Venice, also called the Floating City, is beloved for its many charming canals, elite boutique hotels, and shopping destinations. It’s also essentially a living museum, showing off myriad architectural eras, from Byzantine to Baroque to Gothic. However, designer Géraldine Dohogne loves it most for the Venice Biennale, a cultural exhibition where art, architecture, interiors, and atmosphere “are in constant dialogue, creating environments that feel alive, evolving, and culturally engaged.”
It’s here, during this event which only happens every two years, that London-based Dohogne feels deeply inspired, crediting the way the historic grandeur “becomes a stage for contemporary expression,” she explains. “The old world meets today’s creativity in a way that feels entirely relevant to our current way of living.”