Rome, 21 May (LaPresse) – “We are in the Italian pavilion, enchanted by the exhibition design. I was very keen to visit it. The energy and vitality it conveys far exceed expectations.” So said the Minister for Culture, Alessandro Giuli, speaking to journalists in Venice after visiting the Italian pavilion at the Art Biennale. ‘The message coming from the Biennale,’ he continued, “is freedom, beauty. My presence? A gesture owed to the Italian pavilion, which is the MiC’s pavilion. And a sign of restored calm, that we are putting the controversies behind us. A sign of love for Venice and for the Biennale, whatever may have happened, for their history and for everything they represent. Did I see Buttafuoco? Yes, of course. How did it go? Very well, just as it should have gone with Buttafuoco.”
Venice Biennale, Giuli: ‘Everything’s fine with Buttafuoco, the controversy is behind us’

Rome, 21 May (LaPresse) – “We are in the Italian pavilion, enchanted by the exhibition design. I was very keen to visit it. The energy and vitality it conveys far exceed expectations.” So said the Minister for Culture, Alessandro Giuli, speaking to journalists in Venice after visiting the Italian pavilion at the Art Biennale. ‘The message coming from the Biennale,’ he continued, “is freedom, beauty. My presence? A gesture owed to the Italian pavilion, which is the MiC’s pavilion. And a sign of restored calm, that we are putting the controversies behind us. A sign of love for Venice and for the Biennale, whatever may have happened, for their history and for everything they represent. Did I see Buttafuoco? Yes, of course. How did it go? Very well, just as it should have gone with Buttafuoco.”
