Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
ANTWERP 149

Choice antique furniture and art in the Museum Mayer van den Bergh


R St-Jacobskerk
Lange Nieuwstraat 73–75,
Eikenstraat. Tel (03) 2321032.


Apr–Oct: 2–5pm Wed–Mon;


Nov–Mar: 9am–noon Mon–Sat. &
Noted as Pieter Paul Rubens’s
burial place, this sandstone
church was built between
1491 and 1656. Rubens’s
tomb, in his family’s chapel


E Museum van
Hedendaagse Kunst
Antwerpen (MuHKA)
Leuvenstraat 32. Tel (03) 2609999.
# 11am–6pm Tue–Sun (until 9pm
Thu). & 0 = http://www.muhka.be
This museum fits perfectly into
a city famed for its sense of
style and design. Once a 1920s
dockside grain silo and ware-
house, the huge, sculptural
building has been transformed
into a series of unusual
spaces to display works from
the front line of international
contemporary art. It includes
work by many of the artists
who helped place Belgium at
the forefront of the art scene
in recent years, including Luc
Tuymans, Panamarenko, Jan
Fabre and Wim Delvoye.

P Rockoxhuis
Keizerstraat 12. Tel (03) 2019250.


10am–5pm Tue–Sun. &


http://www.rockoxhuis.be
Nicholaas Rockox (1560–1640)
was the mayor of Antwerp as
well as a humanist, philanthro-
p ist and a friend and patron
of Rubens. These attributes
are reflected in his beautifully
renovated home – a series of
rooms set around a formal
courtyard garden. They hold
a fine collection of
contemporary furniture
and miscellaneous
artifacts, all interesting
and well chosen. The
paintings include
work by Pieter
Brueghel the
Younger, Rubens,
Jordaens and van
Dyck, as well as by
his neighbour, Frans
Snyders (1579–1657), who
was much admired by Rubens,
and painted the fruit and flow-
ers in Rubens’s work. E Rubenshuis
See pp150–51.


E FotoMuseum
Waalse Kaai 47. Tel (03) 2429300
# 10am–6pm Tue–Sun. =
http://www.fotomuseum.be
The city’s excellent museum
of photography displays a
broad variety of historical
artifacts and images. The
museum has now undergone
a complete make over and has
embraced the moving image
by incorpor ating the Antwerp
Film Museum. The latter
offers regularly scheduled film
viewings. In addition to its
extensive per manent collec-
tion, the museum mounts a
series of photo graphy exhibi-
tions that feature both local
and inter national artists.

Stained-glass window in St-Jacobskerk

Fishmarket Antwerp
at the Rockoxhuis

E Museum Mayer
van den Bergh
Lange Gasthuisstraat 19. Tel (03)



  1. 10am–5pm Tue–Sun


    and Easter Mon. & http://museum.
    antwerpen.be/mayervandenbergh
    Fritz Mayer van den Bergh
    (1858–91) was the scion of
    a wealthy trad ing family, but




E Koninklijk Museum voor
Schone Kunsten
See pp152–3.

items now on view in a series
of rooms that includes furni-
ture, paintings, sculpture,
silver ware, pottery, needle-
work and porridge bowls, all
belonging to the orphan age,
or bequeathed to it. There
is also a reproduction of the
original found ling drawer that
used to be in Rochusstraat.


behind the high altar, displays
his paint ing of Our Lady and
the Christ Child Surrounded
by Saints, into which the
artist inserted the faces of
himself and his fam ily.
The rich interior of St-
Jacobskerk contains the
tombs of several notable
Antwerp families, and
a fine col lec tion of
17th-century art that
includes sculp tures
by Verbruggen as
well as paintings
by van Dyck, Otto
Venius – who was
Rubens’s first master – and
Jacob Jordaens (see p103).

instead of following in
his fath er’s footsteps, he
devoted himself to collect-
ing works of art. After his
death at the young age of
33, his mother created this
museum to display his col-
lections. Among the many
treasures on display here
are tapestries, fur niture,
ivory carvings, medieval
and Renaissance sculp-
ture, stained glass, and
a number of excellent
paintings. In particular,
Dulle Griet (Mad Meg) is
a powerful image of a
chaotic world, painted in
1562 by Pieter Brueghel
the Elder (see p103).
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