The Luxembourg Pavilion, located in the Sale d'Armi del Arsenale, will house until November 21, 2021, the modular installation "Homes for Luxembourg" curated by the Luxembourg Ministry of Culture and LUCA, and designed by Sara Noel Costa De Araujo, founder of Studio SNCDA.

Luxembourg's contribution to the 17th International Architecture Exhibition reflects on the title of this year's Biennale, How will we live together?. The exhibition explores reversible forms of life, which offers the possibility of developing a reusable and multipurpose architectural model focused on urban life in common.
The modular installation developed by the Studio SNCDA team has proposed the intervention to give visibility to the committed debate on the housing crisis in Luxembourg by proposing alternative ways of living. The project, in which the architecture magazine Accattone has also contributed, questions the standards of housing and property in today's society.

The collaborators of the new exhibition of the Luxembourg Pavilion for the Biennale di Venezia come from different disciplines and have had the opportunity to organize, in addition, a residency program for curators, authors, set designers and activists, and a series of events in Luxembourg and Venice that They will be held from May to November on their website.
 

Description of project by Studio SNCDA

The Luxembourg Pavilion at the 17th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia opened its doors to the public on Saturday 22 May 2021 with a silent opening.

Set up for the second time at the Arsenale’s Sale d’Armi, the Luxembourg Pavilion hosts until 21 November 2021 an exhibition entitled “Homes for Luxembourg” as well as a residency program and series of events organised in Luxembourg and Venice.

The Ministry of Culture and LUCA, in collaboration with the network of National Pavilions, plan to organize a joint weekend of vernissages this autumn, in Venice, when it will be possible to travel safely again.

As in the previous years, LUCA Luxembourg Center for Architecture was charged by the commissioner, the Ministry of Culture, to act as the curator and organiser of the Luxembourg Pavilion.

Initially planned to open up in May 2020 and postponed twice, the 17th International Architecture Exhibition, entitled “How will we live together?”, is curated by the Lebanese architect Hashim Sarkis and organised by La Biennale di Venezia and its new president Roberto Cicutto.

The first pandemic of the Anthropocene hardly left a stone unturned. Where decades of promoting the concept of sustainability failed, the spreading virus succeeded in the wink of an eye. The collective experience of being catapulted into a way of living within a limited radius, minimal contacts, and reduced consumption provoked a dramatic shakeup of mindsets. It set a spotlight on the relationship between architecture and land, urban and rural, interior and exterior, home and work/study, built environment and nature.

Exhibition

Referring to the title of this year’s Biennale Architettura, How will we live together?, the Luxembourg contribution to the 17th International Architecture Exhibition comes with an exhibition that reflects on these dualities.

The modular installation in the Sale d’Armi – designed by the delegated curator Sara Noel Costa de Araujo (Studio SNCDA) on behalf of the curator and organiser LUCA Luxembourg Center for Architecture – and several contributions to the architecture magazine Accattone explore ways of reversible living, offering a vision for a model of repurposing land as new urban commons, providing new forms of togetherness.

The contributors to this exhibition come from diverse disciplines, and include architects, artists, authors, urban planners, photographers, designers, engineers, curators, researchers, ecologists, developers, lawyers…

HOMES FOR LUXEMBOURG IN ACCATTONE #7
by Carlo Menon, editor of Accattone (BE)


Discover Accattone’s contribution to “Homes for Luxembourg” thanks to a short video presentation by Carlo Menon, one of the editors of the magazine.

Referring to the Luxembourg Pavilion at the 17th International Architecture Exhibition, he states: “We like this project because it is an engaged attempt to open up the debate on the housing crisis in Luxembourg by proposing alternative ways of living. The project questions housing standards and land ownership.”

Emerging Talent Program

As the second central element of the Pavilion, LUCA initiated and set up Luxembourg’s first-ever curatorial residency program at La Biennale di Venezia. Emerging curators, authors, mediators, scenographers, bloggers, and activists in the field of architecture have the possibility to explore this year’s Architecture Biennale, get a first-hand overview of the current state of international discourse, gain a deeper understanding of the challenges and opportunities of contributing to the world’s most important architecture exhibition, enhance their professional abilities, and establish important contacts and develop ideas for own projects.

The Emerging Talent Program will be launched as soon as sanitary conditions permit it.

Events

A series of cultural events, curated and organized by LUCA both in Venice and Luxembourg from May to November and an evolutive website allow anyone, wherever they are, to follow and take part in the life of the Pavilion.

21 May 2021.- Accattone at magazin fair
22 May 2021.- 11 am Silent Opening
22 May 2021.- Official Opening Ceremony of the Biennale (streaming)
22 May 2021.- 12 am Debate on Radio 100.7

Read more
Read less

More information

+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Exhibitors
Text
Studio SNCDA et al. (Sara Noel Costa De Araujo, Koenraad Dedobbeleer, Ester Goris, Arnaud Hendrickx).
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Dates
Text
May 22 to July 31, August 01 to September 21, 2021.
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Location
Text
Luxembourg Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, Sale d'Armi del Arsenale, Venice, Italy.
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Photography
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Studio SNCDA, founded by the architect Sara Noel Costa de Araujo, has a special relationship with research, innovation, and the implementation of research projects. That is why every project, whatever its scale, is seen as a pretext to develop a new method to create a unique project. Over the years, this research has resulted in an independent « Gesamtcollage » project, which brings together thoughts about an autonomous and sustainable city system. The work of Studio SNCDA was exhibited at the Venice Architecture Biennale (Italy), the Architecture Triennial in (Portugal), the LUCA Luxembourg Center for Architecture (Luxembourg), the FRAC Orléans (France), and Etablissement d’En Face (Brussels).

Sara Noel Costa de Araujo started working in 2000 as an architect after graduating from the Bartlett School of Architecture (UCL) in London. She first gained experience with Zaha Hadid Architects in London and Coop Himmelb(l)au in Vienna. From 2003, she worked as a project manager at Xaveer De Geyter Architects, where she was responsible for designing and implementing architectural projects within the agency. Since 2014, Sara Noel Costa de Araujo has been building an autonomous and independent practice based on her various professional experiences.
Read more
Published on: July 12, 2021
Cite: "Homes for Luxembourg. Luxembourg Pavilion at the Venice Biennale" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/homes-luxembourg-luxembourg-pavilion-venice-biennale> ISSN 1139-6415
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...