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Almada Route

Lisbon through Almada´s eyes

São Luiz Municipal Theatre

Point of Interest

If you want to write a guide about the places where Almada left a mark, São Luiz Theatre has to be included. On 14th April 1917, it was then called the Theatre of the Republic and was the stage for the conference “Futurist Ultimatum to the Portuguese Generations of the 20th Century”, presented by the artist. At this event, which the theatre commemorated 100 years later with a series of initiatives, Almada Negreiros tried to rouse the Portuguese from their state of lethargy. The effect may have been far from hoped for, but it was certainly much talked about.


Opening hours: Everyday from 1.00 – 8.00 pm

House in Rua de Alcolena

Point of Interest

In 1952, Almada Negreiros was invited to create various ceramic panels for a house at 28 Rua de Alcolena, a property belonging to confessed admirers in Ajuda, Lisbon. In return for their esteem, the work the artist produced stood out for its rigorous technique and compelling beauty, reflecting the aesthetics of the 1910s-20s.  

Bristol Club

Point of Interest

In Portas de Santo Antão, in Lisbon’s Baixa district, a place called the Bristol Club appeared in 1918 that soon became one of the main focal points of the intelligentsia. Some years later, between 1925 and 1926, its owner and major patron, Mário Ribeiro, decided to completely revamp it in a Modernist style. Amongst other artists, he invited Almada Negreiros to create a magnificent oil painting for the Bristol representing a nude of a post-war cosmopolitan woman. The club closed in 1927.



Palácio do Cunhal das Bolas

Monument

Former home of the Counts of Ericeira, this Renaissance-era palace would later house the S. Luiz dos Franceses Hospital where Almada Negreiros died on 15th June 1970, ironically in the same room where his great friend the poet Fernando Pessoa also died many years earlier on 30th November 1935. The palace is named after one of its large cornerstones decorated with balls of masonry. It is said that the balls were originally covered in gold.

Residence in Rua São Filipe Néry

Point of Interest

For years, Almada Negreiros had two homes. This one, in the heart of Lisbon, and a farm in Bicesse, on the way to Cascais. His wife, Sarah Afonso, preferred the calm of the farm, but Almada was unable to spend too long away from the hubbub of the city’s cafés and social scene. This building, from the latter half of the 18th century and classed by Lisbon Council as a public interest building, was his city residence, where he stayed temporarily but always came back to.