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Venice Biennale British Pavilion, Architecture, Exhibition, London, England, UK
Venice Architecture Biennale : British Pavilion
Italian Biennale 2008 - UK Presence : View
Alan Dunlop on the Venice Biennale
According to Emily Campbell of the British Council, Britain has an
expanding cast of architects held in high regard internationally
but sadly they will not be represented in the British Pavilion at
the Venice Biennale. The British exhibition in Venice will again grandstand
a small coterie of London based practices. Architectural quality drops
like a stone outside of London, says Peter Cook, the single
charismatic guru curator of 9 Positions, our 2004
effort. His view appears to be shared by the British Council. A pity,
for many architects outside London are held in high regard internationally
and many more could be, if given the opportunity to showcase their
work abroad.
What is particularly bewildering is that the British Council continues
to punt their efforts as representing British architecture.
Worse still, and perhaps less forgivable, is that their last two exhibitions
in Venice were exceedingly dull affairs. Peter Cooks, in 2004,
was probably the least interesting in the Giardini and despite The
Long Blondes, Echo City in 2006, was also lacklustre.
Responding to criticism that 9 Positions was too London
centric the Council set up a competition and invited regionally based
ideas for 2006. They chose Sheffield Universitys Jeremy Till
to curate. His urban register however, featuring an installation
of found objects and photographs of the streets of Sheffield was impenetrable.
The British Council though had done its bit; the regions just werent
up to it - back to the status quo
This year the Council will exhibit more London architects who all
work within walking distance of each other and who show limited experience
of building housing in Britain, particularly outside of our capital
city. Yet the Council insists that 2008 will address the national
question of post war reconstruction and Britains housing
challenge. According to the exhibition narrative, housing in
the UK is a key issue which architects, developers,
builders and government in the UK need to address but only in
London it would appear
Take Manchester, for example. The regeneration of the city being a
consequence of an IRA bomb which tore away large parts of the city
centre, is inspirational with much new housing. But no Manchester
architect will be represented in 2008.
What will the exhibition Home/Away: Five Architects Build Housing
in Britain and Europe, say about Liverpool or Belfast, Leeds,
Edinburgh or Glasgow? According to Ellis Woodman, the curator, his
exhibition will explore the roots of the British obsession with home
ownership and the long-term domination of housing by private developers
in the UK. But this is an obsession that is not general.
In Scotland and in particular, Glasgow, people relied on social rather
than private housing. Glasgows plans for the regeneration of
the Clyde was held up for years as the city wrestled with the burden
of its decaying stock of social housing. Only when the city was freed
from the financial overhang through the creation of the Glasgow Housing
Association was it able to focus on other strategic issues. Emily
Campbell says if the point of the Biennale is to advance architecture
then the world would be short changed by not seeing what Britain has
learned Regrettably, for Campbell and the British Council, the
world ends at Camden.
Other countries show that a wider perspective can be taken. In 2004,
the most inspiring exhibition in the Giardini was in the Spanish Pavilion.
It featured the work of many regional architects and was structured,
rigorous and beautifully photographed. It highlighted the range of
work being undertaken throughout Spain. I contend that there is a
similar body of work throughout the UK which is being consistently
bypassed by the organisation which is paid to represent national architecture
and design.
This year, a new debate on architecture will take place in Barcelona,
at the World Architecture Festival. Architects from Britains
other major cities have made it onto the shortlists for the WAF Awards.
Presenting and in competition with other international architects
there are projects from the United States, Japan, Australia and Europe.
Their work has been selected by a jury of world-renowned architects
and did not involve the British Council.
So, Im off to Barcelona and not to Venice this year.
Alan Dunlop, Sep 2008
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Venice Biennale Scottish Pavilion
2008
Venice Biennale Installation
: Gustafson Porter
Venice Biennale - Reviews + Images

photo : Neale Smith Photography
Venice Biennale Exhibition 2007
: Dune Formations installation, Scuola dei Mercanti
Venice Biennale US Pavilion
2008
Venice Biennale Conference
Venice Biennale Images
: Dune Formations images by Zaha Hadid

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos
for the Venice Biennale British Pavilion 2008 page welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Venice Biennale British Pavilion : page - adrian
welch / isabelle lomholt |
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