Collector Patrizia Sandrito Rei Rebodingo acquires Venice Island – ARTnews.com

Isola di San Giacomo, a small, remote island off the coast of Venice, will be transformed into an art space by collector Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo. It will be the third space that you oversee, after those in Turin and the Italian city of Guarene.

Last week, Re Rebaudengo revealed plans to transform the space into what its foundation described as an “eco-thinking laboratory.” The initiative started with the Giota Mombaca show that took place in San Giacomo and was organized by curator Hans-Ulrich Obrist.

The island is currently home to three powder magazines built by Napoleon in 1810, whose forces destroyed an old monastery on the island to make way for them. These powder magazines are now being transformed by Re Rebaudengo into spaces where art exhibitions and events can be held. As part of the construction process, the island will also be restored, and new trees will be planted around buildings that have not been used for five decades.

Related Articles

Three sound sculptures that look like a half

Fondazione Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo said it expects to complete construction on the new space in 2024.

“I like to think that over the centuries, the various life and functions of this small island have been preserved in the soil and can now be brought back to the surface as a source of inspiration,” Rebodingo said in a statement. “I would like San Giacomo to become a point of crossroads, encounters and exchanges, to become again, as in the distant past, a path between the waters and canals of the lake north of Venice, which in turn connects with the world.

She continued, “Our ‘isolation’ in this short strip of land is an act of transition, a choice open to water movement, flights, departure and landing.”

In addition to 1,000 jewelry items and 3,000 photographs, Re Rebaudengo owns more than 1,500 contemporary items. I ranked yearly ARTnews List of top 200 collectors every year since 2003.

Her organization, which she founded in 1995, is known for holding ambitious exhibitions of contemporary art. At one point it was planning to open a venue in Madrid, but in 2020, it canceled it, citing “structural problems” with the space it was to be located in.

[ad_2]

Related posts

Leave a Comment