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La Monnaie

The Royal Theatre of La Monnaie (French: Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie, pronounced [te.atʁ ʁwa.jal də la mɔ.nɛ]; Dutch: Koninklijke Muntschouwburg; both translating as the "Royal Theatre of the Mint") is an opera house in central Brussels, Belgium. The National Opera of Belgium, a federal institution, takes the name of this theatre in which it is housed—La Monnaie in French or De Munt in Dutch—referring both to the building as well as the opera company. As Belgium's leading opera house, it is one of the few cultural institutions which receive financial support from the Federal Government of Belgium. Other opera houses in Belgium, such as the Vlaamse Opera and the Opéra Royal de Wallonie, are funded by regional governments.

La Monnaie
De Munt
Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie (French)
Koninklijke Muntschouwburg (Dutch)
The Royal Theatre of La Monnaie on the Place de la Monnaie/Muntplein in Brussels
La Monnaie
De Munt
Location within Brussels
La Monnaie
De Munt
La Monnaie
De Munt (Belgium)
Former namesThéâtre de la Monnoye (1700–1819)[1]
AddressPlace de la Monnaie / Muntplein
B-1000 City of Brussels, Brussels-Capital Region
Belgium
Coordinates50°50′59″N 4°21′14″E / 50.84972°N 4.35389°E / 50.84972; 4.35389Coordinates: 50°50′59″N 4°21′14″E / 50.84972°N 4.35389°E / 50.84972; 4.35389
Public transit
OwnerRégie des Bâtiments
OperatorPeter de Caluwe[1]
TypeOpera house[2]
Genre(s)Opera, Concert, Recital, Dance[2]
Seating typeArmchairs
Capacity1152
Construction
Built1700
Opened17 October 1700 (1700-10-17)
Renovated1856, 1985, 2017
ArchitectLouis Damesme (1819) and Joseph Poelaert (1856)[1]
Website
Official website

La Monnaie is located on the Place de la Monnaie/Muntplein, not far from the Rue Neuve/Nieuwstraat and the Place de Brouckère/De Brouckèreplein. The current edifice is the third theatre on the site. The facade dates from 1818 with major alterations made in 1856 and 1986. The foyer and auditorium date from 1856, but almost every other element of the present building was extensively renovated in the 1980s. It is served by the metro and premetro (underground tram) station De Brouckère on lines 1, 3, 4 and 5.

History

The theatre of Gio-Paolo Bombarda (1700–1818)

The first permanent public theatre for opera performances of the court and City of Brussels was built between 1695 and 1700 by the Venetian architects Paolo and Pietro Bezzi, as part of a rebuilding plan following the bombardment of Brussels of 1695 by the French army. It was erected on the site of a building which had served to mint coins. The name of this site—La Monnaie (originally spelled La Monnoye[1]) in French or De Munt in Dutch (both meaning "The Mint")—remained attached to the theatre for the centuries to come. The construction of the theatre had been ordered by Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria, at that time Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands. The Elector had charged his treasurer and architect, the Italian Gio Paolo Bombarda, with the task of financing and supervising the enterprise.

 
The first Theatre of La Monnaie (then spelled La Monnoye), c. 1700

The date of the first performance in 1700 remains unknown, but the first showing mentioned in the local newspapers was Jean-Baptiste Lully's, Atys, which was given on 19 November 1700. The French operatic repertoire would dominate the Brussels stage throughout the following century, although performances of Venetian operas and other non-French repertoire were performed on a regular basis. Until the middle of the 19th century, plays were performed along with opera, ballet and concerts.

By the 18th century, La Monnaie was considered the second French-speaking stage after the most prominent theatres in Paris. Under the rule of Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine, who acted as a very generous patron of the arts, the theatre greatly flourished. At that time, it housed an opera company, a ballet and an orchestra. The splendour of the performances diminished during the last years of the Austrian rule, due to the severe politics of the Austrian Emperor Joseph II.

After 1795, when the French revolutionary forces occupied the Belgian provinces, the theatre became a French departmental institution. Amongst other cuts in its expenses, the theatre had to abolish its Corps de Ballet. During this period, many famous French actors and singers gave regular performances in the theatre whilst touring the provinces of the Empire. Still a consul, Napoleon, on his visit to Brussels, judged the old theatre too dilapidated for one of the most prestigious cities of his Empire. He ordered plans to replace the old building with a new and more monumental edifice, but nothing was done during the Napoleonic rule. Finally, the plans were carried out under the auspices of the new United Kingdom of the Netherlands and Bombarda's building was demolished in 1818.

The theatre of Louis Damesme (1818–1855)

The old theatre was replaced by a new neoclassical building designed by the French architect Louis Damesme. Unlike Bombarda's building, which was situated along the street and completely surrounded by other buildings, the new theatre was placed in the middle of a newly constructed square. This gave it a more monumental appearance, but it was primarily the result of safety concerns since it was more accessible to firemen, reducing the chance that fire would spread to surrounding buildings. The new auditorium was inaugurated on 25 May 1819 with the opera La Caravane du Caire by the Belgian composer André Ernest Modeste Grétry.

 
Painting of the second Theatre of La Monnaie, c. 1825–1855

As the most important French theatre of the newly established United Kingdom of the Netherlands, La Monnaie had national and international significance. The theatre came under the supervision of the City of Brussels, which had the right to appoint a director charged with its management. In this period, famous actors like François-Joseph Talma and singers like Maria Malibran performed at La Monnaie. The Corps de Ballet was reintroduced and came under the supervision of the dancer and choreographer Jean-Antoine Petipa, father of the famous Marius Petipa.

La Monnaie would play a prominent role in the formation of the Kingdom of Belgium. Daniel Auber's opera La Muette de Portici was scheduled in August 1830 after it had been banned from the stage by King William I of the Netherlands, fearing its inciting content. At a performance of this opera on the evening of 25 August 1830, a riot broke out which became the signal for the Belgian Revolution and which led to Belgian independence.[3]

Damesme's building continued to serve for more than two decades as Belgium's principal theatre and opera house until it burnt to the ground on 21 January 1855, leaving only the outside walls and portico.

 
Contemporary illustration of the 1855 fire at La Monnaie, published in L'Illustration

The theatre of Joseph Poelaert (1856–present)

After the fire of January 1855, the theatre was reconstructed after the designs of Joseph Poelaert within a period of fourteen months. The auditorium (with 1,200 seats) and the foyer were decorated in a then-popular Eclectic style; a mixture of neo-Baroque, neo-Rococo and neo-Renaissance styles.

The lavish decoration made excessive use of gilded carton-pierre decorations and sculptures, red velvet and brocade. The auditorium was lit by the huge crystal chandelier made of gilded bronze and Venetian crystals, which still hangs in the centre of the domed ceiling today.

The original dome painting, representing "Belgium Protecting the Arts", was painted in the Parisian workshop of François-Joseph Nolau (Paris, 1804–1883) and Auguste Alfred Rubé (Paris, 1815–1899), two famous decorators of the Paris Opera House. In 1887, this dome painting was completely repainted by Rubé himself and his new associate Philippe-Marie Chaperon (Paris, 1826–1907), because it was mostly tainted by the CO2 emissions from the chandelier. This dome painting stayed untouched until 1985, when it was taken down during extensive rebuilding activities and replaced by a bad copy, painted by the Belgian painter Xavier Crolls. From 1988 until 1998, the dome painting of Rubé and Chaperon was in restoration, until its final reinstatement in 1999. The sober whitewashed exterior we see today was done many decades later. Poelaert never intended to whitewash these outer walls. In 1856, the exterior did not have any whitewashing at all, as proved by many photographs of that time.

 
The reconstructed La Monnaie, c. 1890–1900

The new Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie opened on 25 March 1856 with Fromental Halévy's Jaguarita l'Indienne. In the middle of the 19th century, the repertoire was dominated by the popular French composers such as Halévy, Daniel Auber, and Giacomo Meyerbeer, and the Italian composers, Gioachino Rossini, Gaetano Donizetti, Vincenzo Bellini and Giuseppe Verdi, who had considerable success in Paris.

The opera house in the 20th century

Renovations on Poelaert's building were required shortly after opening due to faulty foundation work. The early 20th century saw an additional story added, and in the 1950s, a new stage building was added. By 1985, it was determined that complete renovation was needed. Features such as raising the roofline by 4 metres (13 feet) and scooping out the stage building area—in addition to creating a steel frame to strengthen the load-bearing walls and increasing backstage space—characterised this two-year project. However, the red and gold auditorium remained largely identical. The canvas of the ceiling painting was temporarily removed for restoration and only put back in 1999. It was temporarily replaced by a copy in much brighter colours, which was painted directly on the stucco ceiling.

The entrance hall and the grand staircase underwent a radical makeover, although original features such as the monument by Belgian sculptor Paul Du Bois honouring manager and Music Director Dupont (1910), and a number of monumental paintings (1907–1933) by Emile Fabry were preserved. The Liège architect Charles Vandenhove created a new architectural concept for the entrance in 1985–1986. He asked two American artists to make a contribution: Sol LeWitt designed a fan-shaped floor in black and white marble, while Sam Francis painted a triptych mounted to the ceiling. Vandenhove also designed a new interior decoration for the Salon Royal, a reception room connected to the Royal Box. For this project he collaborated with the French artist Daniel Buren. Now seating 1,125, the renovated opera house was inaugurated on 12 November 1986 with a performance of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9.

In 1998, the major part of the vacant Vanderborght Department Store building (c. 20,000 m2 (220,000 sq ft)) and a neoclassical mansion, both situated directly behind the opera house, were acquired by La Monnaie. The edifices were renovated and adapted to house La Monnaie's technical and administrative facilities, previously spread all over the city. The building also contains large rehearsal halls for opera, the Malibran, and orchestra, the Fiocco. They can also be adapted for presenting public performances.

La Monnaie in the 21st century

 
Grand room at La Monnaie

In the last three decades, La Monnaie has reclaimed its place amongst the foremost opera houses in Europe thanks to the efforts of the successive directors Gerard Mortier and Bernard Foccroulle and Music Directors Sylvain Cambreling and Antonio Pappano.

The opera house was renovated again from May 2015 to September 2017; the stage was levelled, a new fly system was put in place and two scene lifts were installed. This allowed the opera house to stage more technically-demanding productions. Although most of the renovations took place backstage, the opera house used this opportunity to replace all of its worn out seats with new velour seats.[4]

Directors

During the 1980s, Gerard Mortier was General Director of La Monnaie. Bernard Foccroulle succeeded Mortier in 1991 and served for fifteen seasons, maintaining and even expanding the reputation Mortier had gained in the 1980s. The current General Director is Peter de Caluwe, who has been holding office since 2007.

La Monnaie's Music Directors have always played a major role in Belgium's musical life, since the orchestra also performed in regularly organised concerts, and the quality of the orchestra reached a peak at the end of the 19th century under the baton of composer and musicologist Sylvain Dupuis. La Monnaie gave regular performances of the major works of Richard Wagner as well. During the late 19th century, important French composers such as Jules Massenet and Vincent d'Indy directed the world premieres of some of their operas at this theatre. The high musical quality of renditions was maintained under Corneil de Thoran between the two World Wars, but diminished gradually from the 1950s onwards.

At the beginning of the 1980s, Gérard Mortier hired the French conductor Sylvain Cambreling as La Monnaie's Music Director, and Cambreling restored the orchestra to its former playing level. From 1990, Bernd Loebe was Artistic Director. Antonio Pappano became Music Director in 1991, and during his tenure, the orchestra's symphonic repertoire was further extended and it appeared more often in concerts outside the opera. In addition, Pappano made several recordings with the orchestra. He left in 2002 to become Music Director of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in London.

From 2002, the Japanese conductor Kazushi Ono served as Music Director. At the end of the 2007–2008 season, Ono was scheduled to relinquish his position as La Monnaie's Music Director to Mark Wigglesworth, with Ono and Wigglesworth working together in the 2007–2008 season.[5] However, in April 2008, La Monnaie announced that Wigglesworth would not take up the position of Music Director, after reports of opposition to him from the orchestra.[6] In June 2011, the company announced the appointment of Ludovic Morlot as its next Music Director, as of the 2012–2013 season, with an initial contract of 5 years.[7] In December 2014, citing artistic differences, Morlot resigned from the La Monnaie's music directorship, effective 31 December 2014.[8] In September 2015, the company announced the appointment of Alain Altinoglu as its next Music Director, effective January 2016.[9]

For performances of Baroque operas, La Monnaie mostly engages guest orchestras specialising in authentic performances on period instruments. Over the past decades, René Jacobs and his Concerto Vocale have been regular guests at the theatre.

Dance at La Monnaie

Dance and ballet always had their place on the stage of La Monnaie, and during a major part of its history, the theatre housed its own Corps de Ballet. Several members of the Petipa family left their mark in Brussels in the 19th century, but the enthusiasm of the public for traditional ballet performances diminished in the 1950s.

In 1959, director Maurice Huisman embarked on a cooperation with the young avant-garde choreographer Maurice Béjart. This resulted in the creation of the new Ballet of the 20th Century which became the theatre's new ballet company until 1987, when Béjart and his Ballet left La Monnaie after a conflict with Gerard Mortier. In 1988, Mortier hired the New York choreographer Mark Morris and his Mark Morris Dance Group. For three years, they were known as the Monnaie Dance Group Mark Morris. Morris directed several productions in Brussels until 1991. Under Bernard Foccroulle, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker and her company Rosas became the dance company in residence.

Notable world premieres

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Pouget 2017.
  2. ^ a b "La Monnaie / De Munt". La Monnaie / De Munt.
  3. ^ Slatin 1979, p. 53–54.
  4. ^ NWS, VRT (29 August 2017). "Gerenoveerde Muntschouwburg behoudt grandeur en verhoogt comfort". vrtnws.be.
  5. ^ Vivien Schweitzer (20 April 2006). "Mark Wigglesworth Appointed music director of Belgium's la Monnaie". Playbill Arts. Retrieved 29 August 2007.
  6. ^ Shirley Apthorp (10 April 2008). "Feisty Orchestra Fuels Brussels Opera Changes". Bloomberg News. Retrieved 10 April 2008.
  7. ^ Melinda Bargreen (30 June 2011). "New Seattle Symphony music director to moonlight in Belgium". Seattle Times. Retrieved 2 July 2011.
  8. ^ Serge Martin (12 December 2014). "Ludovic Morlot quitte la Monnaie". Le Soir. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  9. ^ (PDF) (Press release). Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie. 2 September 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2015.

Bibliography

  • Busine, Laurent; al. (2000), L'opéra, un chant d'étoiles: exposition, Ateliers de la Monnaie, Bruxelles, du 16 janvier au 2 juillet 2000 (in French), Brussels & Tournai
  • Cabris, Eric (1996), De Munt: drie eeuwen geschiedenis van het gebouw (in Dutch), Tielt: Lannoo
  • Cabris, Eric (1996), La Monnaie, chronique architecturale de 1696 à nos jours (in French), Brussels: Racine
  • Couvreur, Manuel (1996), Le théâtre de la Monnaie au XVIIIe siècle (in French), Brussels: Cahiers du Gram
  • Couvreur, Manuel (1998), La Monnaie wagnérienne (in French), Brussels: Cahiers du Gram
  • Couvreur, Manuel; Dufour, Valérie (2010), La Monnaie entre-deux-guerres (in French), Brussels: Le Livre Timperman
  • De Gers, Arthur (1926), Théâtre royal de la Monnaie, 1856–1926 (in French), Brussels: Dykmans
  • Gantelme, Claude (1981), Théâtre royal de la Monnaie, Opéra national, Ballet du XXe siècle, de 1959 à nos jours (in French), Brussels: Paul Legrain
  • Isnardon, Jacques (1980), Le Théâtre de la Monnaie (in French), Brussels: Schott Frères
  • De Laubier, Guillaume; Pecqueur, Antoine (2013). Die schönsten Opernhäuser der Welt (in German). Munich: Knesebeck. p. 221–229. ISBN 978-3-86873-641-0.
  • Liebrecht, Henri (1923), Histoire du théâtre français à Bruxelles aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles (in French), Paris: Édouard Champion
  • Mortier, Gerard; Van Dam, José; Piemme, Jean-Marie (1986), Opera tot theater maken: het team van Gerard Mortier in de Munt (in Dutch), Gembloux: Duculot
  • Faber, Frédéric (1878), Histoire du Théâtre français en Belgique depuis son origine jusqu'à ce jour (in French), vol. 5, Brussels: Fr. J. Olivier
  • Pouget, Isabelle (2017), Les Mots de la Monnaie (in French), Brussels: Mardaga
  • Renieu, Lionel (1928), Histoire des théâtres de Bruxelles (in French), Paris: Duchartre & Van Buggenhoudt
  • Salès, Jules (1971), Théâtre royal de la Monnaie, 1856–1970 (in French), Nivelles: Havaux
  • Slatin, Sonia (1979). "Opera and Revolution: La Muette de Portici and the Belgian Revolution of 1830 Revisited". Journal of Musicological Research. 3 (3): 45–62. doi:10.1080/01411897908574506.
  • Van der Hoeven, Roland (2000), Le théâtre de la Monnaie au XIXe siècle: contraintes d'exploitation d'un théâtre lyrique 1830–1914 (in French), Brussels: Cahiers du Gram
  • Van der Hoeven, Roland; Couvreur, Manuel (2003), La Monnaie symboliste (in French), Brussels: Cahiers du Gram
  • Van Oostveldt, Bram; Van Schoor, Jaak (1986), The Théâtre de la Monnaie and theatre life in the 18th century Austrian Netherlands: from a courtly-aristocratic to a civil-enlightened discourse, Ghent: Academia Press

External links

  • CARMEN – La Monnaie's digital archives
  • La Monnaie on Google Arts & Culture

monnaie, royal, theatre, french, théâtre, royal, monnaie, pronounced, atʁ, ʁwa, dutch, koninklijke, muntschouwburg, both, translating, royal, theatre, mint, opera, house, central, brussels, belgium, national, opera, belgium, federal, institution, takes, name, . The Royal Theatre of La Monnaie French Theatre Royal de la Monnaie pronounced te atʁ ʁwa jal de la mɔ nɛ Dutch Koninklijke Muntschouwburg both translating as the Royal Theatre of the Mint is an opera house in central Brussels Belgium The National Opera of Belgium a federal institution takes the name of this theatre in which it is housed La Monnaie in French or De Munt in Dutch referring both to the building as well as the opera company As Belgium s leading opera house it is one of the few cultural institutions which receive financial support from the Federal Government of Belgium Other opera houses in Belgium such as the Vlaamse Opera and the Opera Royal de Wallonie are funded by regional governments La Monnaie De MuntTheatre Royal de la Monnaie French Koninklijke Muntschouwburg Dutch The Royal Theatre of La Monnaie on the Place de la Monnaie Muntplein in BrusselsLa Monnaie De MuntLocation within BrusselsShow map of BrusselsLa Monnaie De MuntLa Monnaie De Munt Belgium Show map of BelgiumFormer namesTheatre de la Monnoye 1700 1819 1 AddressPlace de la Monnaie MuntpleinB 1000 City of Brussels Brussels Capital RegionBelgiumCoordinates50 50 59 N 4 21 14 E 50 84972 N 4 35389 E 50 84972 4 35389 Coordinates 50 50 59 N 4 21 14 E 50 84972 N 4 35389 E 50 84972 4 35389Public transitMetro De Brouckere lines 1 and 5 Premetro De Brouckere lines 3 and 4 OwnerRegie des BatimentsOperatorPeter de Caluwe 1 TypeOpera house 2 Genre s Opera Concert Recital Dance 2 Seating typeArmchairsCapacity1152ConstructionBuilt1700Opened17 October 1700 1700 10 17 Renovated1856 1985 2017ArchitectLouis Damesme 1819 and Joseph Poelaert 1856 1 WebsiteOfficial websiteLa Monnaie is located on the Place de la Monnaie Muntplein not far from the Rue Neuve Nieuwstraat and the Place de Brouckere De Brouckereplein The current edifice is the third theatre on the site The facade dates from 1818 with major alterations made in 1856 and 1986 The foyer and auditorium date from 1856 but almost every other element of the present building was extensively renovated in the 1980s It is served by the metro and premetro underground tram station De Brouckere on lines 1 3 4 and 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 The theatre of Gio Paolo Bombarda 1700 1818 1 2 The theatre of Louis Damesme 1818 1855 1 3 The theatre of Joseph Poelaert 1856 present 1 4 The opera house in the 20th century 1 5 La Monnaie in the 21st century 2 Directors 3 Dance at La Monnaie 4 Notable world premieres 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory EditThe theatre of Gio Paolo Bombarda 1700 1818 Edit The first permanent public theatre for opera performances of the court and City of Brussels was built between 1695 and 1700 by the Venetian architects Paolo and Pietro Bezzi as part of a rebuilding plan following the bombardment of Brussels of 1695 by the French army It was erected on the site of a building which had served to mint coins The name of this site La Monnaie originally spelled La Monnoye 1 in French or De Munt in Dutch both meaning The Mint remained attached to the theatre for the centuries to come The construction of the theatre had been ordered by Maximilian II Emanuel Elector of Bavaria at that time Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands The Elector had charged his treasurer and architect the Italian Gio Paolo Bombarda with the task of financing and supervising the enterprise The first Theatre of La Monnaie then spelled La Monnoye c 1700 The date of the first performance in 1700 remains unknown but the first showing mentioned in the local newspapers was Jean Baptiste Lully s Atys which was given on 19 November 1700 The French operatic repertoire would dominate the Brussels stage throughout the following century although performances of Venetian operas and other non French repertoire were performed on a regular basis Until the middle of the 19th century plays were performed along with opera ballet and concerts By the 18th century La Monnaie was considered the second French speaking stage after the most prominent theatres in Paris Under the rule of Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine who acted as a very generous patron of the arts the theatre greatly flourished At that time it housed an opera company a ballet and an orchestra The splendour of the performances diminished during the last years of the Austrian rule due to the severe politics of the Austrian Emperor Joseph II After 1795 when the French revolutionary forces occupied the Belgian provinces the theatre became a French departmental institution Amongst other cuts in its expenses the theatre had to abolish its Corps de Ballet During this period many famous French actors and singers gave regular performances in the theatre whilst touring the provinces of the Empire Still a consul Napoleon on his visit to Brussels judged the old theatre too dilapidated for one of the most prestigious cities of his Empire He ordered plans to replace the old building with a new and more monumental edifice but nothing was done during the Napoleonic rule Finally the plans were carried out under the auspices of the new United Kingdom of the Netherlands and Bombarda s building was demolished in 1818 The theatre of Louis Damesme 1818 1855 Edit The old theatre was replaced by a new neoclassical building designed by the French architect Louis Damesme Unlike Bombarda s building which was situated along the street and completely surrounded by other buildings the new theatre was placed in the middle of a newly constructed square This gave it a more monumental appearance but it was primarily the result of safety concerns since it was more accessible to firemen reducing the chance that fire would spread to surrounding buildings The new auditorium was inaugurated on 25 May 1819 with the opera La Caravane du Caire by the Belgian composer Andre Ernest Modeste Gretry Painting of the second Theatre of La Monnaie c 1825 1855 As the most important French theatre of the newly established United Kingdom of the Netherlands La Monnaie had national and international significance The theatre came under the supervision of the City of Brussels which had the right to appoint a director charged with its management In this period famous actors like Francois Joseph Talma and singers like Maria Malibran performed at La Monnaie The Corps de Ballet was reintroduced and came under the supervision of the dancer and choreographer Jean Antoine Petipa father of the famous Marius Petipa La Monnaie would play a prominent role in the formation of the Kingdom of Belgium Daniel Auber s opera La Muette de Portici was scheduled in August 1830 after it had been banned from the stage by King William I of the Netherlands fearing its inciting content At a performance of this opera on the evening of 25 August 1830 a riot broke out which became the signal for the Belgian Revolution and which led to Belgian independence 3 Damesme s building continued to serve for more than two decades as Belgium s principal theatre and opera house until it burnt to the ground on 21 January 1855 leaving only the outside walls and portico Contemporary illustration of the 1855 fire at La Monnaie published in L Illustration The theatre of Joseph Poelaert 1856 present Edit After the fire of January 1855 the theatre was reconstructed after the designs of Joseph Poelaert within a period of fourteen months The auditorium with 1 200 seats and the foyer were decorated in a then popular Eclectic style a mixture of neo Baroque neo Rococo and neo Renaissance styles The lavish decoration made excessive use of gilded carton pierre decorations and sculptures red velvet and brocade The auditorium was lit by the huge crystal chandelier made of gilded bronze and Venetian crystals which still hangs in the centre of the domed ceiling today The original dome painting representing Belgium Protecting the Arts was painted in the Parisian workshop of Francois Joseph Nolau Paris 1804 1883 and Auguste Alfred Rube Paris 1815 1899 two famous decorators of the Paris Opera House In 1887 this dome painting was completely repainted by Rube himself and his new associate Philippe Marie Chaperon Paris 1826 1907 because it was mostly tainted by the CO2 emissions from the chandelier This dome painting stayed untouched until 1985 when it was taken down during extensive rebuilding activities and replaced by a bad copy painted by the Belgian painter Xavier Crolls From 1988 until 1998 the dome painting of Rube and Chaperon was in restoration until its final reinstatement in 1999 The sober whitewashed exterior we see today was done many decades later Poelaert never intended to whitewash these outer walls In 1856 the exterior did not have any whitewashing at all as proved by many photographs of that time The reconstructed La Monnaie c 1890 1900 The new Theatre Royal de la Monnaie opened on 25 March 1856 with Fromental Halevy s Jaguarita l Indienne In the middle of the 19th century the repertoire was dominated by the popular French composers such as Halevy Daniel Auber and Giacomo Meyerbeer and the Italian composers Gioachino Rossini Gaetano Donizetti Vincenzo Bellini and Giuseppe Verdi who had considerable success in Paris The opera house in the 20th century Edit Renovations on Poelaert s building were required shortly after opening due to faulty foundation work The early 20th century saw an additional story added and in the 1950s a new stage building was added By 1985 it was determined that complete renovation was needed Features such as raising the roofline by 4 metres 13 feet and scooping out the stage building area in addition to creating a steel frame to strengthen the load bearing walls and increasing backstage space characterised this two year project However the red and gold auditorium remained largely identical The canvas of the ceiling painting was temporarily removed for restoration and only put back in 1999 It was temporarily replaced by a copy in much brighter colours which was painted directly on the stucco ceiling The entrance hall and the grand staircase underwent a radical makeover although original features such as the monument by Belgian sculptor Paul Du Bois honouring manager and Music Director Dupont 1910 and a number of monumental paintings 1907 1933 by Emile Fabry were preserved The Liege architect Charles Vandenhove created a new architectural concept for the entrance in 1985 1986 He asked two American artists to make a contribution Sol LeWitt designed a fan shaped floor in black and white marble while Sam Francis painted a triptych mounted to the ceiling Vandenhove also designed a new interior decoration for the Salon Royal a reception room connected to the Royal Box For this project he collaborated with the French artist Daniel Buren Now seating 1 125 the renovated opera house was inaugurated on 12 November 1986 with a performance of Beethoven s Symphony No 9 In 1998 the major part of the vacant Vanderborght Department Store building c 20 000 m2 220 000 sq ft and a neoclassical mansion both situated directly behind the opera house were acquired by La Monnaie The edifices were renovated and adapted to house La Monnaie s technical and administrative facilities previously spread all over the city The building also contains large rehearsal halls for opera the Malibran and orchestra the Fiocco They can also be adapted for presenting public performances La Monnaie in the 21st century Edit Grand room at La Monnaie In the last three decades La Monnaie has reclaimed its place amongst the foremost opera houses in Europe thanks to the efforts of the successive directors Gerard Mortier and Bernard Foccroulle and Music Directors Sylvain Cambreling and Antonio Pappano The opera house was renovated again from May 2015 to September 2017 the stage was levelled a new fly system was put in place and two scene lifts were installed This allowed the opera house to stage more technically demanding productions Although most of the renovations took place backstage the opera house used this opportunity to replace all of its worn out seats with new velour seats 4 Directors EditSee also List of directors of the Theatre de la Monnaie During the 1980s Gerard Mortier was General Director of La Monnaie Bernard Foccroulle succeeded Mortier in 1991 and served for fifteen seasons maintaining and even expanding the reputation Mortier had gained in the 1980s The current General Director is Peter de Caluwe who has been holding office since 2007 La Monnaie s Music Directors have always played a major role in Belgium s musical life since the orchestra also performed in regularly organised concerts and the quality of the orchestra reached a peak at the end of the 19th century under the baton of composer and musicologist Sylvain Dupuis La Monnaie gave regular performances of the major works of Richard Wagner as well During the late 19th century important French composers such as Jules Massenet and Vincent d Indy directed the world premieres of some of their operas at this theatre The high musical quality of renditions was maintained under Corneil de Thoran between the two World Wars but diminished gradually from the 1950s onwards At the beginning of the 1980s Gerard Mortier hired the French conductor Sylvain Cambreling as La Monnaie s Music Director and Cambreling restored the orchestra to its former playing level From 1990 Bernd Loebe was Artistic Director Antonio Pappano became Music Director in 1991 and during his tenure the orchestra s symphonic repertoire was further extended and it appeared more often in concerts outside the opera In addition Pappano made several recordings with the orchestra He left in 2002 to become Music Director of the Royal Opera House Covent Garden in London From 2002 the Japanese conductor Kazushi Ono served as Music Director At the end of the 2007 2008 season Ono was scheduled to relinquish his position as La Monnaie s Music Director to Mark Wigglesworth with Ono and Wigglesworth working together in the 2007 2008 season 5 However in April 2008 La Monnaie announced that Wigglesworth would not take up the position of Music Director after reports of opposition to him from the orchestra 6 In June 2011 the company announced the appointment of Ludovic Morlot as its next Music Director as of the 2012 2013 season with an initial contract of 5 years 7 In December 2014 citing artistic differences Morlot resigned from the La Monnaie s music directorship effective 31 December 2014 8 In September 2015 the company announced the appointment of Alain Altinoglu as its next Music Director effective January 2016 9 For performances of Baroque operas La Monnaie mostly engages guest orchestras specialising in authentic performances on period instruments Over the past decades Rene Jacobs and his Concerto Vocale have been regular guests at the theatre Dance at La Monnaie EditSee also List of dance directors at La Monnaie Dance and ballet always had their place on the stage of La Monnaie and during a major part of its history the theatre housed its own Corps de Ballet Several members of the Petipa family left their mark in Brussels in the 19th century but the enthusiasm of the public for traditional ballet performances diminished in the 1950s In 1959 director Maurice Huisman embarked on a cooperation with the young avant garde choreographer Maurice Bejart This resulted in the creation of the new Ballet of the 20th Century which became the theatre s new ballet company until 1987 when Bejart and his Ballet left La Monnaie after a conflict with Gerard Mortier In 1988 Mortier hired the New York choreographer Mark Morris and his Mark Morris Dance Group For three years they were known as the Monnaie Dance Group Mark Morris Morris directed several productions in Brussels until 1991 Under Bernard Foccroulle Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker and her company Rosas became the dance company in residence Notable world premieres EditJules Massenet Herodiade 19 December 1881 Ernest Reyer Sigurd 7 January 1884 Emanuel Chabrier Gwendoline 10 April 1886 Benjamin Godard Jocelyn 25 February 1888 Ernest Reyer Salammbo 10 February 1890 Vincent d Indy Fervaal 12 March 1897 Vincent d Indy L Etranger 7 January 1903 Ernest Chausson Le Roi Arthus 30 November 1903 Darius Milhaud Les Malheurs d Orphee 7 May 1926 Arthur Honegger Antigone 28 December 1927 Sergei Prokofiev Igrok The Gambler 29 April 1929 Philippe Boesmans La Passion de Gilles 18 October 1983 Mark Morris L Allegro il Penseroso ed il Moderato 22 November 1988 Mark Morris The Hard Nut 1991 John Adams The Death of Klinghoffer 19 March 1991 Philippe Boesmans Reigen 4 March 1993 Philippe Boesmans Wintermarchen 10 December 1999 Philippe Boesmans Julie 8 March 2005 Nicholas Lens Shell Shock 24 October 2014 References EditNotes Edit a b c d Pouget 2017 a b La Monnaie De Munt La Monnaie De Munt Slatin 1979 p 53 54 NWS VRT 29 August 2017 Gerenoveerde Muntschouwburg behoudt grandeur en verhoogt comfort vrtnws be Vivien Schweitzer 20 April 2006 Mark Wigglesworth Appointed music director of Belgium s la Monnaie Playbill Arts Retrieved 29 August 2007 Shirley Apthorp 10 April 2008 Feisty Orchestra Fuels Brussels Opera Changes Bloomberg News Retrieved 10 April 2008 Melinda Bargreen 30 June 2011 New Seattle Symphony music director to moonlight in Belgium Seattle Times Retrieved 2 July 2011 Serge Martin 12 December 2014 Ludovic Morlot quitte la Monnaie Le Soir Retrieved 3 September 2015 Alain Altinoglu Music Director of La Monnaie PDF Press release Theatre Royal de la Monnaie 2 September 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2015 Bibliography Edit Busine Laurent al 2000 L opera un chant d etoiles exposition Ateliers de la Monnaie Bruxelles du 16 janvier au 2 juillet 2000 in French Brussels amp Tournai Cabris Eric 1996 De Munt drie eeuwen geschiedenis van het gebouw in Dutch Tielt Lannoo Cabris Eric 1996 La Monnaie chronique architecturale de 1696 a nos jours in French Brussels Racine Couvreur Manuel 1996 Le theatre de la Monnaie au XVIIIe siecle in French Brussels Cahiers du Gram Couvreur Manuel 1998 La Monnaie wagnerienne in French Brussels Cahiers du Gram Couvreur Manuel Dufour Valerie 2010 La Monnaie entre deux guerres in French Brussels Le Livre Timperman De Gers Arthur 1926 Theatre royal de la Monnaie 1856 1926 in French Brussels Dykmans Gantelme Claude 1981 Theatre royal de la Monnaie Opera national Ballet du XXe siecle de 1959 a nos jours in French Brussels Paul Legrain Isnardon Jacques 1980 Le Theatre de la Monnaie in French Brussels Schott Freres De Laubier Guillaume Pecqueur Antoine 2013 Die schonsten Opernhauser der Welt in German Munich Knesebeck p 221 229 ISBN 978 3 86873 641 0 Liebrecht Henri 1923 Histoire du theatre francais a Bruxelles aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siecles in French Paris Edouard Champion Mortier Gerard Van Dam Jose Piemme Jean Marie 1986 Opera tot theater maken het team van Gerard Mortier in de Munt in Dutch Gembloux Duculot Faber Frederic 1878 Histoire du Theatre francais en Belgique depuis son origine jusqu a ce jour in French vol 5 Brussels Fr J Olivier Pouget Isabelle 2017 Les Mots de la Monnaie in French Brussels Mardaga Renieu Lionel 1928 Histoire des theatres de Bruxelles in French Paris Duchartre amp Van Buggenhoudt Sales Jules 1971 Theatre royal de la Monnaie 1856 1970 in French Nivelles Havaux Slatin Sonia 1979 Opera and Revolution La Muette de Portici and the Belgian Revolution of 1830 Revisited Journal of Musicological Research 3 3 45 62 doi 10 1080 01411897908574506 Van der Hoeven Roland 2000 Le theatre de la Monnaie au XIXe siecle contraintes d exploitation d un theatre lyrique 1830 1914 in French Brussels Cahiers du Gram Van der Hoeven Roland Couvreur Manuel 2003 La Monnaie symboliste in French Brussels Cahiers du Gram Van Oostveldt Bram Van Schoor Jaak 1986 The Theatre de la Monnaie and theatre life in the 18th century Austrian Netherlands from a courtly aristocratic to a civil enlightened discourse Ghent Academia PressExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to De Munt La Monnaie Belgium portalwww lamonnaie be CARMEN La Monnaie s digital archives La Monnaie on Google Arts amp Culture Images of the 1999 renovation with text in English Dutch and French from aboutrestoration eu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title La Monnaie amp oldid 1127263105, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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