Ando, Botta & Glancey on the Dream of Venice, Photographed by Riccardo De Cal
Dream of Venice Architecture, the second in a series by Bella Figura Publications, has brought together a collection of contemporary architects and architectural writers to share their personal experiences of La Serenissima: the great Italian city of Venice. "Water runs through her veins," Editor JoAnn Locktov writes. "Bridges, palaces, churches ? every structure is a testament to the resiliency of imagination."
© Riccardo De Cal
Dream of Venice Architecture, the second in a series by Bella Figura Publications, has brought together a collection of contemporary architects and architectural writers to share their personal experiences of La Serenissima: the great Italian city of Venice. "Water runs through her veins," Editor JoAnn Locktov writes. "Bridges, palaces, churches ? every structure is a testament to the resiliency of imagination."
© Riccardo De Cal
What can we learn from a city that is over 1,500 years old" How does her immutable reality challenge our own sense of urban living" Venice was built where no land ever existed. "Riccardo De Cal took a photograph for each essay," Locktov continues. "He has illustrated the words with an evocative Venice; one that basks in blue winter light, sleeps quietly and becomes an apparition when shrouded in fog. This is the Venice that greets you when you turn a corner and enter an empty campo. This is the Venice that is a contemplative...
© Riccardo De Cal
Dream of Venice Architecture, the second in a series by Bella Figura Publications, has brought together a collection of contemporary architects and architectural writers to share their personal experiences of La Serenissima: the great Italian city of Venice. "Water runs through her veins," Editor JoAnn Locktov writes. "Bridges, palaces, churches ? every structure is a testament to the resiliency of imagination."
© Riccardo De Cal
What can we learn from a city that is over 1,500 years old" How does her immutable reality challenge our own sense of urban living" Venice was built where no land ever existed. "Riccardo De Cal took a photograph for each essay," Locktov continues. "He has illustrated the words with an evocative Venice; one that basks in blue winter light, sleeps quietly and becomes an apparition when shrouded in fog. This is the Venice that greets you when you turn a corner and enter an empty campo. This is the Venice that is a contemplative...
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