Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
KANAL - Centre Pompidou is a museum for modern and contemporary art located in Brussels, Belgium, near the Brussels–Charleroi Canal, in the former Citroën Garage buildings. [3] The opening is scheduled for 2026. [4] [5] During the renovations, the museum remains open at its temporary location K1, at 1, avenue du Port / Havenlaan. [6]
The Millennium Iconoclast Museum of Art (MIMA) is a contemporary art museum in Molenbeek-Saint-Jean, a municipality of Brussels, Belgium. It is a privately owned non-profit museum that was founded in 2016. It is located at 41, quai du Hainaut / Henegouwenkaai, along the Brussels–Charleroi Canal, in the former building of the Belle-Vue brewery.
WIELS is a contemporary art centre in Forest, a municipality of Brussels, Belgium. The centre opened in 2007 in the former Blomme building, which belonged to the Wielemans-Ceuppens brewery. [ 1 ] It has three exhibition platforms with a total exhibition space of 1,800 m 2 (19,000 sq ft), an auditorium, studio workshops for artists-in-residence ...
Museums of the Far East (Japanese Tower and Chinese Pavilion) (part of Royal Museums of Art and History) City of Brussels : Art: Fin-de-Siècle Museum: City of Brussels Art Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium: City of Brussels: Fine art: Major art gallery featuring fine art from the 15th to the 20th century by Belgian and international artists
6 Brussels. 7 Deinze. 8 Dendermonde. 9 Engis. 10 Ghent. 11 Grimbergen. 12 Halle. 13 Harelbeke. ... Museum of Modern Art Antwerp (MuHKA) Plantin-Moretus Museum; Museum ...
The museum was founded on 1 September 1801 by Napoleon [1] [2] and opened in 1803 as the Museum of Fine Arts of Brussels (French: Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bruxelles, Dutch: Museum voor Schone Kunsten van Brussel), occupying fourteen rooms of the former Palace of Charles of Lorraine, known as the "Old Court".
Victor Horta began designing the Centre for Fine Arts in Brussels following World War I, in a more geometric style than his previous works, similar to Art Deco. The Belgian Parliament initially denied funding for the plans. [3] With the founding of the Société du Palais des Beaux-Arts in 1922, the project was revived.
The new museum complex at the Cinquantenaire was named the Royal Museums of Decorative and Industrial Arts. That name was changed in 1912 to the Royal Museums of the Cinquantenaire, but, to prevent confusion, had to be changed yet again when the Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History was also established at the Cinquantenaire in 1922 ...