Fine Arts Palace: Difference between revisions
From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
Derekblue1 (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
(Fixed Mario is Missing release date) Tag: Mobile edit |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
|image=[[File:FineArtsPalace MIM.png|300px]]<br>[[Luigi]]'s photograph of the Fine Arts Palace | |image=[[File:FineArtsPalace MIM.png|300px]]<br>[[Luigi]]'s photograph of the Fine Arts Palace | ||
|greater_location=[[Mexico City]], [[Mexico]] | |greater_location=[[Mexico City]], [[Mexico]] | ||
|first_appearance=''[[Mario is Missing! (PC)|Mario is Missing!]]'' ([[List of games by date# | |first_appearance=''[[Mario is Missing! (PC)|Mario is Missing!]]'' ([[List of games by date#1993|1993]]) | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{quote|The Fine Arts Palace, on the main street, Juarez Avenue, used to be a royal palace. The palace was first turned into an opera house and finally an art museum. Admired for its elaborate architecture, the museum's vast collection represents Mexico's greatest artists including: Tomayo,{{sic}} Diego Rivera and his wife, Freida{{sic}} Kahlo. Its official Spanish name is Palacio de Bellas Artes.|'''Pamphlet'''|Mario is Missing! (PC)}} | {{quote|The Fine Arts Palace, on the main street, Juarez Avenue, used to be a royal palace. The palace was first turned into an opera house and finally an art museum. Admired for its elaborate architecture, the museum's vast collection represents Mexico's greatest artists including: Tomayo,{{sic}} Diego Rivera and his wife, Freida{{sic}} Kahlo. Its official Spanish name is Palacio de Bellas Artes.|'''Pamphlet'''|Mario is Missing! (PC)}} |
Latest revision as of 21:25, October 28, 2024
Fine Arts Palace | |
---|---|
Luigi's photograph of the Fine Arts Palace | |
First appearance | Mario is Missing! (1993) |
Greater location | Mexico City, Mexico |
- “The Fine Arts Palace, on the main street, Juarez Avenue, used to be a royal palace. The palace was first turned into an opera house and finally an art museum. Admired for its elaborate architecture, the museum's vast collection represents Mexico's greatest artists including: Tomayo,[sic] Diego Rivera and his wife, Freida[sic] Kahlo. Its official Spanish name is Palacio de Bellas Artes.”
- —Pamphlet, Mario is Missing! (PC)
The Fine Arts Palace (in Spanish: Palacio de Bellas Artes) is an art museum in Mexico City, including drawings by Mexican artists such as Rufino Tamayo and Diego Rivera. Luigi once visited the Palace during the events of the PC, SNES, and NES versions of Mario is Missing!, after the Fine Arts catalog, a directory of artworks found in the Palace, had been stolen by Koopa Troopas, forcing the Palace to close. Upon returning the catalog to the museum, Luigi was rewarded 900 dollars.
Questions[edit]
Luigi had to prove the catalog's authenticity by answering the following trivia questions:
- The museum used to be a:
- Royal Palace
- great restaurant
- library
- Diego Rivera's wife, ____ was also a famous artist:
- Belle Art
- Freida Kahlo
- Doris Rivera
- The Palace is across the park from:
- a 600-foot tower
- Palacio de Bellas Artes
- the Pyramid of the Moon
Names in other languages[edit]
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
German | Der Palast der schönen Künste[1] | The Palace of the fine Arts |
Trivia[edit]
- The Fine Arts Palace's pamphlet misspells the names of Mexican artists Rufino Tamayo and Frida Kahlo.
References[edit]
- ^ Mario wir vermisst (CD-ROM). Software Toolworks (German). Retrieved September 24, 2024.