viennese blood

54
Viennese Blood

Upload: florin-nourescu

Post on 08-Feb-2016

12 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Viennese Blood

Viennese Blood

Page 2: Viennese Blood

Vienna as seen from Schönbrunn Palace Gardens

It was in Vienna – inspirer of the famous "Viennese waltzes" – that in August 1889, Johann Strauss II wrote the one that the Austrian Emperor Franz Josef, on the occasion of his visit to

Germany, gave to the German Kaiser Wilhelm II as a "toast of friendship“ from Austria to Germany.

Originally called "Mano a mano" (Hand in Hand), later the composition was named Emperor Waltz.

Page 3: Viennese Blood

It’s also in the Schönbrunn Palace Gardens that are offered grandiose spectacles with the music of Johann Strauss II played by worldwide famous orchestras.

Page 4: Viennese Blood

Johann Strauss II, one of the illustrious sons of Austria and great composer of the Romantic Age, was responsible for the popularity of the waltz in Vienna during the nineteenth century.

This monument in his honor is located at the entrance of City Park - Stadtpark.

Page 5: Viennese Blood

Vienna - the rosy capital, homeland not only of Strauss and Mozart, Haydn, Schubert, Mahler, etc.. - is all music and romanticism, seeming to extend the sides of Burgtheater

to welcome its visitors with open arms.

Page 6: Viennese Blood

But the beauty of the city is not solely made of its music - the building where the City Hall of Vienna is installed - Rathaus - is an example of one of the most beautiful architecture in the city.

Page 7: Viennese Blood

And it is hard to say when the building is more admirable - if under sunlight or when night falls and artificial lighting highlights each of its marvelous architectural details.

Page 8: Viennese Blood

 Since Vienna has been the birth place of the Great Music since the great names that sparkled across Europe and then the rest of civilization, the stage of its Opera House remains one of the

most coveted in the world of musical art.

Page 9: Viennese Blood

  An original room inside Vienna State Opera.

Page 10: Viennese Blood

Playing on the stage of the Vienna State Opera is always a coronation for the career of any artist, company or orchestra.

Page 11: Viennese Blood

A Night at the Vienna State Opera is not only a feast for music lovers as well as an opportunity for foreigners to appreciate how elegant are the Viennese.

Page 12: Viennese Blood

The Opera’s events rooms are other of the refined ambiences of Vienna where the society displays its entire splendor.

Page 13: Viennese Blood

Vienna yearly promotes hundreds of balls but the most famous is the Opera Ball which, as might be expected, takes place in the magnificent hall of the State Opera, and is considered

a social event of the highest level, attracting celebrities from all over the world.

Page 14: Viennese Blood

The Wiener Musikverein, commonly abbreviated to Musikverein, is a concert hall and home of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.

Page 15: Viennese Blood

Another important annual event takes place at the hall of the Wiener Musikverein: the Vienna Philharmonic Ball.

Page 16: Viennese Blood

Since 1981, every year from the end of June to mid-July takes place the Jazz in Vienna festival, in its Ancient Roman Theatre, a historic monument built in the first century

of Christian era where is now Vienna.

Page 17: Viennese Blood

Schönbrunn Palace, one of the major historical and cultural monuments in Austria, was built between 1638 and 1643, and severely damaged during the second Turkish siege of Vienna. The reconstruction and expansion to its current form was in made in 1743, under Empress Maria Theresa.

Page 18: Viennese Blood

Visiting the interior of Schönbrunn is like walking into a fairy tale...

Page 19: Viennese Blood

Gloriette of the Baroque palace (Schönbrunn) that was the summer residence of the Austrian Imperial family since the mid-eighteenth century until the end of World War II, also being a cultural and political

center of the Habsburg empire. Here lived until her marriage to the future Emperor of Brazil D. Pedro I, the Archduchess Leopoldina of Habsburg, who had such a great role in the independence of Brazil. 

Page 20: Viennese Blood

The complex Belvedere composed by two palaces – upper and lower – and gardens, built for Prince Eugene of Savoy – general, philosopher and art lover.

Page 21: Viennese Blood

It's so much beauty in artistic painting as well as in architectural decoration that we cannot highlight one among all. I opted for the one which is called Earthly Hall, where the sculptures are

the main feature - beautiful, like all the others of the Palace.

Page 22: Viennese Blood

Gardens link the upper palace to the lower with motifs defined in a gentle gradient and they include decorative fountains and cascades, Baroque sculptures and majestic wrought iron gates.

Page 23: Viennese Blood

The main gate to the Upper Belvedere, with coats of arms of the Princes of Savoy supported by lions.

Page 24: Viennese Blood

The Upper Palace, Baroque, houses the world's largest collection of the Austrian Gustav Klimt - including the legendary painting The Kiss - and also other works by Schiele and Kokoschka,

both also Austrian.

Page 25: Viennese Blood

Sumptuous as a palace is the Parliament building of Vienna. 

Page 26: Viennese Blood

With the end of the Empires of which Austria was a part, the political regime of the country changed to Parliamentary Republic. This building of neoclassical facade, from the early twentieth century,

today houses four ministries.

Page 27: Viennese Blood

Minoritenkirche - founded in 1275, it is one of the first Gothic churches of Austria, where there is a copy of the famous Milanese mosaic mural by Leonardo da Vinci - "The Last Supper".

Page 28: Viennese Blood

Saint Stephen’s Cathedral, an example of architecture of the twelfth century, was renovated in Gothic style between 1304 and 1433, while its interior has acquired a baroque tendency. Its famous bell, "Pummerin", weighing not less than 21 tons, suffered considerable damage in World War II.

Page 29: Viennese Blood

The Votive Church, neo-Gothic, inspired on the Gothic of the Cathedral of Cologne, was built in the late nineteenth century in appreciation for the miraculous survival of the Emperor Francis Joseph after an assassination attempt.

Page 30: Viennese Blood

Churches, all of them bear artistically rich interiors, but the one of St. Peter's Church, which is near the central Graben street, is considered even more divine and impressive for those who pay a visit.

Page 31: Viennese Blood

Another of the important churches of the city - St. Francis of Assisi’s - lies on the banks of the Danube, that becomes really blue at the magic hour of the sunset in Vienna.

Page 32: Viennese Blood

In everyday Vienna, Graben is a pulsing shopping street at the heart of city center where is a famous column. The street has Roman origin and is surrounded by typical style places,

elegant tradition and gourmet pleasures.

Page 33: Viennese Blood

Grabenstraße – This, the Graben, is one of the streets showing us that the majestic beauty of Vienna goes beyond its palaces and castles...

Page 34: Viennese Blood

“Pestsäule” – Column of the Plague - it was the payment of a promise by Emperor Leopold, who prayed for the end of the plague epidemic of 1679, which claimed about 100,000 lives.

The sculpture is composed of angels, figures representing faith, a praying emperor, and it is crowned by the Holy Trinity sitting on a cloud.

Page 35: Viennese Blood

Although Vienna is permeated with flower gardens that would deserve a compilation with only this kind of beauty, one cannot walk by the busy streets of the city without find

a well cared flower shop on the sidewalk.

Page 36: Viennese Blood

Kohlmarkt – street of great luxury in Vienna, begins in St. Michael's Square and displays a high density of jewelers and international brands stores.

Page 37: Viennese Blood

It is on Kohlmarkt Street the most famous pastry shop in Vienna - the Café Demel, in which the halls are always full of visitors to taste the sweet temptations and the special coffee with cream.

Page 38: Viennese Blood

Also in the central part of the city lies the Hotel Sacher, famous due to the luxury, the elegance and the sophistication of its physical structure and high standard of services, while its very famous Sachertorte constitutes one of the greatest gustatory pleasures that one can find in Vienna.

Page 39: Viennese Blood

Restaurant Steirereck, in Stadtpark, is on the list of the 5 best restaurants in Vienna and also on that one that elected the top 50 worldwide.

Page 40: Viennese Blood

Vienna still preserves the medieval Grinzing - today a neighborhood far from the city - with its houses called Heurigen (traditional cafes with live music - folk in general - serving wine and grape

juice), since long a big attraction for tourists.In the Grinzing’s village-cemetery are buried Gustav Mahler and his widow, Alma Mahler-Werfel.

Page 41: Viennese Blood

"Wheels of pleasure", with chairs suspended from large wooden rings and driven by strong men, may have originated in Bulgaria in the seventeenth century. Wiener Riesenrad in Prater Park, was built in 1897, 65m tall, for the Golden Jubilee of Franz Josef I of Austria. Damaged during

the First World War, it was rebuilt with 15 cabins.

Page 42: Viennese Blood

Ankeruhr is a large clock and music box that links two buildings in the center of Vienna, and reveals itself as one of the most outstanding works of Art Nouveau. It's a popular tourist attraction because it

shows historical figures at every full hour - Marcus Aurelius, Haydn, Maria Theresa, and others.

Page 43: Viennese Blood

But Vienna, cosmopolitan city that it is, besides all its tradition, is also adapted to the technologies of contemporary life, with modern bridges, freeways, wide avenues and

buildings of bold architecture.

Page 44: Viennese Blood

Not only Vienna but the Danube itself was modernized, now framed by the city’s fey lighting, and the walkway of illuminated private and tour boats, and even the refinement of the new glazed restaurant

from where much of the beauty of the river and the city is unveiled.

Page 45: Viennese Blood

Today, the youth brings to the banks of Danube a relaxed coexistence that is slowly replacing the excessive formalism so characteristic in the European continent. The change is for better

or worse? I bet on a tie.

Page 46: Viennese Blood

Contrast seems to be a feature of modern life: the very traditional Vienna Opera, continent of the purest nutriment for the soul - the music, here as background for an activity related

to physical culture.

Page 47: Viennese Blood

Indeed young people have discovered how to enjoy the city in innovative ways and even have brought to the Danube their sailing colors. However, as with most of European youth, they enjoy also - and a

lot - all of the cultural improvement which is provided by museums.

Page 48: Viennese Blood

This breathtaking Art Complex, near the Imperial Palace, comprises renowned museums such as Leopold Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art, and also a lively variety of restaurants, cafes and

bars that make the neighborhood one of the best meeting places in the city. .. and beyond.

Page 49: Viennese Blood

MuseumsQuartier – is the eighth largest cultural area in the world. The area has originated from the stables of the Hofburg Imperial Palace and, besides being home to museums, houses

different segments towards Art in general and socio-cultural conviviality.

Page 50: Viennese Blood

MUMOK "MUseum MOderner Kunst" – is another museum located in the MuseumsQuartier. The Mumok has a collection of 7,000 works of modern and contemporary art, including major works

by Andy Warhol, Pablo Picasso, Joseph Beuys, Nam June Paik, and many others. 

Page 51: Viennese Blood

The Leopold Museum, located at the MuseumsQuartier in Vienna, is houses one of the largest collections of modern Austrian art, featuring artists such as Egon Schiele, Gustav Klimt, Oskar Kokoschka and Richard Gerstl. It contains the largest collection of Egon Schiele in the world.

Page 52: Viennese Blood

Café Central, that since the late

nineteenth century is one of the main meeting

places for the Viennese intellectuals. It's housed in the Palais Ferstel, one

of the most beautiful buildings in the city.

Besides Austrian literary personalities of that time,

in the early twentieth century were its

frequenters: Tito, Sigmund Freud, Adolf

Hitler, Vladimir Lenin e Leon Trotsky.

Page 53: Viennese Blood

This photo appears also to illustrate the list of the world's 10 best cities to live in, Vienna holding the 2nd place.

Page 54: Viennese Blood

Images: all from internet, with credits to authors

Songs : The Emperor Waltz by Johann Strauss with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra

Creation, research, compilation and formatting:

Delza Dias Ferreira English version: Flavio M. de Freitas GuimarãesWebmaster and revision – Claudia Ricci São Paulo – 2013

End