From Little Venice to Venice: The Narrative of Carlo Scarpa’s Venezuela Pavilion

Nestled amongst the plethora of grandiose and carefully crafted national pavilions in the Giardini della Biennale in the Italian city of Venice is one pavilion by the city's perhaps most well-known modern architect. Sited between the pavilions of Russia and Switzerland is the Venezuela Pavilion, by architect Carlo Scarpa. In many ways, the structure typifies the design approach of its architect but has its idiosyncrasies. Built for Europe's most important biennial art exhibition, it is a member of a cohort of Modernist pavilions that came after the earlier, more classicist pavilions. This is its story.

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Cite: Mohieldin Gamal. "From Little Venice to Venice: The Narrative of Carlo Scarpa’s Venezuela Pavilion" 09 Aug 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1032763/from-little-venice-to-venice-the-narrative-of-carlo-scarpas-venezuela-pavilion> ISSN 0719-8884
Exterior of the Venezuela Pavilion / Carlo Scarpa. Image © Flickr user Jean-Pierre Dalbéra

从“小威尼斯”到威尼斯:卡洛·斯卡帕的委内瑞拉馆叙事

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