"Bellas Artes de Santurce" | |
![]() Interactive map of Centro de Bellas Artes Luis A. Ferré | |
| Former names | Centro de Bellas Artes de Puerto Rico |
|---|---|
| Address | Ponce de León Ave, Parada 22Santurce, PR 00940 |
| Location | San Juan, Puerto Rico |
| Coordinates | 18°26′51″N66°4′9″W / 18.44750°N 66.06917°W / 18.44750; -66.06917 |
| Owner | Corporation of the Performing Arts Center of Puerto Rico |
| Type | Concert hall, Opera house, Theatre, Performing arts center |
| Capacity |
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| Construction | |
| Built | 1981 |
| Opened | April 9, 1981 (1981-04-09) |
| Construction cost | $11,372,000[1] |
| Website | |
| www | |
The Luis A. Ferré Performing Arts Center (Centro de Bellas Artes Luis A. Ferré in Spanish) is a multi-use performance centre located in the barrio of Santurce in San Juan, Puerto Rico. It features three main concert and theater halls for plays, ballet, operas and concerts. It was renamed in 1994 after the late Puerto Rican philanthropist, politician and Governor of Puerto Rico, Luis A. Ferré.
The Center opened on April 9, 1981 under the administration of Governor Carlos Romero Barceló after ten years of planning, project financing, and construction. Since then, it has become the most important performing arts venue in the Puerto Rican capital, presenting the highest level of commercial theater in Puerto Rico along with ballets and operas, and also hosting artists such as Plácido Domingo and Menudo. The center is home to the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra and the annual Casals Festival.
In January 2019, Lin-Manuel Miranda’s musical Hamilton began its third touring production at the venue, with Miranda reprising the title role of Founding Father and Secretary of Treasury, Alexander Hamilton, with higher praise than his original run on Broadway.[2] Miranda returned to the venue after nine years since he reprised the role of Usnavi exclusively in San Juan during the North American touring production of In the Heights, which he also wrote.
On February 17, 1967, Francisco de Arriví lobbied in favor of the project, claiming that if it didn't proceed local theater would be "estranged".[3] Ulises Barros was selected as the head engineer of the project.[3] In December 1970, the project received a million in funds from the government.[3] Following the end of the Luis A. Ferré administration, additional assignments of $2,722,000 and $3,100,000 were made, with the total reaching $18,000,000.[3] The building was inaugurated on April 9, 1981, amidst protests against the Romero Barceló administration that responded to the approval of the "cultural laws" that created the AFAC.[4] Among the speakers were Ricardo Alegría, Arriví, Edwin Reyes and Clemente Soto Vélez.[4]
Alegría, who had opposed Senate Project 1157, which transferred the CBA to the Fondo de Becas para el Arte y la Cultura (AFAC) as a public corporation, calling it "cultural piracy" for taking a project that was almost finished, lobbied to the governor transferring control of the CBA to the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture (ICP).[5] On February 15, 1980, Arriví delivered a speech supporting the ICP as administrator of the CBA, citing a long-standing history of international cultural initiatives.[6] In 1985, the Centro de Bella's Artes was transferred to the ICP and led by a subdirector independent of the institution.[5] In 1993, there was an initiative to name the Centro de Bella's Artes.[7]Juan Mari Bras proposed naming it after Alegría, who declined, having drafted a law against issuing the name of living persons to public projects or buildings/monuments.[7] It was ultimately named after Luis A. Ferré.
The Center features four main concert and theater halls, two eateries and a central outdoor plaza, each with its own unique features:

The center is surrounded by various art expositions, including murals, paintings, and sculptures. The two largest halls feature art expositions which distinguishes each one:
Near the entrance of the center, various expositions greet guests and visitors, including a 40-foot (12 m) aluminum sculpture by Luis Torruella titled Melodic Reflection. However, the main art theme of the center's entrance are The Muses. These are two separate works of art, one being an assortment of 6-foot-tall (1.8 m) bronze female sculptures along the Juan Morel Campos Plaza, by Annex Burgos; and the second being a large mural at the center's façade (pictured above), made from a mixture concrete and crystal stones and designed by Augusto Marín. Each muse represents the different arts and cultures which the Center embraces, including local and classical music, theater, literature, dance, films, architecture, sculptures, and painting.
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Bibliography
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