The Hungarian pavilion’s exhibition at the Venice Architecture Biennale opened

The Hungarian pavilion’s exhibition at the Venice Architecture Biennale, There is Nothing to See Here, opened on Thursday. It showcases 13 stories “highlighting human creativity, knowledge and ingenuity and the search for new paths,” deputy state secretary for public collections and cultural development, MátĂ© Vincze, said at the opening ceremony.

Vincze noted that Hungary’s exhibition two years ago showcased the Hungarian Museum of Ethnography as an object of art. This year, “the extraordinary exhibition of Hungary and the Ludwig Museum, called There is Nothing to See Here, offers much to see and serious content,” he said.

Hungarian pavilion's exhibition at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2
Photo: MTI

JĂşlia FabĂ©nyi, the director of the Ludwig Museum and government commissioner for the Hungarian pavilion, said that the exhibition’s curator, Márton PintĂ©r, will be leading visitors into a “mysterious building with a million things to see, not about buildings but hidden messages and non-architectural inventions of architects which have brought world fame for the inventors.”

Read also:

  • 5 astonishing buildings in Budapest and the history behind them — PHOTOS and details HERE
  • Hungarian Architecture Museum receives green light for construction – VISUALS and details in THIS article

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