Southbank Centre
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Southbank Centre
Summary
Southbank Centre is an arts center[1]. It ranks in the top 1% of arts_center entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (195 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Southbank Centre's field of work was performing arts[3].
- Southbank Centre's field of work was contemporary music[4].
- Southbank Centre's field of work was literature[5].
- Southbank Centre's field of work was visual arts[6].
- Southbank Centre's field of work was classical music[7].
- Southbank Centre is located in London Borough of Lambeth[8].
- Southbank Centre is in the country of United Kingdom[9].
- Southbank Centre's image is recorded as Royal Festival Hall (37366103611).jpg[10].
- Southbank Centre's instance of is recorded as arts center[11].
- Southbank Centre's instance of is recorded as tourist attraction[12].
- Southbank Centre's instance of is recorded as charitable organization[13].
- Southbank Centre's movement is recorded as brutalist architecture[14].
- South Bank is named after Southbank Centre[15].
- Southbank Centre's ISNI is recorded as 0000000086104812[16].
- Southbank Centre's ISNI is recorded as 0000000123249931[17].
- Southbank Centre's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 145845952[18].
- Southbank Centre's GND ID is recorded as 5000479-7[19].
- Southbank Centre's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as nr88002435[20].
- Southbank Centre's Union List of Artist Names ID is recorded as 500301990[21].
- Southbank Centre's IdRef ID is recorded as 178879266[22].
- Southbank Centre's location is recorded as South Bank[23].
- Southbank Centre's Commons category is recorded as Southbank Centre[24].
- Southbank Centre's OpenStreetMap relation ID is recorded as 1698905[25].
- Southbank Centre's Libraries Australia ID is recorded as 35213015[26].
- Southbank Centre's has part is recorded as Royal Festival Hall[27].
Body
Industry
Fields of work include performing arts[3], a type of arts[28]; contemporary music[4], a music genre[29]; literature[5], a type of arts[30]; visual arts[6], a type of arts[31]; and classical music[7], a music genre[32], founded in 0500[33].
Why It Matters
Southbank Centre ranks in the top 1% of arts_center entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (195 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[35]