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Building program hits the right note

 

Illuminations at the National Centre for the Performing Arts in Beijing during the celebrations to mark the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China. Feng Jun / for China Daily

Frustrations

Often, the architects commissioned to build these centers aren't from a musical background, Zambello said. "They've hired amazing architects for whom I have great respect, but they don't work in what we do, so they don't have a connection," she commented. "There are many impractical things about the way the buildings are set up. That's very frustrating, but anyone who works in theater will tell you that in the US too."

On the upside, there is room for experimentation that might not always be possible elsewhere, Newhouse said. She pointed to Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid's Guangzhou Opera House, which employed a revolutionary asymmetrical design featuring breakthrough acoustics technology. However, Hadid was the "winner" of the region's fourth competition to design the center, making it clear that the competition was ultimately only a pretext for local government to select its own designer, she said.

Other complications have emerged because of timing, Smith said. "Sometimes performing arts venues will be completed and then lie dormant for a year," he said. "They'll decide on the Vienna Philharmonic, and then say, 'Can we get them in three months?' They have a sense of reality that on the one hand is very connected to how the rest of the world looks, but is very remedial in terms of how the rest of the world actually functions."

"It's not an organic growth; they are building the halls at the same time as they are building the audiences for the halls. In America, they built halls because the audience had outgrown a previous hall, and orchestras developed a sound based on their own halls. But the audience and the halls don't actually exist yet in China."

In the United States, the arts, and public and private investment in them, first developed in major metropolitan cities before moving to medium-sized regional centers. In China, the initial wave hasn't even died down but the second wave is picking up, Smith said.

Other people have seen project plans fall apart as supporters have fallen out of favor politically, he said. But as funding models for the arts in Europe and the US have struggled over the past decade, China might ultimately provide a path for the future, he said.

"China is being expected to do something that we (the West) don't even seem to have a successful model for yet," he said. "So they have to find popular support for international art forms that have never really had a broad audience in China, and what they do might change the dynamic worldwide.

"It might have to become more Chinese for Chinese audiences to embrace it. International people will have to accept that the product might not look the same way it does back home; it's going to look different. But if China can make it work, the rest of the world will follow."

By Kelly Chung Dawson

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