Paris Opéra
Garnier, Charles
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Alternative Titles
Palais Garnier
Opéra Garnier
Date
1860-1874Description
West elevation, paired pilasters; The ceiling area, which surrounds the chandelier, was given a new painting in 1964 by Marc Chagall. "Garnier had the idea of constructing the different parts of the building (the foyer, the auditorium and the fly) in distinct masses and decided to arrange them in tiers in such a way that the perspective varied in depth, gradually increasing the concentration on the façade...Garnier set out the low volume of the foyer in a very emphatic manner, as he did the auditorium and the immense gabled fly tower, which was of an impressive height: more than 60 m high, or three times the height of Parisian buildings at that time. The heart of the building is the great stairway. This colossal, brightly lit and multicoloured space, with its imperial flights of stairs with bronze statues and marble columns, culminates in the ivory caryatids at the entry to the theatre boxes. The progression of effects is spectacular and makes the Opéra the most exuberant building of its time and the most characteristic of the Second Empire, although it was not completed until 1875, under the Third Republic." Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.groveart.com/ (accessed 1/16/2008)
Type of Work
opera houseSubject
architectural exteriors, music, Performing arts, Beaux-Arts, Second Empire, Baroque Revival
Rights
Rights Statement
Licensed for educational and research use by the MIT community only