Ambasada Gavioli

Ambasada Gavioli
Private
Industry Music
Founded 1995
Headquarters Izola, Slovenia
Key people
Giannni Gavioli (Architect)
Website www.ambasada-gavioli.com

Ambasada Gavioli is a nightclub located in Izola, Slovenia and named after its architect Gianni Gavioli. It has a floor space of 1,600 m2 and a capacity of 2,500 guests.

Appearance

The project is inspired from literature, theatre, cinema and fashion. Some themes include Italian baroque with Juliet's balcony and Charles Baudelaire's The Flowers of Evil. The architecture of the club is divided in two floors: wider main room and smaller, more intimate privee', which are connected with a glass wall, that allow visual and programming contact of rooms. The Ambasada Gavioli uses different materials like wood, white stone and copper, combined in a Mediterranean style.

Music

David Morales in Ambasada Gavioli (2001)

The music of Ambasada Gavioli is bases on a combination of several modern directions in club music, like clubbing techno futurism and modern house. The music is played by international DJs residents and other artists. These include Supa DJ Dmitry (from Deee-Lite), Tiësto (Netherlands), Sven Väth (Frankfurt), Marshall Jefferson (Chicago), Laurent Garnier (Paris), Richie Hawtin (Canada), Jeff Mills (Detroit), Takkyū Ishino (Tokyo), Westbam (Berlin), Boris Dlugosch (Germany), David Morales (USA) among others and last but not least DJ Umek.

History

In early 1990s, a group of young Slovenian businessmen, operating under a name of Evolution Inc. decided to sell all their business assets, get international loans and invest in what was anticipated to become a trans-national chain of dance entertainment complexes of the future. As opposed to other similar projects in the world at the time, this one was approached heavily from a cultural point of view, rather than purely commercial. A well known Italian architect maestro Gianni Gavioli has been invited to collaborate on the development. Before the first sketches were laid down, the architect has spent over a month in Slovenian Istria, learning about its culture, architecture and legends while meeting with locals from various generations in the area. In 1994 works began on what developed to be the maestro’s life masterpiece, combining feel of the local cultures with stories of Charles Baudelaire, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Due to its significance, the IRWIN artist group, part of Neue Slowenische Kunst movement, suggested the name of the new venue to be Ambasada Gavioli (Embassy of Gavioli). The new entertainment complex opened in December 1995.

Despite the initial optimism, based on fast development of independent Slovenia as an emerging cultural and economic power in the region as well as on the overall faith in positive future emerging from the global Rave movement at the time, the venue did not attract as much audience as expected from the start. 1996 thus represented a year of initial struggle for Ambasada Gavioli.

Hard work and structural reorganization eventually started to attract attention of various cultural circles, national and international media and attracting ever wider audiences,[1] resulting in Ambasada Gavioli already becoming recognized as one of world’s top 10 most prestigious and trendy electronic music venues in 1997 and one of top clubbing destinations in Southern Europe.

Ideological Structure

Ambasada Gavioli has been operating according to the neuropolitan teachings of part-time prophet and ravelutionary Chiron Morpheus. He proclaimed AG as the Cathedral of Avant-Pop and a Portal to elusive territory of the Ravelutionary haven of a Pirate Utopia or a Temporary Autonomous Zone. He practised neuromancy, divination in the form of a graphic Koans. The AG management used to receive weekly ideological feeds from Chiron Morpheus, which were used as flyers and repurposed in the club’s programming by Valentino Kanzyani’s AG Music Direction department, MC Flasher’s AG Performance & Outreach division, Denis Papic’s AG Ministry of Information.

In 1998, the IRWIN group introduced the official flag of Ambasada Gavioli as a visual manifestation of its temporary state ideology. The flag consisted of a golden and black field with five stars in circle – two black stars on golden background, two golden stars on black background and a star of both oppositional colours connecting both fields.

From second half of 1999, the ideological aspect of Ambasada Gavioli has mostly been maintained by MC Flasher, which after his Canadian relocation in 2000 evolved into the Final Flash series and the division morphed into the Final Flash Association. Through the years, the territory and/or the venue of Ambasada Gavioli has been also regarded as Embassy of 3rd Europe, The Cathedral of Luxurious Colours (also “Ambassada dei mille colori” in Italian).

Since 2005, the ideological aspect of Ambasada Gavioli has mostly been abandoned, thus bringing it closer to a concept of a more commercial discotheque.

Cult Following

Since 1995 when it opened, Ambasada Gavioli has become the focal point of the Electronic music community in Slovenia, Northern Italy, Southern Austria and North-West Croatia, achieving almost a cult following appeal in the scene. In the cultural context many people see the venue and the movement it created as a display of new cultural strength of the independent Slovenia. The club was also intensely famed by the media due to its edgy provocative image, which has been carefully maintained by its Public Relations department, further reinforcing its futuristic cult-like appeal.

Ownership and Management

Originally owned and managed by a share-holders corporation, Evolution Inc., the management of the club was later occasionally shifted to the Final Flash Association for the Final Flash festival and later to Ultimed Music business partnership on a full-time lease since 2005. Evolution Inc. still remained the sole legal owner of the property. In August 2008 a part of the club's premises was sold to Slovenian biggest merchandising company Mercator. The club continued to host events until December 31, 2008.[2] After that the destiny of Ambasada Gavioli remained unknown.

In 2010 Fetch The Vibe organisation re-opened Ambasada Gavioli in a glorious manner with Oldies-Goldies party, featuring two of Ambasada's first and most famous ambassadors DJ Umek and Valentino Kanzyani. Maybe the future for Ambasada is looking brighter with the new management and hopefully the cult will evolve and continue.

On December 17, 2011 the day of the Ambasada Gavioli anniversary, the newspaper Delo and the actual management Fetch The Vibe stated that the NYE Event on December 31, 2011 will be the second-last event followed by a future one on January or February 2012. Fetch The Vibe will not renew the contract and the club will be given to the organization Pink TV - for the recording of some TV shows.[3] However the Pink TV organisation did not sign the contract in the beginning of March as stated. The reason was probably of financial nature and the initial protest of club's audience which couldn't accept the fact that after 16 Years of electronic events the club's scene, for which it became known, now it will all come to an end. Fetch The vibe is now continuing with organisation of events in the club and the brand "Ambasada Gavioli" remains in their hands. However the quantity of events remains low for a club, they still continuously guest leading artists from international electronic scene. For now, Ambasada Gavioli continues the trend from last two years.

Controversy

Although the venue has attracted thousands of people on weekly basis and hosted main events of festivals such as Golden Drum European Advertising Festival and Final Flash International Art festival; it sparked a fair amount of controversy in the local community due to over-population problems caused by high amount of visitors,[2] sometimes calling for the closing of the venue or imposing limitations to the free movement of visitors after the events.

References

  1. Ručna N. (December 18, 2006). "Ambasada, ki je spromovirala Slovenijo" (in Slovenian). Finance (requires registering to read full article).
  2. 1 2 Šuligoj B. (August 22, 2008). "Ambasada Gavioli se poslavlja" (in Slovenian). Delo.
  3. "Ambasada Gavioli: Zgodba o uspehu z žalostnim koncem?" (in Slovenian). Delo. December 12, 2011.

External links

Coordinates: 45°32′5.85″N 13°40′6.08″E / 45.5349583°N 13.6683556°E / 45.5349583; 13.6683556

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