Five stunning European theatres for #LoveTheatreDay

15 November is #LoveTheatreDay. So here are five stunning settings to put on your cultural must-visit list. What’s your favourite theatre? Tell us @europeanaeu with #lovetheatreday

The Seebühne

First up, The Seebühne. This is a floating stage that gets erected every year for the Bregenz Festival. It’s on Lake Constance in Austria and has 7,000 seats (on dry land). The festival started in 1946 with two barges – one for the set and one for the orchestra, who performed Mozart. The picture below is from 1960 – the first year that ballet became part of the festival. Check out this Google images search for more recent productions – the stages are simply breathtaking in size, ambition and beauty.

 

Seebühne der Bregenzer Festspiele / Bühnenbild - Wiener Blut | Anonym

Seebühne der Bregenzer Festspiele / Bühnenbild – Wiener Blut | Anonym, Vorarlberger Landesbibliothek, CC BY

Palau de la Música Catalana

To Barcelona now and the Palau de la Música Catalana. In 1997, this Art Nouveau building became a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Designed by Lluís Domènech i Montane, for a Catalan choral society, it was built between 1905 and 1908. Look at the intricacy and attention to detail (and the height!) applied to just a corridor – pictured below. Makes you want to go and see the rest, right?  If you’re not in Barcelona any time soon, explore the auditorium with a virtual tour.

 

Corredor del Palau de la Música de Barcelona | Salvany i Blanch, Josep, 1866-1929, Biblioteca De Catalunya, public domain

The Royal Albert Hall

The Royal Albert Hall in London. Opened in 18971, the concert hall was designed to promote understanding and appreciation of the Arts and Sciences. To that end, an almost 250 metre long mosaic circles the building and depicts the advancement of the Arts and Sciences across the world. Explore the history of this building through its Time Machine!

 

[Modern London: the World's Metropolis. An epitome of results, Business Men and Commercial Interests, Wealth and Growth, etc.] The British Library, public domain

Royal Albert Hall from [Modern London: the World’s Metropolis. An epitome of results, Business Men and Commercial Interests, Wealth and Growth, etc.] The British Library, public domain

The Odeon of Herodes Atticus

To Greece now, and almost the oldest theatre in our list. The Odeon of Herodes Atticus, or ‘The Herodeon’, in Athens. It was completed in 174 AD, but destroyed and left ruined less than 100 years later by the Heruli – an East Germanic tribe who attacked Greece from the Black Sea. Fast forward to a restoration project in the 1950s and the Athens Festival was born. In 2017, the festival saw 114 productions presented in venues across the city.

 

Odeion des Herodes Atticus, German Archaeological Institute, CC BY-SA

Hellbrunn Palace gardens

And finally to our last, and oldest, theatre. And probably one you’ve never heard of.  A theatre carved by nature out of rock. Despite the typo in the image title, I think this location can be tracked down to the gardens of Hellbrunn Palace, Salzburg. There’s no information to be found nowadays about performances here. The park is now home to water gardens with trick fountains! But I was enchanted by the image and just had to include it in this list. 

 

Vue du théatre taillé dans le roc, près du jardins de la maison de plaisance d’Hellenbrunn (!) pris du dehors. | Carl Gustav Hempel, Austrian National Library, public domain


Source: http://blog.europeana.eu/?p=19602

Keywords: Content

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