Wednesday, 22 May 2013

Vatican to host pavilion at Venice Biennale ... hear! hear!

Vatican to host pavilion at Venice Biennale  ... hear! hear!

 
Cardinal Ravasi (CNS)
Cardinal Ravasi (CNS)
 
After years of discussion and at least one failed attempt, the Vatican is set to open a pavilion at the 2013 Venice Bienniale contemporary art exhibition.
Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, president of the Pontifical Council for Culture, said the pavilion, that will be paid for by sponsors, represents part of the Vatican’s attempt to initiate a dialogue with modern artists. The exhibition runs from June 1 – November 24, with the Vatican hosting one of 88 national pavilions.
“In the pavilion we will not present art destined for the liturgy and sacred spaces, this is not our task,” Cardinal Ravasi said. “We want to rebuild relations between art and faith, a relationship that went through a divorce, although not all contact was severed.”
For decades, he said, “art went its way, looking back at religion once in a while, though often critically or even blasphemously.”
The Vatican has chosen to begin its new relationship with artists by looking at the beginnings of faith and of the universe as recounted in the first 11 chapters of the Book of Genesis, he said, proposing the themes of creation, destruction and rebirth. “We didn’t want to go to artists and say, ‘Make us three crosses in three different styles’ or ‘three Virgin Marys,’” he said, but “to offer them a fundamental text and begin a dialogue.”
After discussing the project with a dozen artists, three were commissioned to create works in different media for the Vatican space. Studio Azzuro, an Italian multimedia group, will create an interactive video installation on the theme “creation.” Czech photographer Josef Koudelka will exhibit 18 photographs on the theme “de-creation” or destruction, and the painter Lawrence Carroll, who often re-uses materials to suspend on his canvases, will present works on the theme of “re-creation” or “another life.”
“It was a privilege to be asked to show at the Vatican’s first pavilion, to show at the Venice Biennale,” said Carroll, who was born in Australia and raised in the United States. Carroll added he’s still completing the sculpture and five paintings, including a frozen one that melts and freezes again, he hopes to show in Venice.
At the entrance to the exhibit the Vatican will display three paintings by Tano Festa, an Italian painter and expert on Michelangelo. The works by Festa, who died in 1988, pay homage to Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling frescoes of the creation of Adam and the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden.
Antonio Paolucci, the director of the Vatican Museums and curator of the Vatican’s Venice exhibit, said the idea was to provide a bridge back to the great art commissioned by and created for the church, which communicates with people of every era and from any background

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