Unknown Brussels – Trends magazines on PC
It is well known that Brussels has architectural gems of Art Nouveau and Art Deco. The Brussels Biennale – Neoclassic draws attention to a lesser-known style: the neoclassical patrimony.
The second edition of the Brussels Biennale focuses on the neoclassical architecture of the capital. Although less known at first glance, the program exports to many buildings. One of the truth is the Palace of the National…
The second edition of the Brussels Biennale focuses on the neoclassical architecture of the capital. Although less known at first glance, the program exports to many buildings. One such case is the Palace of the Nation, the seat of the federal parliament. The Cercle Gaulois opposite it, that part of the Vauxhall, the eighteenth-century pleasure center for the Brussels bourgeois style, was also built in that. A little further on is the St. James-op-de-Coudenberg Church, with its impressive columns and pediment, another neoclassical eye-catcher, next to the Royal Chapel, which now houses the Protestant church. In addition to these official buildings, visitors will also have access to places that are otherwise closed to the public during the biennale. The studio of the funeral sculptor Ernest Salu is open near the Laeken cemetery and in the European quarter you can discover where the painter, theosophist and patron Marcel Hastir worked. In Schaerbeek, the former country house of the wealthy cloth merchant Charles-Louis Eenens opens its doors. created, La Maison des Arts is located, which organizes temporary exhibitions.