Aarhus is home to many annual cultural events and festivals, museums, theatres, and sports events of both national and international importance, and presents some of the largest cultural attractions in Denmark. There is a long tradition of music from all genres, and many Danish bands have emerged from Aarhus. Libraries, cultural centres and educational institutions present free or easy opportunities for the citizens to participate in, engage in, or be creative with cultural events and productions of all kinds. Since 1938, Aarhus has marketed itself as
Smilets by (City of smiles) which has become both an informal moniker and official slogan. In 2011, the city council opted to change the slogan to "Aarhus. Danish for Progress" but it was unpopular and abandoned after just a few years. Other slogans that have occasionally been used are
Byen ved havet (City by the sea),
Mellem bugt og bøgeskov (Between bay and beechwood) and
Verdens mindste storby (World's smallest big city). Aarhus is featured in popular songs such as
Hjem til Aarhus by
På Slaget 12,
Lav sol over Aarhus by
Gnags,
8000 Aarhus C by
Flemming Jørgensen,
Pigen ud af Aarhus by
Tina Dickow and
Slingrer ned ad Vestergade by
Gnags. In 1919, the number
Sangen til Aarhus (Song to Aarhus) had become a popular hit for a time, but the oldest and perhaps best known "national anthem" for the city is the classical
Aarhus Tappenstreg from 1872 by
Carl Christian Møller which is occasionally played at official events or at performances by local marching bands and orchestras.
Museums Aarhus has a range of museums, including
two of the largest in the country, measured by the number of paying guests,
Den Gamle By and
ARoS Aarhus Kunstmuseum.
Den Gamle By (The Old Town), officially
Danmarks Købstadmuseum (Denmark's Market Town Museum), presents Danish townscapes from the 16th century to the 1970s with individual areas focused on different time periods. 75 historic buildings collected from different parts of the country have been brought here to create a small town in its own right. ARoS Aarhus Kunstmuseum, the city's main art museum, is one of the largest art museums in Scandinavia with a collection covering Danish art from the 18th century to the present day as well as paintings, installations and sculptures representing international
art movements and artists from all over the world. The iconic glass structure on the roof,
Your Rainbow Panorama, was designed by
Olafur Eliasson and features a promenade offering a colourful panorama of the city. The
Moesgård Museum specialises in
archaeology and
ethnography in collaboration with Aarhus University with exhibits on Denmark's
prehistory, including weapon sacrifices from
Illerup Ådal and the
Grauballe Man.
Kvindemuseet, the Women's Museum, from 1984 contains collections of the lives and works of women in Danish cultural history. The
Occupation Museum (
Besættelsesmuseum) presents exhibits illustrating the
German occupation of the city during the
Second World War; the University Park on the campus of
Aarhus University includes the
Natural History Museum with 5,000 species of animals, many in their natural surroundings; and the
Steno Museum is a museum of the
history of science and
medicine with a
planetarium.
Kunsthal Aarhus (Aarhus Art Hall) hosts exhibitions of contemporary art including painting, sculpture, photography, performance art, film and video. Strictly speaking it is not a museum but an
arts centre, one of the oldest in Europe, built and founded in 1917.
Libraries and community centres at the harbour front
Public libraries in Denmark are also cultural and community centres. They play an active role in cultural life and host many events, exhibitions, discussion groups, workshops, educational courses and facilitate everyday cultural activities for and by the citizens. In June 2015, the large central library and cultural centre of
Dokk1 opened at the harbour front. Dokk1 also includes civil administrations and services, commercial office rentals and a large underground robotic car park and aims to be a landmark for the city and a public meeting place. The building of Dokk1 and the associated squares and streetscape is also collectively known as Urban Mediaspace Aarhus and it is the largest construction project Aarhus municipality has yet undertaken. Apart from this large main library, some neighbourhoods in Aarhus have a local library engaged in similar cultural and educational activities, but on a more local scale. The
State Library (
Statsbiblioteket) at the university campus has status of a
national library. The city is a member of the ICORN organisation (
International Cities of Refuge Network) in an effort to provide a safe haven to authors and writers persecuted in their countries of origin. There are several cultural and community centres throughout the city. This includes Folkestedet in the central
Åparken, facilitating events for and by non-commercial associations, organisations and clubs, and activities for the elderly, the nearby
Godsbanen at the railway yard, with workshops, events and exhibitions, and Globus1 in
Brabrand facilitating sports and various cultural activities.
Performing arts The city enjoys strong musical traditions, both classical and alternative, underground and popular, with educational and performance institutions such as the concert halls of
Musikhuset, the opera of
Den Jyske Opera,
Aarhus Symfoniorkester (Aarhus Symphony Orchestra) and
Det Jyske Musikkonservatorium (Royal Academy of Music, Aarhus/Aalborg). Musikhuset is the largest concert hall in Scandinavia, with seating for more than 3,600 people. Other major music venues include VoxHall, rebuilt in 1999, and the associated venue of Atlas, Train nightclub at the harbourfront, and
Godsbanen, a former rail freight station. The acting scene in Aarhus is diverse, with many groups and venues engaged in a broad span of genres, from
animation theatre and
children's theatre to
classical theatre and
improvisational theatre. Aarhus Teater is the oldest and largest venue with mostly professional classical acting performances. Svalegangen, the second largest theatre, is more experimental with its performances and other notable groups and venues includes EntréScenen, Katapult, Gruppe 38, Helsingør Teater, Det Andet Teater and Teater Refleksion as well as
dance venues like Bora Bora. The cultural center of
Godsbanen includes several scenes and stages The city hosts a biannual international theatre festival, International Living Theatre (ILT), with the next event being scheduled for 2021. Since 2010 the music production centre of PROMUS (
Produktionscentret for Rytmisk Musik) has supported the rock scene in the city along with the publicly funded ROSA (
Dansk Rock Samråd), which promotes Danish rock music in general. Aarhus is known for its musical history. Fuelled by a relatively young population
jazz clubs sprang up in the 1950s which became a tour stop for many iconic American Jazz musicians. By the 1960s, the music scene diversified into rock and other genres and in the 1970s and 1980s, Aarhus became a centre for rock music, fostering iconic bands such as
Kliché,
TV-2 and
Gnags and artists such as
Thomas Helmig and
Anne Linnet. Acclaimed bands since the 1970s include
Under Byen,
Michael Learns to Rock,
Nephew,
Carpark North,
Spleen United,
VETO,
Hatesphere and
Illdisposed in addition to individual performers such as
Medina and
Tina Dico.
Events and festivals Aarhus hosts many annual or recurring festivals, concerts and events, with the festival of
Aarhus Festuge as the most popular and wide-ranging, along with large sports events. Aarhus Festuge is the largest multicultural festival in Scandinavia, always based on a special theme and takes place every year for ten days between late August and early September, transforming the inner city with festive activities and decorations of all kinds. There are numerous music festivals; the eight-day
Aarhus Jazz Festival features jazz in many venues across the city. It was founded in 1988 and usually takes place in July every year, occasionally August or September. There are several annually recurring music festivals for contemporary popular music in Aarhus.
NorthSide Festival presents well-known bands every year in mid-June on large outdoor scenes. It is a relatively new event, founded in 2010, but grew from a one-day event to a three-day festival in its first three years, now with 35,000 paying guests in 2015.
Spot festival is aiming to showcase up-and-coming Danish and Scandinavian talents at selected venues of the inner city. The outdoor
Grøn Koncert music festival takes place every year in many cities across Denmark, including Aarhus.
GrimFest is a small, but notable, summer music festival held in
Skjoldhøjkilen,
Brabrand. Aarhus also hosts recurring events dedicated to specific art genres. International Living Theatre (ILT) is a bi-annual festival, established in 2009, with
performing arts and stage art on a broad scale. The festival has a vision of showing the best plays and stage art experiences of the world, while at the same time attracting thespians and stage art interested people from both Aarhus and Europe at large. LiteratureXchange is a new annual festival from 2018, focused on literature from around the world as well as regional talents. The city actively promotes its
gay and lesbian community and celebrates the annual
Aarhus Pride gay pride festival while Aarhus Festuge usually includes exhibits, concerts and events designed for the LGBT communities. Notable events of a local scope include the
university boat-race, held in the University Park since 1991, which has become a local spectator event attracting some 20,000 people. The boat race pits costumed teams from the university departments against each other in inflatable boats in a challenge to win the
Gyldne Bækken (Golden Chamber Pot) trophy. The annual lighting of the Christmas lights on the
Salling department store in
Søndergade has also become an attraction in recent times, packing the pedestrianised city centre with thousands of revellers. Significant dates such as
Saint Lucy's Day,
Sankt Hans (
Saint John's Eve) and
Fastelavn are traditionally celebrated with numerous events across the city.
Food, drink, and nightlife Aarhus has a large variety of restaurants and eateries offering food from cultures all over the world, especially Mediterranean and Asian, but also international gourmet cuisine,
traditional Danish food and
New Nordic Cuisine. Among the oldest restaurants are
Rådhuscafeen (lit. The City Hall Café), opened in 1924, serving a menu of traditional Danish meals, and
Peter Gift from 1906, a tavern with a broad beer selection and a menu of
smørrebrød and other Danish dishes. In Aarhus, New Nordic can be experienced at
Kähler Villa Dining,
Hærværk and
Domestic, but local produce can be had at many places, especially at the twice-weekly food markets in Frederiksbjerg. Aarhus and
Central Denmark Region was selected as
European Region of Gastronomy in 2017. The city (and municipality) is a member of the
Délice Network, an international non-profit organisation nurturing and facilitating knowledge exchange in
gastronomy. Appraised high-end restaurants serving international gourmet cuisine include Frederikshøj, Substans, Gastromé, Det Glade Vanvid, Nordisk Spisehus, Restaurant Varna, Restaurant ET, Gäst, Brasserie Belli, Møf. Restaurants in Aarhus were the first in provincial Denmark to receive
Michelin stars since 2015, when Michelin inspectors ventured outside Copenhagen for the first time. Vendors of street food are numerous throughout the centre, often selling from small trailers on permanent locations formally known as
Pølsevogne (lit. sausage wagons), traditionally serving a Danish variety of
hot dogs, sausages and other fast food. There are increasingly more outlets inspired by other cultural flavours such as
sushi,
kebab and
currywurst. The city centre is packed with cafés, especially along the river and the
Latin quarter. Some of them also include an evening restaurant, such as
Café Casablanca,
Café Carlton,
Café Cross and
Gyngen. Aarhus Street Food from 2016, Markedshallen Nikolinehus from 2022, and Banken Food Hall from 2024, are three indoor
food courts in the inner city, comprising a variety of street food restaurants, cafés and bars. Aarhus has a robust and diverse nightlife. The action tends to concentrate in the inner city, with the pedestrianised riverside, Frederiksgade, the Latin Quarter, and Jægergårdsgade on Frederiksbjerg as the most active centres at night, but things are stirring elsewhere around the city too. The nightlife scene offers everything from small joints with cheap alcohol and a homely atmosphere to fashionable nightclubs serving champagne and cocktails or small and large music venues with bars, dance floors and lounges. A short selection of well-established places where you can have a drink and socialise, include the large homely Irish pub
Tir na nÓg with occasional live music, and a separate cocktail bar; relaxed
RIS RAS Filliongongong, offering
waterpipes and an award-winning beer selection;
Sharks Poolhall nightclub with televised sports events and joyful billiard players; the fashionable but hard to find
Gedulgt nightclub speak-easy, high-end cocktail bar; cosy
Vinstuen bar with a cheap menu of basic drinks, beer, and table football; British-style
Sherlock Holmes pub stuffed with
Sherlock Holmes paraphernalia; and
LouLou nightclub dance lounge at the riverside. A few nightlife spots are aimed at gays and lesbians specifically, including Gbar (
nightclub) and Café Sappho. The
Århus Set (
Danish: Århus Sæt) is a set of drinks often ordered together, named for the city and consisting of two beverages, one
Ceres Top beer and one shot
Arnbitter, both originally from Aarhus. Ordering "a set" suffices in most bars and pubs. Aarhus Bryghus is a local
craft brewery with a sizeable production. The brewery is located in the southern district of Viby and a large variety of their craft brews are available there, in most larger well-assorted stores in the city, and in some bars and restaurants as well. They also export.
Local dialect The Aarhus dialect, commonly called
Aarhusiansk (Aarhusian in English), is a
Jutlandic dialect in the
Mid-Eastern Jutland dialect area, traditionally spoken in and around Aarhus. Aarhusian, as with most local dialects in Denmark, has diminished in use through the 20th century and most Danes today speak some version of Standard Danish with slight regional features. Aarhusian, however, still has a strong presence in older segments of the population and in areas with high numbers of immigrants. Some examples of common, traditional and unique Aarhusian words are:
træls ('tiresome'),
noller ('silly' or 'dumb') and
dælme (
excl. 'damn me!'). The dialect is notable for single-syllable words ending in "d" being pronounced with
stød while the same letter in multiple-syllable words is pronounced as "j", i.e.,
Odder is pronounced "Ojjer". Like other dialects in East Jutland, it has two
grammatical genders, similar to Standard Danish, but different from West Jutlandic dialects, which have only one. In 2009, the University of Aarhus compiled a list of contemporary public figures who best exemplify the dialect, including
Jacob Haugaard,
Thomas Helmig,
Steffen Brandt,
Stig Tøfting,
Flemming Jørgensen,
Tina Dickow and
Camilla Martin. In popular culture, the dialect features prominently in
Niels Malmros's movie
Aarhus by Night and in 90s comedy sketches by Jacob Haugaard and
Finn Nørbygaard. ==Sports==