What’s on in Europe this month

Nordic capitals ring in the season of goodwill in Europe with comforting Christmas fairs and parades, while in the south, La Scala breaks with elitism to broadcast its first opera of the season live to Milan. Politics meets art in London where a new...

Nordic capitals ring in the season of goodwill in Europe with comforting Christmas fairs and parades, while in the south, La Scala breaks with elitism to broadcast its first opera of the season live to Milan.

Politics meets art in London where a new play explores the summer riots that rocked the capital; a Paris show exposes the colonial-era roots of racism, while the Nobel Peace Prize concert strikes a hopeful year-end note in Oslo.

Following is some of the best of what’s on in Europe in December.

Austria

Art: Vienna’s Kunsthistorisches Museum, in collaboration with the Kunsthaus Zurich, explores the varied depictions of winter in Western art in a show three years in the making, with 180 works from 1450 to the present from Bruegel to Beuys, Van Goyen to Van Gogh and Monet to Munch. Untill January 8.

www.khm.at/en/

Art: The Belvedere Museum, already home to the largest collection worldwide of oil paintings by Gustav Klimt, pays tribute to the Austrian artist and interior designer Josef Hoffmann, showing their common vision of an art meant to touch all spheres of life, kicking off Klimt Year 2012. Until March 4.

www.belvedere.at

Denmark

Art: Outspoken Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who disappeared into custody for 81 days earlier this year, goes on show at Denmark’s Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebaek, north of Copenhagen.

Three monumental installations – Forever (2003), Fountain of Light (2007) and Trees (2009-2010) – are shown alongside a series of films and a recorded interview with the artist. Runs until February.

www.louisiana.dk

Christmas market: Copenhagen’s Tivoli gardens hosts a Russian-themed Christmas market, with a scale model of Moscow’s onion-domed Saint Basil’s cathedral, sound and music shows, parades and concerts, and an English-language show for children, “Crazy Christmas cabaret – below the (equatorial) belt”.

Every night until December 30, from 6 p.m.

www.tivoli.dk

Germany

Art: Satiricon explores the legacy of the prolific French artist and caricaturist Tomi Ungerer, who turned 80 this month, and whose work ranges from children’s illustrations to erotica.

The exhibit at Frankfurt’s Caricatura Museum features some 11,000 drawings and posters, most of them satirical. Runs until March 18.

www.caricaturamuseum.de/index.php?article_id=18 (in German)

Film: Colin Firth and The King’s Speech lead the nominations at the 24th European Film Awards, returning to Berlin for the first tme since 2007.

Last year, The Ghost Writer” by Roman Polanski picked up best film and best director awards, while the film’s star Ewan McGregor was named best actor. Other categories include Best Animated Feature Film, Best Short Film and Best Composer. On December 3.

www.europeanfilmawards.eu/en_EN/home

The Netherlands

Art: Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum puts on display some 75 original items left on the barren arctic island of Nova Zembla by Dutch explorer Willem Barentsz and his crew, after they were stranded for the winter in 1597 while trying to discover a passage to China. Until February 27.

www.rijksmuseum.nl

Britain

Musical adaptation of Roald Dahl’s popular book for children, Matilda, staged by the Royal Shakespeare Company with music and lyrics by popular British comedian and musician Tim Minchin.

The story of a little girl with an amazing imagination was a sell-out success at The Courtyard Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon and has now transferred to London’s West End, where early reviews have been strong. The cast includes three rotating teams of eight children. At the Cambridge Theatre, until October 2012.

www.matildathemusical.com

Theatre: Three months after the riots which rocked London and other British cities, the Tricycle Theatre in London tackles the subject by conducting its own “investigation” pieced together from 50 hours of testimony.

The Riots describes the looters and rioters who ran amok for four nights in August, grabbing televisions, laptops and training shoes from ransacked shops and in some places setting fire to buildings.

It attempts to show the unrest through the eyes of policemen, community workers and rioters themselves. At the Tricycle Theatre, London, until December 10.

www.tricycle.co.uk

Exhibition: Six decades of work by groundbreaking British designer Terence Conran, whose products and retailing style transformed the interior design industry, are shown in a major exhibition at the Design Museum in London.

The art school dropout began making furniture in the 1940s and his modern and affordable home designs were credited with lifting British homes out of post-war gloom.

He became a household name in Britain after he founded revolutionary retailer Habitat in 1964.

At the Design Museum until March 4.

http://designmuseum.org/exhibitions/current-exhibitions

Finland

Christmas festival: Eat seasonal rice porridge and give your wish list to Santa, whom Finns claim as one of their own, at Helsinki’s traditional Christmas Path festival. At the Seurasaari Open-Air Museum on December 11, from 1 to 5 p.m.

www.seurasaarisaatio.fi/index.php?id=18&ala=56

Italy

Opera: La Scala opera house’s season opens on Wednesday with none of the usual complimentary tickets and with the performance of Don Giovanni broadcast live throughout the city of Milan, in line with current climate of austerity.

www.teatroallascala.org/en

Christmas: Pope Benedict XVI uses a tablet computer to switch on the lights of what has been dubbed the world’s biggest Christmas tree – a massive light display covering a hillside near the mediaeval town of Gubbio, on Wednesday.

Portugal

Art: Still lives and their changing place in late 19th and early 20th century European painting are at the heart of a new exhibit at Lisbon’s Gulbenkian Foundation.

Monet, Cezanne, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Magritte, Dali and Matisse, are among around 70 artists exhibited at “The perpective of things”, which runs until January 8.

www.gulbenkian.pt

France

Dance: Andy Warhol dreamed of being a tap dancer, Pablo Picasso married a Russian ballerina, Henri Matisse used to visit acrobats in cabarets and Jackson Pollock painted twirling on the ground like a chaman: a new exhibit at Paris’ Pompidou Centre explores the profound influence of dance on other art forms.

Dancing Life – brings together some 450 exhibits, with films and videos of seminal 20th century choreographies set alongside paintings, drawings, photography and sculpture. Runs until April 2.

History: Paris’ museum of tribal arts looks back at how men, women and children from Africa, Oceania or America were exhibited to the European public, from the 16th- to the mid 20th centuries, in circuses, fairs or even zoos.

Exhibitions: The invention of the Savage, at the Quai Branly museum, shows how labelling them “savages” helped justify colonial rule, and tries to restore some dignity, centuries on, to the victims of the practice. Until June 3.

Sweden

Christmas: December 13 is Lucia Day in Sweden, celebrated to bring light to one of the darkest days of the year and a highlight of the Christmas season.

Young Lucias wear candles in their hair and long white robes with a red sash, singing Christmas carols at traditional concerts and processions in churches, schools and public locations around the country.

Big Lucia concerts will be held in Stockholm at the open-air museum Skansen and at Engelbrekts Church.

www.skansen.se

Christmas architecture: Stockholm’s Architecture Museum shows off its annual gingerbread house exhibition, this year on the theme: Pride and Prejudice: Bake your own pride and burn a few sad prejudices.

From November 30 to December 10, members of the public vote on their favourite house, rewarded with a prize December 11. Runs until January 8.

www.arkitekturmuseet.se/utstallningar/pepparkakshus-2011

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