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Dinu Lipatti House

- Bulevardul Lascăr Catargiu 12 -
The one-story residential building, which was built in 1902, was constructed according to the plans of the Romanian architect , who took his education in . From 1927 until 1943, the Romanian classical pianist and composer Constantin Dinu Lipatti lived in this building with his family. He was born on April 1, 1917, in Bucharest, in the family of the diplomat and violinist Theodor Lipatti and the pianist Anna Lipatti, maidan name Racoviceanu. Valentin Lipatti, who became an ambassador, was his younger brother and Dinu's godfather at baptism was . He was accepted as a student by the demanding piano teacher , and in the meantime, he was admitted to the Conservatory in Bucharest, in order to participate in the international piano competition in in 1934. The fact that he was awarded only the second prize led the famous French pianist to leave the jury in protest. Cortot invited him to Paris to continue his piano studies under his direction at the Ecole Nationale de Musique.
Dinu Lipatti, at the age of one, with his mother and father
In 1936 he began his career as a concert pianist with a series of concerts in Germany and Italy, his reputation continuing to grow with each public appearance. At the beginning of the , he returned to Bucharest where he gave piano recitals as a soloist or accompanying George Enescu. He fled his native Romania in September 1943 with his companion, fellow pianist, and future wife, Madeleine Cantacuzene, who was also a former student of Florica Musicescu and decided to settle with Madeleine in Switzerland, where he became a piano teacher at the Conservatory.
Dinu Lipatti and Madeleine Cantacuzene on September 16, 1950
It was while teaching at the Geneva Conservatory in the 1940s that the first signs of Lipatti's illness emerged. At first, doctors were baffled, and in 1947 he was diagnosed with Hodgkin's disease. As a result, his public performances became considerably less frequent. He and Madeleine married in 1948 as Lipatti's health continued to decline. His energy level was improved for a time by then experimental injections of cortisone and his collaboration with record producer between 1947 and 1950 resulted in the majority of the recordings of Lipatti's playing. Lipatti gave his final recital, also recorded, on 16 September 1950 at the Besançon Festival in France. Dinu Lipatti died on December 2, 1950, in Geneva, at the age of 33, from a burst abscess on his one lung, and his wife, who died in 1982, was buried next to him.

After Dinu Lipatti's departure from the country, in 1943, his mother Ana and his brother Valentin stayed in the house until 1950, when it was nationalized. later on, the building became a cultural center, which bears the name of Dinu Lipatti.
Lipatti's final concert in Besançon on 16 September 1950.
The most striking feature of the Eclectic and Art Nouveau building is the tower-like structure of which the high jump entrance is also part. The hip roof that covers the tower-like structure features a decorative vase, as well as several dormers, just like the other roofs. It also features a , which like all of the other cornices, is decorated with . Above the beautifully framed oval-shaped window, you can admire a richly decorated from which two garlands hang. The segmentally shaped are either adorned with another cartouche to which a is attached or supported by several , which are embellished with and . More volutes are used in the beautifully decorated fragment that's located underneath two of the windows. Above the segmentally shaped entrance door, you can admire beautiful ornamentation that includes a and a female .
The building in the 1970s