China Daily Global Edition (USA)

London to create new art quarter

-

LONDON — The City of London Corporatio­n and major arts organizati­ons in the Square Mile announced on Friday ambitious plans to create a new art quarter for the historic city. The northern border of the city of London will be the home to a new Culture Mile, according to CLC, the local municipal authority.

The Culture Mile will feature a new museum covering London and its history and a new music center that will have the capacity to be a major venue for visiting orchestras. The area is already home to the Barbican Arts Center with two concert halls, two theaters, an art gallery and cinemas, as well as the Museum of London, the Guildhall School of Music & Drama and London Symphony Orchestra’s St Luke’s venue.

In addition, the area has a rich heritage ranging from the Roman period through medieval churches and ancient crafts groups to distinguis­hed contempora­ry buildings by leading architects.

“Now is the time to draw all this history, innovation and achievemen­t together in a major initiative, as the arts, heritage and culture organizati­ons in the northwest of the City ... come together to launch Culture Mile, a major destinatio­n for the culture of today in the heart of London’s financial district,” says Nicholas Kenyon, managing director of the Barbican Arts Center.

“With the exciting major developmen­t of the new

Now is the time to draw all this history, innovation and achievemen­t together in a major initiative.” managing director, Barbican Arts Center

Nicholas Kenyon, Museum of London in West Smithfield, and the ambitious vision to create a new Center for Music ... we have the potential to work with stakeholde­rs and partners to redefine the role of the City for future generation­s,” Kenyon adds.

The area has traditiona­lly been the home of offices of major financial institutio­ns such as the Stock Exchange and of global financial giants like Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank.

CLC policy chairman Catherine McGuinness says the aim is to make London “admired as much for being a world-class cultural destinatio­n as for its position as a leading global financial center”.

“There is no doubt that Culture Mile will transform the area and in the face of Brexit send a signal to the world that London is ... a welcoming, open and resolutely internatio­nalist city.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States