, commercial center dedicated exclusively to décor and design, and home to the
Hard Rock Cafe. The Recoleta neighborhood is distinguished by its great cultural spaces. In addition to historical monuments, it is home to the National Fine Arts Museum or
Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, the
National Library of Argentina, the
Recoleta Cultural Center, and other exhibition venues. The neighborhood is also well known for its shopping facilities.
Recoleta Cemetery The
Recoleta Cemetery is one of the main tourist attractions in the neighborhood. It was designed by the French architect
Prosper Catelin, at the request of President
Bernardino Rivadavia, and was dedicated in 1822.
Museums and cultural centers Next to the cemetery is the former General
Juan José Viamonte Shelter, administered in the past by the Recollect Fathers. When it ceased functioning as a shelter for the indigent, it was acquired by the city and converted into the
Centro Cultural Recoleta, one of the most important exhibition halls for the plastic arts in the city. 150 meters away, across
Libertador Avenue, is the
Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (
MNBA), which holds in its permanent collection works of art by Argentine artists such as
Berni and Seguí, as well as works by European masters such as
Titian,
Goya,
Rembrandt,
Gauguin, and
Manet. To the east, along Posadas Street, is the
Palais de Glace, which was, at the beginning of the twentieth century, an
ice skating rink. It has since been turned into a multimedia exhibition center. The
Centro Municipal de Exposiciones, which houses a wide variety of exhibitions and cultural events, is located behind
Carlos Thays Park.
Education Several of the oldest and most prestigious schools in the capital are in the Recoleta neighborhood. Among them are the
Escuela Superior de Comercio Carlos Pellegrini, the
Escuela Argentina Modelo, the
Scuola Edmundo de Amicis, the
Colegio Champagnat, the
Colegio Mallinkdrodt, the and Normal School 1, the oldest portion of which has been declared a
National Monument. Many university schools are also found in Recoleta, including several
University of Buenos Aires faculties such as the
Law,
Medicine,
Dentistry and
Pharmacy and Biochemistry faculties, and the Las Heras branch of the
Faculty of Engineering, an annex building in the
neogothic style building characterized by the cold, humid air typical of gothic structures. A construction in the
brutalist style, located on Agüero Street between Libertador Avenue and Las Heras, is home to the new National Library of Argentina. The building was completed in 1992, after 20 years of construction work. It contains more than four million volumes, including twenty priceless editions, such as a rare copy of
Dante's
Divine Comedy.
Recoleta and tango Several
cabarets in the neighborhood served as locales for tango music and dance. The
Pabellón de las Rosas, on Libertador Avenue and Tagle Street, like the
Café de Hansen in the Palermo neighborhood, maintained a
Belle Époque atmosphere, where the so-called
atorrantes ("vagabonds", but also "scoundrels", "spoiled brats") spent their evenings. At this, and at other cabarets such as the
Armenonville, a "p
eringundín" ("dance hall") where
Carlos Gardel was known to appear, fights—occasionally bloody—would break out between
"malevos" ("ruffians"), "
compadritos" ("tough-guys") and
"jailaifes" ("high-lifes” or high society boys) according to the florid contemporary slang (
lunfardo). In the 1910s, when the Palais de Glace no longer served as an ice skating rink, it became a dance venue, and it is there where the
tango finally became accepted by the upper classes of Buenos Aires, especially since it had already become a fad in Paris. Many
tango lyrics reflect life in the Recoleta neighborhood. One song, by
Horacio Ferrer, set to music by
Ástor Piazzolla, is the
"Balada para un loco" ("Ballad for a Madman"), which cites two of the neighborhood streets, Callao and Arenales:
"Salís de tu casa por Arenales... / Ya sé que estoy piantao, piantao, piantao... / ¿No ves que va la Luna rodando por Callao,/ que un corso de astronautas y niños, con un vals,/ me baila alrededor...?" (You leave home down Arenales ... / I know I'm mad, mad, mad../ don't you see the moon rolling down Callao? / how a carnival of astronauts and children /dance a vals around me...?") == Sculpture ==