socio-political movements and anxieties about climate change, economic instability, and the rise of artificial intelligence.<\/span><\/p>\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n A Shift in Narrative<\/b><\/h2>\n
Recollecting the Past<\/b><\/h2>\n
Rethinking the Future<\/b><\/h2>\n
Challenging the Western Dominance<\/b><\/h2>\n