Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
GREATER BRUSSELS 81

Musée des Beaux-


Arts d’Ixelles 2


Rue Jean van Volsem 71, Ixelles,
1050 BRU. Road Map B4. Tel (02)



  1. @ 34, 54, 64, 71, 80.
    Q Porte de Namur. v 24, 25, 81.

    11:30am–5pm Tue–Sun. 7 =


    http://www.museedixelles.be




The commune of Ixelles
possesses a remarkably rich
art collection, presented in
this small but highly reward-
ing gallery. It contains
intrig uing but little-known
work by painters such as
Rembrandt, Fragonard and
Picasso and original posters
by Toulouse-Lautrec. There is
a good variety of work by the
Belgian Symbolists Léon
Frédéric and Léon Spilliaert.
Other Belgian artists such as
Magritte and Rik Wouters are
represented with such pieces
as a copy of the latter’s
exuberant bronze sculp ture
La Vierge Folle (The Mad
Virgin). The museum is also
noted for temporary exhibits.


Musée Constantin


Meunier 3


Rue de l’Abbaye 59, Ixelles, 1050
BRU. Road Map B4. Tel (02)



  1. @ 38, 60. v 23, 93, 94.

    10am–noon and 1–5pm Tue–Fri.


    = http://www.fine-arts-museum.be




Brussels-born Constantin
Meunier (1831–1905) was
an artist of great distinction,
a realist who painted gritty
industrial scenes in keeping


with his socialist sympathies.
He is best known for bronze
sculptures of factory workers,
such as the puddleurs (forge-
workers). These were largely
inspired by his visits to indus-
trial regions around Liège
(see pp216–19) and Charleroi
(see p187) in the 1870s and
1880s. The figures speak
eloquently of that era – bent
by their grim toil and hard-
ships, they nonetheless retain
an air of indom itable dignity.
This museum, a branch
of the Musées Royaux des
Beaux-Arts (see pp68–73),
is located in Meunier’s
former home and studio,
built in 1899, where Meunier
lived and worked for the last
five years of his life. In
addition to the sculptures for
which he is famous, the
museum also has a good
cross section of his paintings
and documents, as well as
informative exhibits that
demon strate some of his
working techniques.

Charmingly geometric Art Deco style at Musée David et Alice van Buuren

Wouters’s La Vierge Folle in the
Musée des Beaux-Arts d’Ixelles


Musée David et
Alice van Buuren 4

Avenue Léo Errera 41, Uccle, 1180
BRU. Road Map B4. Tel (02)


  1. @ 60, 134. v 23, 90.

    2–5:30pm Wed–Mon. & =


    http://www.museumvanbuuren.com




Set in the prosperous, leafy
suburb of Uccle, this museum
delights on two levels. First,
it is a comfortable, relaxed
villa, originally built and fur-
nished in the late 1920s in a
user-friendly Art Deco style
for the Dutch banker David
van Buuren and his wife.

Second, since the van Buurens
used their fortune to invest in
their pas sion for art, the house
contains an out standing
private collection of artwork.
The art on display includes
a priceless ver sion of The Fall
of Icarus by Pieter Brueghel
the Elder, as well as paintings
and sculptures by Vincent van
Gogh, James Ensor and Rik
Wouters. Artists from the St-
Martens-Latem School of Art
(see p136), such as Constant
Permeke and Gustave van
de Woestyne, are also well
rep resented in the collection.
The van Buurens’s quest
for harmonious surroundings
extended to the beautiful
series of gardens outside,
which were carefully
designed according to Art
Deco princ iples of stylistic
geometry by the noted
land scape architects, René
Pechère and Jules Buyssens.

The iconic Blacksmith sculpture on
view at Meunier’s former home
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