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Portuguese World Exhibition

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Portuguese World Exhibition
Flag of the Portuguese World Exhibition
Overview
BIE-classUnrecognized exposition
NamePortuguese World Exhibition
Building(s)Museu de Arte Popular
Visitors3 million
Organized byAugusto de Castro, Júlio Dantas, Cottinelli Telmo [pt], António Ferro
Participant(s)
Countries2
Location
CountryPortugal
CityLisbon
VenuePraça do Império, Belém
Coordinates38°41′47″N 9°12′27″W / 38.69639°N 9.20750°W / 38.69639; -9.20750
Timeline
Opening23 June 1940
Closure2 December 1940

The Portuguese World Exhibition (Portuguese: Exposição do Mundo Português) was held in Lisbon in 1940 to mark 800 years since the foundation of the country and 300 years since the restoration of independence from Spain.[1][2]

The fair ran from 23 June to 2 December 1940,[1] held on the Praça do Império,[3] and was attended by 3 million people.[1]

Organizers

Augusto de Castro was the commissioner general, Júlio Dantas president of committee, Cottinelli Telmo [pt] the master architect,[4] António Ferro (director),[3] and lead engineer Duarte Pacheco.[5]

The exhibition was opened by President Carmona, with Oliveira Salazar also in attendance.[1]

Contents

The fair was divided into three main sections of display: history, ethnography, and the colonial world.[6]

Monument to Discoveries

A monument to the discoveries of Portugal Padrão dos Descobrimentos was designed by Pardal Monteiro and Cottinelli Telmo and erected in the Praça do Império (it was dismantled in 1943).[7]

Nautical sports

A modernist restaurant and beer hall was designed by António Lino with guidance from Cottinelli Telmo. In 2014, it was remodelled to become a nightclub and bar.[8]

The pavilion of popular life was designed by Veloso Reis and João Simões and after the exhibition was refurbished and opened as Lisbon's Museum of Popular Art in 1948.[9]

Brazil

The Brazil pavilion, named Independent Brazilian Pavilion,[10] was designed by Raul Lino,[4] with interiors by Roberto Lacombe.[10] Its contents included a large photographic mural and a reading room with 5000 works.[10] It had an art section including paintings by Lucílio de Albuquerque, Arthur Timótheo da Costa, Oscar Pereira da Silva and Candido Portinari.[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "The Portuguese World Exhibition of 1940". Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  2. ^ "Efemérides | A Restauração (1640)" (in Portuguese).
  3. ^ a b Corkill, David; Almeida, José Carlos, Commemoration and Propaganda in Salazar's Portugal: The Portuguese World Exhibition of 1940
  4. ^ a b "Opiniões de Algibeira: Reminiscências do Passado (3): a exposição do Mundo Português (1940)" (in Portuguese).
  5. ^ "Expo VN Inauguration — Visualizing Portugal: the New State (1933-1974)". Retrieved 20 October 2017.
  6. ^ "Expo VN Map — Visualizing Portugal: the New State (1933-1974)". Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  7. ^ "Monument to the Discoveries". Retrieved 20 October 2017.
  8. ^ "Espaço Espelho D'Água on Architizer". Retrieved 20 October 2017.
  9. ^ "DGPC | Museus e Monumentos | Rede Portuguesa de Museus | Museu de Arte Popular" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  10. ^ a b c d Williams, Daryle. Culture Wars in Brazil: The First Vargas Regime, 1930–1945.