Rotunda and gardens
on the 1873 poster
Marc Maison
In 1873, it was Vienna’s turn to host the 5th great World’s Fair and the first in a German-speaking country. Emperor Franz-Joseph I commissioned it as soon as he returned from Paris World’s Fair of 1867, to commemorate his 25 years of reign, and to show off a cosmopolitan Austria-Hungary that was open to international trade.
Constructing the site, 1872-3
Structurae
His Exhibition was built on Prater Park where the arrival of coffee-houses led to the start of the Wurstelprater, a centre of relaxed entertainment: lawns, gardens, lakes, forests. Prater Park, near the Danube River, had previously been the imperial hunting grounds, bequeathed to the Viennese by Kaiser Josef II in 1766. The impressive grounds were much larger that the Paris grounds where the previous World Fair had been held, to showcase Austro-Hungarian industry and culture. Preparations for the Fair cost £23.4 million, lasting from May-Nov 1873 and hosting 7,225,000 visitors.
The buildings and landscaped grounds of all C19th world fairs, including Vienna’s, were directly related to the architectural and urban design traditions of the host cities. At the same time, they possessed idealised qualities that made them distinct from other contemporary buildings. The result of collaborative planning among architects, engineers and planning committees, the exhibitions were built to evoke ideal civic settings, their exhibition palaces, pavilions and gardens forming exemplary complexes that synthesised both invention and tradition.
There were c26,000 exhibitors housed in different buildings erected for this fair, including the Rotunda, a large circular building in Prater Park designed by Scottish engineer John Scott Russell. A central building that became the symbol of the World Fair, the Rotunda was by far the largest domed structure in the world when it was built, with a 108 ms diameter. See the magnificent view of the rotunda towards the elongated gallery escape, after the picturesque, grotesque and instructive pavilions and special buildings, after the well-tended meadow and forest areas, they wrote.
British Machine Hall
The opening of every exhibition was usually by royalty. Vienna’s Fair of 1873 was naturally inaugurated by Emperor Francis Josef, with imposing ceremonies in the presence of vast throngs. The day was immortalised by the music of Handel and Strauss.
The Vienna exhibition set off Western nations' pavilions against Eastern pavilions, with the host, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, setting itself at the juncture between East and West. This was the place where many peoples brought the best of their culture and industry. Appropriately the 1873 Ottoman Pavilion was more prominent than its pavilion in previous world fairs. Egypt, which had its own pavilion despite being a territory of the Ottoman Empire, included small replicas of notable Ottoman buildings and models of vernacular architecture eg a replica of the Sultan Ahmed Fountain in Topkapı Palace, a model Istanbul residence, Turkish bath and bazaar. This palace built by Khedive Ismail Pasha was particularly admired.
The Japanese display,
seen from one of the Ottoman minarets, Wiki
The Chinese Tea Pavilion was perhaps the most original. The U.S designed an Indian wigwam, where gin and other spirits were served, and Brasil’s Pavilion displayed rich minerals and rare woods. The Japanese Pavilion had its own garden where a small bamboo bridge crossed a miniature river. The garden was decorated with bronzes, earthenware, stone lanterns, temple and lavish copy of the 15+ ms Kamakura Buddha.
The U.S Wigwam Pavilion
Artblart
The industrialists, who showed their products at world fairs, felt they were benefitting the whole of human society. After all, Vienna World Exhibition was dedicated to culture and industry. And it was the sewing machine industry that was most widely represented: from North America, France, Denmark and Britain, but particularly from Germany and Austria.
Most countries’ World Fair structures were meant to be dismantled at the end of the festivities, the Eiffel Tower (Paris 1889) and the Exhibition Buildings (Melbourne 1880) were fortunate exceptions. In spite of this, the Vienna Fair itself was disappointing in terms of the number of visitors (because of flooding, stock market crash and cholera). In the end, rather than the expected 20 million visitors, only 7.2 million came, and resulted in a major loss. So although the Rotunda was intended to be torn down, the lack of finances meant that there were insufficient funds to do this and so it remained standing.
The 61 m diameter giant Riesenrad Wheel, at entrance of Vienna’s Prater, was not erected until 1897, to celebrate Emperor Franz Josef I's golden Jubilee. How tragic that the largest Vienna fire broke out in 1937, after which very little of the main building was left.
Read Great Exhibitions: The World Fairs 1851-1937 by Robert Wilson, 2008
16 comments:
I know I keep saying it, but so interesting and I knew nothing of Vienna World Exhibition. Can you put a USB stick in your ear, copy your knowledge of European history to the stick and post it to me please.
The opening ceremonies were normally huge. So why did Emperor Francis Joseph not glam it up? The reports suggest that the music was more important i.e the orchestra playing Handel's March and the waltzes by Strauss. Go Vienna!
It sounded a wonderful exhibition. What a huge loss when it was destroyed by fire. I imagine it would have taken days to wander around and enjoy this exhibition.
Andrew
From 1990 on, as a post-grad student and then as a lecturer, I was besotted with the Great Exhibitions aka World Fairs. They were my first introduction to booming 19th century arts, sciences, industry and culture, in cities that invited the whole world in. London, Paris, Vienna, Melbourne and Sydney were my favourite World Fairs, but then the students and I spread to other cities as well eg Chicago.
Joe
it was an easy choice regarding Johann Strauss II because he was born and raised in Vienna, in a very well loved Viennese musical family. His Viennese waltzes were played publicly for the first time at the 1873 World Fair.
With George Frideric Handel was born in Germany and never even visited Vienna. However he enjoyed a presence in Vienna's musical life that compared well to that of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. It was Handel that composed the 1873 Festival theme music.
Fun60
after the four years of careful planning, fund raising and building the World Fair facilities, it seems incredible that the organisers KNEW that most of the _very expensive_ facilities would be pulled down.
Sometimes it was by accident (eg the beautiful 2nd Crystal Palace in London accidentally burned to the ground, as did Sydney's beautiful Garden Palace in 1882). Less frequently a beautiful building was intentionally preserved (eg Festival Palace in Melbourne). Occasionally a Festival building was protected and converted into something the city needed (eg the 1904 Palace at St Louis Fair was reopened as the St Louis Art Museum.
we tend to think of the industrial revolution and its consequences as being very much an Anglo thing and this shows us just how much the whole world was changing . I just love Vienna , Its a smaller city with a human scale and yet still so much a city aware of it magnificent history . Its a city with great self esteem .
Who made the decision about where the next Fair would be and when? Vienna should have hosted it more often.
mem
The old city fortifications were pulled down in the 1850s and expansion continued for the rest of the 19th century. Vienna must have been absolutely beautiful then, my favourite period of urban planning, architecture, music, landscaping and the arts. No wonder Emperor Franz-Joseph I (reigned 1848–1916) was so keen to invite the world in, to admire the culture and industry.
Train Man
The Bureau International Des Exposition is a intergovernmental organisation that formally invites cities to submit applications for world fairs, assesses the applications, sets the dates and supervises the successful cities' progress.
Hi Hels - fascinating ... and I see you studied it - is there 'a definitive book' - preferably short one! - you'd recommend ... thank you ... you've whetted my appetite - cheers Hilary
Hilary
royalty and the aristocracy always lived and socialised in attractive facilities. But it wasn't until the second half of the 19th century that ordinary middle class families could participate in cultural activities - theatres, public parks, musical events, coffee shops, beach huts, pleasure piers, summer holiday resorts etc.
Of course workers down coal mines couldn't ever visit world fairs, even during the great years of culture and industry.
Boa tarde minha querida amiga. Obrigado pela excelente matéria e aula de história. Não conhecia essa matéria.
Luiz
I am guessing that was because South America only had ONE International Exhibition that was recognised by the Bureau International Des Exposition/BIE - Independence Centenary International Exposition in Rio de Janeiro 1922-1923. It was a great success.
Bom final de semana com muita paz e saúde minha querida amiga.
Luiz
thanks for reading the post :)
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