Falling Garden is a world in which botanical curios are suspended from the ceiling of a 17th-century church in Venice.
The artists installed "Falling Garden" inside San Staƫ church, on the Grand Canal, at the 50th Venice Biennial. According to the artists, the church was built as a mausoleum for a 17th-century doge (duke), who was entombed in the center, under an arrangement of skeletons and a grinning skull.
To view the installation, visitors lie on the floor, or, as the artists suggest, on the gravestone's bed. It's the best seat in the house, a house of cascading flowers and cherub carvings. Having thus submitted, the visitor's thoughts are free to drift, as "the garden thinks for them."
All images courtesy of the artists Gerda Steiner & Jorg Lenzlinger.
The artists installed "Falling Garden" inside San Staƫ church, on the Grand Canal, at the 50th Venice Biennial. According to the artists, the church was built as a mausoleum for a 17th-century doge (duke), who was entombed in the center, under an arrangement of skeletons and a grinning skull.
To view the installation, visitors lie on the floor, or, as the artists suggest, on the gravestone's bed. It's the best seat in the house, a house of cascading flowers and cherub carvings. Having thus submitted, the visitor's thoughts are free to drift, as "the garden thinks for them."
All images courtesy of the artists Gerda Steiner & Jorg Lenzlinger.
No comments:
Post a Comment