One of my personal Vienna "musts" was to enjoy the piano music in a café, especially on a Friday afternoon, when you're half dead and half glad that you're somehow alive, in the back of your head.
Café Museum is one of them (Click here to see the others). It was opened in 1899 by Ferdinand Rainer and it's ideal location (near the Academy of Fine Arts, the Vienna
State Opera Theater on the Vienna river and the Viennese Music
Association) attracted many artists, such as Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele and Oskar
Kokoschka.
The architect Adolf Loos was commissioned to
design the interior of the café. He went against
the typical overly ornate style of those times and chose a
simplistic one, which he later referred to in his essay: “Ornament and
crime”.
Enjoy the pics, and don't forget that the real thing is far more magical!
No comments:
Post a Comment