{"id":2229,"date":"2017-01-13T11:23:06","date_gmt":"2017-01-13T11:23:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/bonplan_en.anakena.info\/?p=2229"},"modified":"2020-03-23T16:23:26","modified_gmt":"2020-03-23T15:23:26","slug":"museu-del-modernisme-catala","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/barcelona-top-travel-tips.com\/museu-del-modernisme-catala\/","title":{"rendered":"Museu del Modernisme Catal\u00e0: a broader vision of art nouveau"},"content":{"rendered":"

Barcelona’s Art Nouveau buildings are so famous that modernism is sometimes seen as a purely architectural phenomenon. The reality is much more complex! Visit the Museu del Modernisme Català to discover the true richness of this artistic movement.<\/p>\n

Art Nouveau in Catalonia<\/h2>\n

From an artistic movement to the construction of an identity<\/h3>\n

\nThe Art Nouveau movement, which aimed to break away from the confines of classicism, was extremely influential in late-19th Century Europe. It took on a particuarly important role in Spain, most significantly in Catalonia.<\/p>\n

More than a smiple fashion, Catalan Art Nouveau (or Modernism) resulted in urban, social and political redevelopment in Barcelona and Catalonia as a whole.<\/p>\n

The local authorities adopted it as an official style, commissioning huge modernist edifices (such as the Palau de la Música Catalana<\/a> and the Hospital de Sant Pau<\/a>). The Art Nouveau style was adopted for the design of streetlights and of public benches. Its influence extended to religious buildings (Sagrada Familia<\/a>), industrial complexes (Colonia Güell<\/a>), scientific establishments (the Fabre Observatory) and more.<\/p>\n

\"museu<\/a>\n<\/p>\n

The many faces of modernism<\/h3>\n

\nBarcelona and Catalonia were the birthplace of an important Art Nouveau movement which spread its influence across the city, starting with the first Universal Exhibition in Barcelona in 1888.\n<\/p>\n