Landing by helicopter at a women’s prison where the Vatican has mounted its pavilion for the Venice Biennale international art exhibition, Pope Francis on Sunday told the women incarcerated there that they had a “special place in my heart.”“Grazie,” one woman called out.
Others applauded.
Over the decades, countries participating in the Biennale — the world’s principal showcase for new art — have used deconsecrated churches, former beer factories, water buses and various other sites to display their art, but this was the first time a prison was selected.
That made the project “more complex and more difficult to implement,” Bruno Racine, the director of two venues of the Pinault Collection in Venice and a co-curator of the Vatican Pavilion, said in an interview.
But the setting is consistent with Francis’ message of inclusivity toward marginalized people, he added.
Persons:
Pope Francis, “, ” Francis, ” Bruno Racine, Francis ’
Organizations:
Venice Biennale, Sunday
Locations:
Venice