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The art of getting to know Belgium

Go beyond the country’s ‘serious’ reputation to discover its art, architecture and fashion scene

    • Adoration of the Mystic Lamb in St Bavo's Cathedral.
    • Bozar Centre of the Arts is a home for surrealist art by the likes of James Ensor.
    • Flemish artist James Ensor's Pierrot et squelettes 1905 is on dispay at BOZAR.
    • A Smurfs street mural in Brussels.
    • Zurenborg Art Nouveau neighbourhood in Antwerp.
    • A visit to Maison Hannon is a must.
    • Surrealism heavyweight Musee Magritte celebrates the 100th anniversary  of the art movement in 2024.
    • Maison Hannon is a stunning sunlit townhouse museum.
    • Brussels in Spring.
    • Magritte Bar serves cocktail interpretations of famous Rene Magritte paintings.
    • Mary is a family-run chocolate business.
    • Adoration of the Mystic Lamb in St Bavo's Cathedral. PHOTO: AUDREY PHOON
    • Bozar Centre of the Arts is a home for surrealist art by the likes of James Ensor. PHOTO: BOZAR CENTRE OF THE ARTS
    • Flemish artist James Ensor's Pierrot et squelettes 1905 is on dispay at BOZAR. PHOTO: BOZAR CENTRE FOR FINE ARTS
    • A Smurfs street mural in Brussels. PHOTO: AUDREY PHOON
    • Zurenborg Art Nouveau neighbourhood in Antwerp. PHOTO: AUDREY PHOON
    • A visit to Maison Hannon is a must. PHOTO: AUDREY PHOON
    • Surrealism heavyweight Musee Magritte celebrates the 100th anniversary of the art movement in 2024. PHOTO: ERIC DANHIER
    • Maison Hannon is a stunning sunlit townhouse museum. PHOTO: AUDREY PHOON
    • Brussels in Spring. PHOTO: AUDREY PHOON
    • Magritte Bar serves cocktail interpretations of famous Rene Magritte paintings. PHOTO: AUDREY PHOON
    • Mary is a family-run chocolate business. PHOTO: VISITBRUSSELS
    Published Thu, May 23, 2024 · 06:00 PM

    LEGEND has it that sometime in the 11th century, in a region now part of Brussels, a two-year-old duke saved his troops by urinating on enemy soldiers from the branches of a tree. Centuries later, an artist immortalised the pint-sized hero in bronze, and today, the statue of the Manneken Pis (Dutch for “little pissing man”) is recognised by locals as a symbol of the Belgian spirit: playful, inventive, down-to-earth, and subtly subversive. 

    Zurenborg Art Nouveau neighbourhood in Antwerp. PHOTO: AUDREY PHOON

    To outsiders, these characteristics might seem surprising.

    Belgium can appear buttoned up, even boring, beneath its “serious” labels: de facto capital of Europe, home to the European Union and many political international organisations. 

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