Riga, Latvia. Interior from Riga’s Art Nouveau Museum. Photo: Massimo Borchi/Corbis Riga has over 700 art nouveau buildings, more than any other European city. The movement’s golden age coincided with the city’s rapid economic growth and within three years of the industrial and handicraft exhibition of 1901, art nouveau had become the only style of construction. One of the main streets, Alberta iela, has rows of Jugendstil houses. Designed by Mikhail Eisenstein, the Amphora building on Elizabetes iela is a showcase of art nouveau with floral motifs, stained glass, sky-blue tiles, sculpted knockers, peacocks and stern female faces peering out of the top floor. The other great architect of the period was Konstantins Pēkšēns, whose former home is now the Riga’s Art Nouveau Museum, where staff wear period costume. Nearby is the Sienna art cafe (makslas kafejnica) on Streinieku iela, with its elegant drawing room complete with floral-design crockery, screens, chandeliers and large sugary desserts. |
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