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Photo Blog Covering the City of Brussels, Belgium
twelve Ostrich sculptures Parc Leopold back of EU Parliament Brussels
Sculpture

Ostrich statues in Park Leopold next to the European Parliament

by Vincent July 5, 2020
written by Vincent

A new breed of birds have popped up in Park Leopold at the back of the European Parliament. You’ll notice a herd of twelve ostrich sculptures, five are standing while seven others have their heads in the ground have taken residence over the old unattractive ventilation vents.

Ostrich sculptures at the back of EU Parliament
The ostrich sculptures with half of them with their head buried in the ground can be found at Rue Wiertz 77, Etterbeek, Brussels

Designed by the architectural firm MSA, the project was done in effort to rehabilitation the park’s entrances and is not meant as a political statement around the work of the European Union like many would come to think.

Ostrich sculptures at the back of EU Parliament
Close-up picture of one of the ostrich sculptures made out of concrete

Rather just a reminder that between 1850 and 1900 and on this very location, live ostriches were held when the park was a zoological garden.

Ostrich sculptures at the back of EU Parliament
Ostrich sculptures with the building of the representation of the Free State of Bavaria to the European Union behind
Ostrich sculptures at the back of EU Parliament
Ostrich sculptures at the back of EU Parliament
Most of the ugly ventilation vents are now harder to see due to the rehabilitation plan
Ostrich sculptures at the back of EU Parliament
Ostrich sculptures at the back of EU Parliament
Ostrich sculptures at the back of EU Parliament
Ostriches sculpture with its head buried in the ground just behind the Press Service of the European Parliament

July 5, 2020 0 comments
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Sloth by Artist Nelson Dos Reis Street Art Bruegel walk in Maroles Brussels
urban art

Bruegel Street Art walk across the Marolles neighborhood

by Vincent July 3, 2020
written by Vincent

To celebrate the 450th anniversary of Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s death, the city of Brussels hired a collective of artists known under the name FarmProd to to pay homage to the painter and compose, through the Marolles neighborhood, a street art itinerary containing 12 murals freely inspired by the work of the master. This artistic walk completes the program of exhibitions devoted this year to Bruegel, in the capital, and across Belgium.


Starting with the Bruegel street art tour

The statue of Bruegel in Brussels
The Bruegel sculpture made by Tom Frantzen can be located at Place de la Chapelle, 1000 Brussels, Belgium.

A great place to begin your itinerary is at the Église Notre-Dame de la Chapelle (Church of Our Lady of the Chapel) just two minutes walk from the actual start of the street art tour. Right outside of the church where he was both married and buried, you will find a statue of Bruegel recently sculpted by Tom Frantzen. Bruegel’s history is closely linked to that of Brussels, and in particular, to the Marolles district where the tour takes place. It was indeed while living at 132 rue Haute from 1563 onward that he produced his most famous paintings.

The statue of Pieter Bruegel in Brussels

The sculpture represents the Bruegel in front of an imaginary canvas only delimited by a broken frame leaving room for the imagination and creativity of the passersby. This window is called “the open window”. It represents the open mind of the Renaissance humanist.

Here above in a close-up, you can see better the little monkey on his shoulder wearing a funnel on his head. This was added to symbolizes the satirical spirit of the artist.


Fred Lebbe - Farm Prod (BE)
The Fall of the Rebel Angels mural by Artist Fred Lebbe is located Corner rue Hate and rue Rollebeek, 100 Brussels, Belgium.

Fred Lebbe here made a faithful reproduction of the famous Bruegel painting “The fall of the rebel angels”. You can also find some of his characters in the Notre-Dame de la Chapelle church, which is right next door, and where Bruegel is buried.

Fred Lebbe - Farm Prod (BE)
Closer look at the spray painting mural depicting “The Fall of the Rebel Angels” of Bruegel by Artist Fred Lebbe

“I chose a particular part of this piece, as its pictorial universe speaks to me. My challenge was to interpret it as accurately as possible with the spray painting technique. It was a way to pay tribute to Bruegel’s technical prowess”

Artist Fred Lebbe on his “Fall of the Rebel Angels” mural

Patientia  by Hell'O (BEL).JPG
The Patientia mural by Artists of the Hell’O Collective is located at corner of rue hate and rue Notre-Seigneur 29-31, Brussels, Belgium.

The Patienta (Patience in English) mural is a very colorful and abstract rendition by the Hell’O Collective of the painting of the same name from Bruegel.

Patientia  by Hell'O (BE

At first, I thought it would take some wild imagination to be able to recognize anything in this mural from Bruegel’s 1556 painting. But the Hell’O Collective explains below.

Patientia  by Hell'O (BE)
Close-up picture of the Patience mural by the Hell’O Collective

“Patientia by Bruegel is an allegory of patience ( attempting to concretise abstract ideas), our intention was to work on a counter-allegory. To isolate elements of the original work that seemed interesting to us and translate them into simple, balanced and colorful geometric shapes.”

The Hell’O Collective went on to explained about the Mural


Le dénicheur et autres personnages by Les Crayons
Orgueil mural (right) by Artists of Les Crayons collective is found at Rue du miroir 7, Brussels, Belgium

Les Crayons Collective have also invited themselves into Bruegel’s universe with not one but two murals at the end of rue du Miroir. The one above is inspired his “Pride” engraving.

Le dénicheur & Orgueil By Les Crayons
“The nest robber” mural (left) by Artists of Les Crayons collective is found at Rue du miroir 3, Brussels, Belgium

The tree, where you can see the character hung, is taken from Bruegel’s painting “The Peasant and the Nest-Robber”. The exact meaning of the original is, to this date is still the subject of debate.


Nelson Dos Reis of Farm Prod (BE)
“Sloth” mural by Artist Nelson Dos Reis is found at rue Saint-Ghislain 75, Brussels, Belgium

Here as seen above and below, artist Nelson Dos Reis has chosen to represent only one of the fantastic creatures in the original Sloth drawing by Bruegel, made in 1557.

La paresse by Nelson Dos Reis
Close-up on “Paresse” mural by artist Nelson Dos Reis inspired by the engraving of Pieter Bruegel the Elder

“I have often been drawn by characters that are a little flawed or in anti-hero roles. Here, I wanted to pay tribute to Bruegel’s art in my own way by focusing on just one of his multiple creatures, isolating it from it’s context in the scene.”


Nelson Dos Reis goes on to explain about the mural

"L’âne à l’école" or The Ass in the School in English
“The ass in school” mural by Artist Alexis Corrand is found at rue Blaes 140, Brussels, Belgium

If you take the time to look up on 140 rue Blaes, you will discover a friendly little donkey depicted studying a book. Alexis Alexis Corrand made here a great rendition of Bruegel The Ass at School drawing.

“I chose this piece, of a teacher in the middle of a rowdy class; and I focused on just one character: The donkey which is seen coming out of a window. I positioned my donkey to give the illusion that it was coming out of the wall.”

Alexis Corrand goes on to explain about the choices in his mural

Landscape with the Flight into Egypt by Piotr Szlachta
“Landscape with the Flight into Egypt” mural by Artist Piotr Szlachta is found at rue des Capucins 7, Brussels, Belgium

Piotr Szlachta reveals his personal interpretation of Joseph & Mary’s “Flight to Egypt” on 9 rue des Capucins. The Brussels artist, Born in Warsaw, Poland retains the classic Bruegel style, while adding a few modern touches to the painting like an EU flag. The artist chose this painting, located in one of the most multicultural neighborhoods of Brussels, to remind people that the migrations of populations has always been occurring since the beginning of times.

Landscape with the Flight into Egypt by Piotr Szlachta

Here above you can see the Landscape with the Flight into Egypt” mural in it’s entirety


Self-portrait Pieter Bruegel the elder by Arno 2bal
“Pieter Bruegel the Elder self portrait” mural by Artist Arno 2bal is found at rue du Chevreuil 16 , Brussels, Belgium

Just on the corner of Place du Jeu de Balle going onto rue du Chevreuil is where you will find the mural by Belgian artist Arno Debal aka Arno 2bal. His rendition is very faithful to the original self-portrait of Bruegel made in 1682 but background has been cleverly modified to include words common expressions and puns in the local “Brusseleir dialect“. You can better make out the text in the picture below.

Self-portrait Pieter Bruegel the elder by Arno 2bal

A list of typical Brusseleir expressions is shown in the background in alphabetic order in the picture above


The Tower of Babel by Artist Kim Demane
“The Tower of Babel” mural by Artist Kim Deman aka Delicious Brains is found at rue des Renards 1F , Brussels, Belgium

Easy to miss walking down rue des renards as it’s somewhat hidden in the courtyard of the Bruegel Cultural Center, you will find a beautiful interpretation of one of Bruegel’s most famous paintings “The Tower of Babel” by artist Delicious Brains . The Swedish artist of his real name Kim Deman brings a colorful contrast to the original 1563 painting.

The Tower of Babel by Kim Demane

“For me, Babylon represents a symbol of oppression. A dark world where power thirsty men seeking to rule over others by force from one gigantic tower. Sadly, this is still the foundation of our society today. Even though Bruegel painted this many centuries ago, the theme is still very relevant today.”

Artist Kim Demane of Delicious Brains (SE)  

The Parable of the Good Shepherd by Farm Prod

“The Parable of the Good Shepherd” mural by 6 Artists of the Farm Prod collective Arno 2bal is found at rue des Renards, 38-40 , Brussels, Belgium

Going up on rue Haute, at the corner of rue des renards, you will find the mural created collectively by 6 members of FarmProd: Alexis Corrand, Arno Debal, Nelson Dos Reis, Fred Lebbe, Piotr Szlachta & Gui Tar.

The Parable of the Good Shepherd by FarmProd

Inspired by “The Parable of the Good Shepherd” of Pieter Bruegel the Elder, here above by looking more closely you will notice that the sheep in the original work has been replaced by a fox, a nod to the name of the street, but also to this emblematic animal of Brussels.


The Hunters in the Snow by Guillaume Desmarets
“The Hunters in the Snow” mural by Artist Guillaume Desmarets aka Guitar is found at rue  de la Rasière 32 , Brussels, Belgium

At the corner of rues Haute and La Rasière, you will find one of Bruegel’s emblematic works “the hunters in the snow”. But why exactly did artist Gui Tar turn dogs into rats?

The Hunters in the Snow by artist Guillaume Desmarets
Close-up on the mural inspired by “The Hunters in the Snow” of Bruegel by Artist Guitar

“I was immediately attracted by the composition and surrealist  atmosphere of this scene. I decided to focus on the hunters and their hounds. By retaining the compositional elements, I transformed the subject and the graphic aesthetic. The scene depicts rat hunters pursued by their prey, all in a fluffy universe which resembles a dream. It’s a kind of surreal allegory of the absurd.”

Artist Guillaume Desmarets aka Gui Tar

The Wedding Dance by Lazoo (FR)

“The Wedding Dance” mural by artist Lazoo is found at rue Haute 399, Brussels, Belgium

The tour ends with one final mural on rue Haute 399. French artist Yann Lazoo, took his his inspiration from Bruegel’s painting “The Wedding Dance” by transforming its protagonists into more contemporary urban characters from hip-hop culture.

July 3, 2020 0 comments
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Street art rue de namur Brussels bird flying away
urban art

Rue de Namur Street Art

by Vincent June 28, 2020
written by Vincent

Next time you take the sinuous road that connects the high end shops of the Porte de Namur to the museum district and Grand Place take some time to look up to around as several news murals by the artistic collective Propaganza have gone up in order to embellish this popular artery of Brussels.

Backstory: While Brussels is better known for its comic strip murals, the Minister of Culture has recently allocated a budget of 100 000 euros a year for young and talented artists to showcase their art on the walls of the city of Brussels.

The works was done by six artists in 2015: Spear, Eyes B, Parole, Koolkoor, Steve Locatelli and Nova Dead.

Sagesse Mural by Spear

The Sagesse Mural by Artist Spear is located at rue de Namur 14, Brussels, Belgium


Mural Rue de Namur by artist Parole

This Mural by Artist Paroles is found at rue de Namur 5, Brussels, Belgium

Mural Namur Street by artist Parole

Paroles is a self-taught artist, he draws mostly words and letters, he has to his credit numerous exhibitions in France, Belgium and even one in Lebanon.


Flower Mural by Artist Orkez

This Flower Mural by Artist Orkez is found at rue de Namur 65a, Brussels, Belgium


Mural rue de Namur

Unknown Artist, was here prior to the work of the the PROPAGANZA collective


Bird Mural rue de Namur
Bird mural by Steve Locatelli located at rue de Namur 82, 1000 Brussels, Belgium

Mural by Artist Eyes-B

Mural by Eyes-B located on the corner of rue du Baudet and rue de Namur 49, Brussels


COVID-19 mask

COVID-19 Chic sold in a store rue along de Namur


Street art by Kool Koor
Abstract work by Kool Koor located at rue de Namur 64, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
June 28, 2020 0 comments
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Museum

MIMA ZOO Exhibit

by Vincent June 21, 2020
written by Vincent

Located on the emblematic site of the former Belle-Vue brewery, The MIMA (Millennium Iconoclast Museum of Art) is an all new contemporary art museum dedicated to Culture 2.0. With their latest “Zoo” exhibit, you are invited to enter an anthropomorphic universe where animals come out of cages to see what these furry or feathered characters tell us about Humans.

Main entrance

This visually very strong exhibition presents the work of eleven international artists from all walks of life: graphics, illustration, graffiti, tattoo, etc. Sections of art too often neglected. Here a carnivorous smile crunches a critique of society, there it expresses our bestiality. Suggestive and satirical, this always pop culture exhibition prompts spectators to take another look at their own nature and their place in this world.

This joyfully colorful wild vision of society exhibit is until August 30 in Brussels.


Staring with the wild signature style of Swedish artist @Finsta

Art work by @finstafari
Art work by @finstafari
Art work by @finstafari

Piet Parra (NL) is visual artist, former professional skateboarder, graphic artist, fashion designer and musician he is a jack of all trades. His aesthetics combines a talent for the visual with a poetics of the absurd where characters and freehand typography are discretely intertwined. The Dutchman is also the brilliant creator of the MIMA logo!

Piet Parra (NL) excels in the poetics of the absurd
Piet Parra (NL) excels in the poetics of the absurd

His art is easily recognized by the funny bird-headed characters that are his trademark

Piet Parra excels in the poetics of the absurd
Artist Piet Parra (NL) excells in the poetics of the absurd

A closer look at Piet Parra’s take on Tintin and Snowy from Hergé

Tintin and Snowy

Based in Los Angeles, Steven Harrington explores the psychedelic pop scene. His works are rooted deep in the California hippie culture. In his creation below, he envisions a wolf visiting his own universe in his painting, which morphs into a “living” sculpture. The message conveyed by him is: “Choose the role you want to play in life, it is your actions that define you.”

Steven Harrington (US) is based in Los Angeles
Steven Harrington (US) is based in Los Angeles
Steven Harrington (US)
Steven Harrington (US) is based in Los Angeles

Marti Sawe is a Spanish artist that paints and sculpts by collage, superimposition and contrast of colors. The patchwork of techniques and collage come together into a global subject that is recognizable at first glance used by the artist to deliver a critical message about the society we live in. His themes often portrait the invasion of technology in our lives and our resulting distancing from nature. The artist delivers a reflection on the purpose of technology, the overdose of social networking and the symbolic hijacking of the image of the animal to exploit emotions when our humanity is driving them to brick of extinction.

Marti Sawe (ES) EN The Spanish artist paints and sculpts by collage
Marti Sawe (ES) EN The Spanish artist paints and sculpts by collage,
Marti Sawe (ES) EN The Spanish artist paints and sculpts by collage
Marti Sawe is a Spanish artist paints and sculpts by collage
Marti Sawe (ES) EN The Spanish artist paints and sculpts by collage,
Marti Sawe (ES) EN The Spanish artist paints and sculpts by collage

Pablo Dalas is a French visual artist and tattoo designer exploring the aesthetics of old animated movie characters. He loves to distort his subjects with an illusion of rapid film movement, known as smears in animated films. The excessive repetition of the effect gives a nightmarish taint to a childlike universe that is normally reassuring. By hijacking Disney aesthetic, which has been fabricating children’s dreams for almost a century, Pablo Dalas critics our immature society locked in a fantasy worldview that remains cut off from reality and its responsibilities.

Pablo Dalas (FR)
Pablo Dalas (FR)
Pablo Dalas (FR)
Pablo Dalas (FR)

Rhys Lee (Australia) is a Melbourne artist that specializing in hybrid totem figures on canvas or in ceramic. The Artist’s works are infused with a graphic presence of the cartoon character, bordering on grotesque and macabre. His strokes are fast and spontaneous with great freedom. These qualities recall the urgency and vitality so present in graffiti, something he explored intensely during the ’90’s when he was out as a street artist.

Rhys Lee (AUS) is a Melbourne artist
Rhys Lee (AUS) is a Melbourne artist
Rhys Lee (AUS) is a Melbourne artist
Rhys Lee (AUS) is a Melbourne artist

Russell Maurice (UK) is English artist and a leading figure of a pictorial movement named the “Comic Abstraction movement” who takes from the aesthetics of the earlier part of our 20th century animations. Artists who identified with this movement, usually come from a street graffiti background .

Russell Maurice (UK)

Todd James (US) is a New York artist that first gained notoriety under the alias REAS as a young graffiti street artist in the earlier portion of the 1980’s. Today his art mostly depicts cartoons. He was part of the exhibits: “Beautiful Losers”, “Street Market” and “Art in the Street”, which were the precursors that knocked open the doors of contemporary art to artists from street subcultures. The art he chose for this particular exhibit expose the military-industrial lobby of which the American dream was based upon.

Todd James (US)
Todd James (US)
Todd James (US)
Todd James (US)
Todd James (US)
Todd James (US)

Ryan Travis Christian (US) With great talent, this Chicago-based artist portraits a dysfunctional society. His drawings are evocative of old cartoons, scorned for committing desecrating the innocence that covers the eyes of young. Through the use of vintage cartoons, he both celebrates and denouces the American model. He blames the conformism of the individual and his stereotypical view of the world as manufactured by the entertainment industry. The cartoons also tackle social issues such as drugs and violence immigration.

Ryan Travis Christian (USA)
Ryan Travis Christian (USA)
Ryan Travis Christian (USA)
Ryan Travis Christian (USA)
Ryan Travis Christian (USA)

This Belgian artist identifies with the Lowbrow movement, a popular art movement that takes it’s origins from a mix of things: Underground comic books and video games, tikki culture, graffiti street art and tattoo… Lowbrow art is often includes humor, as is the work of artist here at times joyful and others sarcastic and mischievous. Often portrayed in a cheery patchwork of images with meanings superimposed on the canvas reflects the image of a Western culture that are recycled ad nauseum,

Laurent Impeduglia (BE)
Laurent Impeduglia (BE)
Laurent Impeduglia (BE)
A closer look reveals the Belgian political circus depicted here

Laurent Impeduglia (BE)
Laurent Impeduglia (BE)
Laurent Impeduglia (BE)

Artist Egle Zvirblyte (Lithuania) The XL curves of the women depicted in these drawings is an ode to a liberated and self-assured female sexuality. Egle’s work is both modern and pop, as if Matisse’s “Dance” had embarked on the Beatles’ “Yellow submarine”. The characters depicted are an hymn to life and hedonism. Zvirblyte has created for the ZOO Exhibit a labyrinth inspired by the “unicursal” model in Greek mythology.The art work is named the “temple of transmutation” and is separated into three distinct areas named: Celebration, Honoring and Ritual of transformation.

Artist Egle Zvirblyte (Lithuania)
Artist Egle Zvirblyte (Lithuania)
Artist Egle Zvirblyte (Lithuania)
Artist Egle Zvirblyte (Lithuania) Artist Egle Zvirblyte (Lithuania)
Artist Egle Zvirblyte (Lithuania)

View from the open rooftop over the Canal in Molenbeek area

View fom the Canal from Mima

Uknown artist

Uknown artist
June 21, 2020 0 comments
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urban art

Luxuria mural by street artist Phlegm honors Bruegel

by Vincent June 20, 2020
written by Vincent

Renowned Welsh-born street artist Phlegm has created a gigantic fresco on the facade of the KBR (National Library of Belgium) inspired by the work of Pieter Bruegel the Elder. As a huge admirer of the Renaissance artist himself, Phlegm was honored to be asked to a modern rendition of Bruegel’s Seven Deadly Sins series.


"Luxuria" mural by Phlegm using a Bruegel theme
“Luxuria” mural by Phlegm using a Bruegel theme at Mont des Arts on the facade of KBR, near the main entrance.

Currently, various events exhibitions and events have been setup to commemorate his death 450 years ago. Have a look on the official Brussels Tourism page for more info.

June 20, 2020 0 comments
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