Su un volo da Riga a Vienna, mi sono ritrovato seduto accanto a qualcuno che lavora alla Biblioteca Nazionale di Riga e abbiamo iniziato a parlare dell’edificio. Lo ha descritto come qualcosa che ogni lettone dovrebbe immediatamente riconoscere in termini di simbolismo, questa idea di conoscenza, cultura e identità che “risorgono”. L’ho trovato piuttosto sorprendente e da allora ci ho pensato.

Alla fine sono riuscito a esaminarlo un po’ più a fondo, e sono curioso: sembra davvero che ciò sia universalmente compreso in Lettonia, o è più un ideale che una realtà?

Inoltre, ha insistito perché guardassi Succession, che ho appena finito, e sì, aveva assolutamente ragione. Spettacolo incredibile. Quindi, se per miracolo vedi questo: grazie, quella raccomandazione è arrivata.

Anche un contrasto piuttosto divertente: pensare a un edificio destinato a rappresentare la conoscenza e la continuità culturale, e poi guardare uno spettacolo che parla fondamentalmente di potere, eredità e disfunzione.

Sarebbe interessante sapere come le persone qui vedono effettivamente la biblioteca: simbolicamente o semplicemente come un edificio.

https://i.redd.it/6qe2n7o25sxg1.jpeg

di limpxaxa

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6 commenti

  1. Puzzled_Mode4459 on

    I’m gen X – for me it is a symbolic building – we were waiting for it such a long time. The architect made the first sketch in 1989 and it was on the TV news. And then, the building itself was built from 2008 to 2013 and opened in 2014.

  2. kingleomark on

    Yeah, mostly! For us Latvians it really is one of our symbols/symbolic buildings, if I remember right the building is also called the glass mountain based on the glass mountain from a old theatre play written by a very important Latvian writer before ww1 , it had hidden symbolism that Latvia needs to be free. It was something like that or I just hallucinated everything

  3. pinedeer on

    Well, not everybody thinks about the symbolism probably, but with people who are generally more inclined to think about that kind of stuff, it is definitely recognisable, mainly because of the name. The castle of light or Gaismas Pils was named after a very famous choir song (look it up on youtube, preferably from Dziesmu Svētki aka the song and dance festival) and the song’s lyrics and overall feeling (and it being so popular in the festival) invokes these themes a lot. So the building being named that kind of inherits the symbolism from the song

  4. Deep_Limit_4833 on

    It’s from a tale about glass mountain that protagonist has to climb. Zelta Zirgs – golden horse.

  5. Charming-Bowl5759 on

    It is universally understood, there’s even a pretty popular and important song about it. Some people might not be able to tell you the specifics about the legend/poem, but they do know the idea of the castle sinking and then rising up when Latvia regains freedom. The song was even banned from being performed at the Latvian Song and Dance festival during occupation, it’s that patriotic and important. I’d recommend watching a performance on Youtube.

    As for the library itself, opinions seem to be a little more split 😀 I’ve heard thoughts from people who hate it and people who adore it. Personally, I love it and think it’s gorgeous, but one of my relatives who grew up in Riga thinks it’s ugly and a stain on the city. In her opinion, it looks out of place and it’s also expensive and difficult to clean, thousands of taxes are spent on cleaning that thing. I’ve heard similar sentiments from other people too, but most people seem to like it or not mind it. 

    Here’s some more information about the song in English – https://thesilvergrove.weebly.com/32-gaismas-pils-the-castle-of-light-augscaronup.html

  6. dddkrjfj on

    I remember some people saying it depicts the latvian economy (especially as it was built after the 2008 recession)

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