The Art & History Museum's new gallery spotlights Belgium's rich Art Nouveau and Art Deco heritage. Art Nouveau takes center stage, having exploded in prosperous Belgium around 1900 with its distinctive stylistic variety.
A major star is the fully restored winter garden Victor Horta designed in 1900 for engineer Jean Cousin, dismantled in the 1960s and now dramatically reassembled.
The iconic 1912 jewelry boutique designed by Horta for Brussels' prestigious Wolfers Frères house has been faithfully reconstructed at full original scale inside a dedicated museum gallery showcasing the brand's legacy through a selection of outstanding Art Nouveau pieces.
After the museum we headed down to Place Jourdan and Maison Antoine widely hailed as one of the best spots for the famous Belgian frites. They follow the classic Belgian double-fry method: low-temp first for fluffiness inside, high-temp second for that perfect golden crisp.
After our frites stop we headed up into the heart of the European Quarter (Quartier Européen / Europese Wijk).
The uphill trek after a mountain of frites is a classic Brussels move, nothing powers a political pilgrimage like a full belly of mayonnaise-slathered chips!
Above is the 'Justus Lipsius' building, the main headquarters of the Council of the European Union (the institution where ministers from the 27 member states meet to negotiate and adopt EU laws).
We wandered through their visitors centre which does a great job of making the EU feel approachable and forward-looking, especially with their interactive exhibits on how member states collaborate. Seeing young people there in numbers amplified that impression, it draws university students on field trips, Erasmus folks and curious 20 somethings from across Europe (and beyond). As you can see from the pic above Pauline couldn't quite get to grips withe the ear piece.
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