Acqua Alta – Paddling in Venice!

This is a wonderful post on high water in Venice.

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The sea is a fickle mistress. Built on marshland within a salt-water lagoon off the Adriatic, Venice owes her fortune to the sea. At her birth, at 12pm on 25th March 421 AD (according to legend), the lagoon protected Venice from her enemies. Later, in her heyday, water-based trade and naval warfare made the city very rich. But water can also bring damage and destruction as Venice knows all too well. Venetians call the phenomenon Acqua Alta, or high water.

Acqua alta in Piazza San Marco, June 2014 Acqua alta in Piazza San Marco, June 2014

Wading through Wading through

So what causes acqua alta? Here comes the science bit! Acqua alta is produced when a number of factors combine to cause an exceptionally high tide which floods the city. These factors include –

  1. Normal and seasonal high tides
  2. Low pressure weather and prevailing winds pushing the high tide into the Venetian lagoon like a storm surge
  3. Subsidence or sinking…

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V is for the Venice Biennale

Do you know about the Venice Biennale?   The first Biennale was held in 1895 and it is still one of the major international exhibitions of contemporary art.  It is happening right now in its 55th iteration.  This year’s version was curated by Massimiliano Gioni.  He entitled it “The Encyclopedic Palace” (Il Palazzo Enciclopedico) and it includes 88 “national pavilions” with 158 artists.  Several countries are participating in the important Biennale for the first time, including Angola, the Bahamas, the Kingdom of Bahrain, the Ivory Coast, the Republic of Kosovo, Kuwait, Maldives, Paraguay, Tuvalu and, perhaps most surprisingly, the Holy See!

If you’d like to know more about this year’s exhibition, here is a link:

http://www.labiennale.org/en/art/

I haven’t been to this year’s exhibition (nor would I want to be in Venice in the summer heat and crowds, but that’s just me!). I was there one August for the Biennale.  It was the 1980s and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, where I was a curator, lent a painting to the exhibition. I had the great privilege of being sent from the Museum to Venice to oversee the packing up of the painting and I got to accompany it back to Boston.  This is a major perk of being a museum curator!  I have some crazy ass stories to tell about that entire episode, which I will tell some other time.

But, even though I don’t want to rush over to Venice for this year’s Biennale, I still am interested in what’s happening there.

One of the most interesting looking installations–although not an endorsed inclusion in the actual Biennale–is this:

Artist and optical wizard Rudolf Stingel took over three stories of the wonderful Palazzo Grassi (which is owned by billionaire art collector Francois Pinault) and covered the interior walls, and floors with the pattern of one kilim carpet.  I hear that the crowds are loving the installation and there is much buzz about it.