The newly-built pavilion of Australia at the Giardini della Biennale by Denton Corker Marshall architects. Photo © Inexhibit, 2016
The Pool – The exhibition of Australia at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2016
There are countries for which a key architectural device that others consider marginal becomes highly symbolic of the nation’s spirit and identity. For Finnish people, such an element is the sauna, for Britons is the pub, for Italians a suburban football playground. For Australians, it is, indisputably, a pool.
From large to small, from natural to artificial, from stylish to impromptu, pool “has the unique ability to evoke both the sacred and the profane. It also aptly represents a distinctively Australian democratic and social space – a great leveler of difference.”
“The Pool” at the Pavilion of Australia, installation view. Photos © Inexhibit, 2016
Admittedly, someone could argue that building a temporary pool in Venice would not be the most appropriate answer by Australia to the theme proposed by the director of the Biennale, Alejandro Aravena; namely, to investigate the social impact of architectural endeavors.
Yet, the approach by the creative director of the Australian pavilion, Aileen Sage, is much more profound than it may seem at first sight. The idea is to go beyond a self-referential discourse between architects and to investigate the relationship between place and society.
Indeed, through a series of stories narrated by seven Australian leaders in various fields, including literature, science, the arts, sport, and music, the multisensory installation The Pool depicts how such kind of infrastructure could become “… a means to enable survival in an unforgiving landscape, to tame our environment, to provide spaces that facilitate a direct contact with nature, to create democratic social spaces, but also spaces for healing racial and cultural division“. (Aileen Sage)
“The Pool” at the Pavilion of Australia, exterior and installation views. Photos © Inexhibit, 2016