Lúcio Costa was an open-minded and humorous man and the Riposatevi installation he prepared for the 13th Milan Triennale in 1964 (now reassembled at the Venice Achitecture Biennale by Lauro Cavalcanti, curator of the Brazilian Pavilion, in the Giardini) is a strange ensemble of hammocks hanging from a mesh of steel cables, which in turn are attached to the walls.
More than an invitation to rest, this is a careful structural study, as the weight of the users doesn't alter or curve the line of the cables. Although the hammock is one of the stereotypes we normally associate with Brazil, Costa reminded us in 1964 that "o mesmo povo que descansava em redes sabia, quando necessário, construir uma nova capital em três anos" ("The same people who rested in hammocks could, when necessary, build a new capital in three years").
