25 June 2020
A string quartet serenaded the “growing” audience at the reopening of Barcelona’s Liceu on Monday.
Spain, a country deeply rooted in live music traditions, is marking the return of classical concerts following
lockdown. But it wasn’t members of the public who attended this first opera house showing…
Instead, the seats at the Gran Teatro del Liceu were reserved for the leaves, shoots and roots of an all-plant audience, or a “vegetable kingdom”, as artistic director Víctor García de Gomar
it.
The Uceli Quartet performed Puccini’s single-movement ‘Crisantemi’ (Chrysanthemums) for the 2,292 potted patrons, the inspiration for which was a striking yellow flower.
The ‘Concert for the Biocene’ took place on Monday (22 June), and though the guest list was strictly limited to vegetation, humans still enjoyed the event via a livestream.
Eugenio Ampudia, the artist behind the concert, wanted to reflect the social effect that the confinement of lockdown has caused, across the globe.
We have become, Ampudia says on the
, “a public deprived of the possibility of being public”.
“At a time when an important part of humankind has shut itself up in enclosed spaces and been obliged to relinquish movement, nature has crept forward to occupy the spaces we have ceded,” he told the
.
All the leafy concert attendees have been donated to health workers following the event, to thank them for all their efforts during the pandemic. (C) 2020 ClassicFM London
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