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Photo Blog Covering the City of Brussels, Belgium
ADAM Museum Temporary PUNK DESIGN exhibit
Museum

ADAM Temporary Exhibit Punk Graphics: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die

by Vincent June 19, 2020
written by Vincent

The Punk Graphics expo: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die, was originally created in 2018 at the Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) in New York and is now shown for the first time in Europe at the ADAM Brussels Design Museum. The exhibit is is based on Andrew Kristine’s extensive collection of punk memorabilia that includes flyers, posters, albums, promotional items and fanzines from 1976 to 1986.

Walking through the Punk Graphics Exhibit

In his youth, this New York investment banker was a front-seat witness to the birth of the punk movement. Fascinated by the inventiveness of punk graphic productions, began his collecting early as a teenager, and has accumulated over 3000 pieces over the space of four decades.

ADAM MUSEUM BRUSSELS: Punk Graphics Exhibit
Siouxsie and the Banshees and Hüsker Dü posters

His exhibition illustrates in particular the influence of the anti-establishment attitude of this counter culture, which favored a ‘DIY’ and ‘artisanal’ approach at a time when the professional graphic sector were turning to computers. The bands created their own posters and record covers, while fans created flyers and fanzines using typewriters, cutting letters out from newspapers and magazines to design their own rebel typography.

ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN exhibit
GBH & Killing Joke posters

Punk graphics is also characterized by a great freedom of inspiration: all art forms, teen pop culture (comics, popular novels, science fiction, horror films, etc.) or the style of the 1950s and 1960s were appropriated freely. Collage was the reference technique; stencil the preferred mode of reproduction; contestation, irony and bright colors the essential ingredients.

ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN exhibit
Here displayed a collection of Belgian punk vinyls records

There was a reciprocal relationship between the art world and the punk music scene, especially in cities like New York and London. The Andy Warhol influence can be easily seen for instance just below with the portraits of artists below of Elvis Costello, Nick Lowe, and Ian Dury.

Andy Warhol inflence on Punk art
Andy Warhol Pop art reflected in these portraits

After studying graphic design at Manchester Polytechnic in 1978, Peter Saville became one of the founding members of Factory Records. Saville created many memorable album covers and promotions for bands and projects associated with the company including designs for Joy Division and its successor band New Order. In step with the postmodernist tendencies of the times, Saville often looked to art and design history for inspiration. For this poster below used to promote the album Closer, Saville explores the neoclassical.

ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN exhibit

The poster features a contemporaneous photograph taken by Bernard Pierre Wolff of the Appiani family tomb in Genoa’s famed Monumental Cemetery of Staglieno, sculpted by Demetrio Pernio around 1910. Rendered beautifully in dramatic light and shadow, it depicts the scene of the family’s bereavement. The image and the classical typography were chosen for their ability to quickly contrast the very modem music of the band with this seemingly ancient image in which it was wrapped. It was, however, an image whose grieving tone would be brought much closer to home following the tragic suicide of Joy Division’s lead singer Ian Curtis.


ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN exhibit
Punk chic

One of the most iconic images of rock music (below on the left) when Pennie Smith captured The Clash bassist Paul Simonon smashing his guitar against the stage during a concert at The Palladium in New York in 1979. The image is framed by the pink and green typography mimicking Elvis Presley’s 1956 eponymous debut album.

ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN exhibit

Despite these two strong visual elements, this promotional poster owes much to artist Andy Warhol and his use of repetition. The horizontal step-and-repeat of the design creates a still animation effect of this frenzied action, while also alluding to Warhol’s own series of Elvis canvases, which ranged from a single iconic pose to multiple repeat images of the singer.


ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN exhibit
Colorful art in the rooms of the Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit

ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit

Answer WE ARE DEVO Poster!!! The mention on the bottom refer to “Jocko Homo” the B-side of their 1st single, “Mongoloid”


ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit
Walking around the Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit

ADAM Museum: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit
Black Flag and D.O.A. are some of the founders of the Punk Hardcore movement that started late “70’s was of my era

Jamie Reid, creator of legendary graphics for the Sex Pistols, designed this poster to promote the single California Über Alles, an anti-fascist song from the San Francisco based Punk band the Dead Kennedys. The title refers to the first stanza of the German national anthem “Deutschland, Deutschland Über alles” (“Germany, Germany above everything”), a lyric that was dropped following the end of World War II because of its close associations with Nazism and anti-Antisemitism.

ADAM Museum: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit


The 1979 song is a satirical attack on Jerry Brown, then Governor of California (1975-1983) and depicts a fascist vision of a future America based on post-hippie values. In this imagined totalitarian world, a California ethos of healthy living, cheerful music, and fashion-consciousness dominates a docile society ruled by a liberal dictator. Reid uses the swastika adorned with cannabis leaves to create a decorative border, a design treatment that evokes its pre-Nazi era use as a symbol of good fortune in, among other things, architectural pat-terns and decorative tile work.

Here is a video of the Dead Kennedys in concert with the 7-inch single version of the song playing

Long before the swastika was adopted by the Nazis in the 1930’s, it was widely used in various cultures around the world for centuries, from its ancient roots as an Eastern religious icon in Hinduism and Buddhism to a sign of auspiciousness and good luck in Western Greek, Celtic, and Baltic traditions.


The same year in 1979 and at the age of 21, Jello Biafra ran for Mayor of San Francisco. His platform was quite unconventional and included ideas such as requiring police officers to run for election by the residents of the neighborhoods they patrol, legalizing squatting in vacant buildings and forcing businessmen to wear clown suits within the SF city limits, He came In 3rd out of 10 In the Mayoral Race.


ADAM Museum: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit
Jello Biafra with NOMEANSNO “The Sky Is Falling and I Want My Mommy” poster promoting the new album.

ADAM Museum: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit
Which Punk era are you from? The Circle Jerks sticker there was one of the iconic bands of my era

ADAM Museum: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit

CRASS Band Punk/political artist Gee Vaucher’s “Your Country Needs You.” Anti-War song was released with the uncensored re-issue on The bands album “The Feeding of the 5,000.”


ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit
Some of the more noticeable posters among them Talking Heads, PIL, Bauhaus & Butthole Surfers on the left.

ADAM Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit

American artist Pettibon came to prominence in the early 1980s in the southern California punk rock scene for the Black Flag album covers and band logo. His target in the Zine zine above was the drug-wrecked hippie movement of the 1960’s.


Adam Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit
Plastic Bertrand was the internationally known be Belgian New Wave Artist for his hit single “Ça plane pour moi”.

Adam Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit
The Ramones, UK SUBS at Ancienne Belgique & Bérurier noir show flyers at Plan K

Adam Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit

Adam Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit

The Clash 1979 Tour & Give them enough rope album posters


Adam Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit
The Cramps, Siouxsie and the Banshees & The Damned posters on display

ADam Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit

Talking Heads Speaking Tongues LP


ADam Museum PUNK DESIGN: Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die exhibit

Punks often used dark humor imagery to provoke, the picture of German abbot Alban Schachleiter walking among rows of Nazi brownshirts offering Hitler salutes and appearing to return the salute is a great example and was used for a concert poster in the early 1980 while promoting the Malicious Damage album and was also used on Laugh? I Nearly Bought One!

June 19, 2020 0 comments
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Ferris Wheel

The View Ferris Wheel

by Vincent June 18, 2020
written by Vincent

Looking for the best place to get panoramic views over the city of Brussels but don’t know where to go? The newly re-opened “The View” Ferris Wheel attraction just next to the Palace of Justice is your answer.

The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

Already considered to be one of the best viewpoints in our capital, now you can go an extra 55 meters up in the air to enjoy one of the most beautiful panorama of Brussels and its surroundings. Its creator, René Bufkens is no newbie in the business. A few years ago, he acquired the “Grande Roue de Paris” and at last received the long-awaited authorization to install his big wheel in Brussels where he had always dreamed of it being: Square Poelaert.

The prices: 8 € for adults and 5 € for children under 12.

The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

A bar with chairs is fond on the left side of the Ferris wheel if you fancy a drink


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

The Big wheel and bar area in it’s entirety


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

Poelaert Square is already considered to be viewpoints of the capital.


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

This is often used as gathering place on a nice and sunny day for people to stop by and have a drink while admiring the view over the lower portion of Brussels


The View from Brussels Ferris Wheel

The extra 55 meters does make a difference


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

Ticketing booth


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

Closer look at the individual cabins


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

When the Palace of Justice of Brussels was completed in 1883, it was at the time the largest building in the world with a total surface of 26 thousand square meters


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

On the bottom left is the elevator that connect the higher and lower Brussels


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

You’ll find these blue deck chairs with a bar at quite a few locations in Brussels and


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

View of Square Poelaert from the big wheel


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

Bar at the base of the Ferris wheel


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

Closer picture of the cabins behind a blue sky place Poelart


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

“The View” Ferris wheel in it’s entirety


The View Brussels Ferris Wheel

The Midi tower seen here in the background, is at 171 meters and 37-story high, the biggest building of Belgium (Think small seems to be our motto)

June 18, 2020 0 comments
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Visit to the ADAM Brussels Design Museum
Museum

ADAM Brussels Design Museum: Permanent Plastic Design Expo

by Vincent June 17, 2020
written by Vincent

The ADAM: Brussels Design Museum Permanent Plastic Design exhibit pays a big homage to plastic design creativity. Most of what is on display dates from the golden age of the ’60’s & the 70’s when plastic chic was at it’s zenith. Of the entire 2000 strong collection, started in the ’80s by Philippe Decelle, about 500 furniture and household items are permanently displayed. The collection offers some interesting thought provoking designs and prototypes that are sure to bring back back nostalgia to those lucky enough to have lived through this special era. This reminds us just how quickly things evolve in just a few decades.

The ADAM: Brussels Design Museum Permanent

Adam Brussels Design Museum

The ADAM Design Museum is conveniently located just 150 meters from one of the most visited sights of Brussels, the 1958 Expo Atomium. Entrance to the ADAMN is free for those who purchased t a ticket to the Atomium at 16 EUR, otherwise the ADAM entrance is 10 EUR which makes the bundle a great value.

Entrance to the Adam Brussels Design Museum

The hard to miss entrance in big yellow letters


Entrance to the Adam Brrussels Design Museum

The colorful exterior staircase


Plastic Design Permanent Collection

Entrance to the Plasticarium Collextion

Zombie Chair by Roger Tallon 1967

Zombie Chair by Roger Tallon made for the Astrolabe Café in Paris (1967)


Spehere d'isolement S2 by Maurice Claude Vivildi 1970

The isolation chamber by Maurice Claude Vivildi (1970)


Television sets from the 60's and 70's

Various Television sets from the 60’s & 70’s


Plastic fashion wear

Fashion wear

Nicolas L foot Armchair (1968)

Foot Armchair by Nicolas L (1968)


The entrance to the Adamn Brrussels Museum

Plastic Arts


Homme Chair by Ruth Francken in 1970

“Homme” Chair by Ruth Francken (1970)


Nastro Chair by Ceasare Leonardi1961

Nastro Chair by Ceasare Leonardi (1961)


Annie Tribel Coquille table

Coquille table seat by Annie Tribel (1968)


Goldorak 1975 flastic figurine

Plastic figurines by Mattel: Goldorak, Gaiking & Dragun (1975)


The Pratt chair by Gaetano Pesce in 1984

The Pratt chair by Gaetano Pesce (1984)


Radical Plastic Designs

Joe Armchair on the left the by Jonathan De Pas (1971)


Plastic Head

Plastic head by unknown artist


Dondolo armchair by Ceasare Leonard  in 1967

Dondolo armchair by Cesare Leonardi (1967)


Pamtonaef the swiss assembly game

Pantonaef: the Swiss lego-like assembly game


Desk and chair from 70's

Tag'liatelli armchar by Ane Quinze (2005)

Tag’liatelli armchar by Ane Quinze (2005)


Some of the record players and phones on display at ADAM Museum

Phones and record players from the ’70’s


Vittorio Parigi desk 1970

Desk by Vittorio Parigi (1970)


Jean Luc Favriau sofa

Sofa by Jean Luc Favriau


Lady Braun austronette hair drier

70’s Lady Braun space age Astronette hair dryer

June 17, 2020 0 comments
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statue

Leopold II & Baudouin statue vandalized in Brussels

by Vincent June 14, 2020
written by Vincent

The statue of King Leopold II riding proudly on his horse at Place du Trône, just steps away from the Royal Palace has been once again vandalized and spray-painted with various tag lines. Prominently across the King’s chest, we could see a big “Pardon”. Other messages read “Fuck racism” or “This man killed 15 Million people”, a “BLM” in reference to the Black Lives Matter movement, was also found on the base of the statue. This is the same effigy of the King that had already been targeted Sunday, June 7 after the march against racism organized in front of the Law Courts of Brussels.

King Leopold statue vandalized with tags and paint

The hands of Leopold II on his horse were symbolically painted red in reference to the blood that the king had on his hands for crimes perpetrated against the native population during the Congolese Colonial era.


Photo of King Leopold statue defaced and tagged with big sorry across his chest

The words “Pardon’ written by the vandals Across his chest and “Racism” on his Horse


Additional  tags such as “King Assassin”, “fuck u” or “no justice, no peace” were also tagged on the base of the monument to King Leopold

Additional tag-phrases such as “King Assassin”, “fuck U” or “No justice, No peace” were also spray painted on the base of the monument to King Leopold in Place du Trône.


A statue of Leopold II vandalized in the garden of the Museum of Africa

Another statue of Leopold II had also been similarly targeted in the gardens of the Museum of Africa just on the outskirts of Brussels in the municipality of Tervuren.

The same modus operandi, using red paint to deface Leopold II. Under the statue, surrounded by animals and native congolese, is spray painted the word “FDP”. An acronym for “Son of a bitch” in French.


King Baudouin statue vandalized with red paint

But the vandalism didn’t end with King Leopold II, statues of other Belgian monarchs such as the the King Baudouin were also defaced with red paint in front of the Cathedral of Saint Micheal and Gudule, right in the center of Brussels.


King Baudouin statue tagged with the words REPARATIONS

The words “Reparations” can be seen tagged on the back of this statue, it was during King Baudouin’s reign in in 1959 that he announced the intention of the Belgian Government to grant independence to the Congo.


Red paint covers the statue of King Baudouin in Brussels

On June 30, 1960, he traveled to the Congo to witnessed the transfer of power in Kinshasa (still called Léopoldville at the time). During this ceremony, the King delivered a speech which was later considered by many to only glorifying the Colonial work and ignore of the wrongdoings committed during the era of Belgian rule in the country.


Léopold II statue defaced in Ekeren

Other statues of the King Léopold II have also been defaced throughout Belgium in the cities of Hal, Ostende and Ekeren as seen in the picture above. Leopold II is criticized for some atrocities that took place in the Congo in the 19th century, when the territory belonged to him personally. The debate on the presence of such monuments in public space, and more broadly on the colonial past of Belgium and the role of the second Belgian sovereign reappears at regular intervals.

Only a very small minority actually support the removal or vandalizing of statues of Leopold II (25% according to the latest polls), but as usual in today’s world, it is more often minorities who dictate their ideology to the majority. The reign of Leopold II corresponds to a period when Belgium is – briefly – the second industrial power in the world and it is during this period of great prosperity, that the King redesigned Brussels and had some of the cities’ biggest landmarks built.

But make no mistake! This is only a small part of their much bigger agenda. In the UK, we’ve seen the venerated Admiral Nelson, winner of Napoleon at Trafalgar being defaced, as well just recently statues of Sir Winston Churchill, the revered icon of WWII.

The choice of the people targeted, even the most illustrious, is secondary. This is not a question of putting words that are unacceptable today in their historical context, but to eradicate a supposed “colonial mentality” still pervasive in the minds of white people.

As I was writing this post, statues of Saint Anthony on the Roman Square had been found with heads severely damaged in Velzeke

Decolonization activists and their new allies of the radical left want to put an end to the West, wipe out it’s history, civilization and what it represents.

Another statue in Belgium today, this time the Roman emperor Caesar was quite damaged. The lance and some fingers that he once held in his right hand was torn off and the authors wrote the graffiti ‘krapuul’ spray painted on the base. The word in Dutch roughly translates into Scumbag

Like in the old days of communism or more theocracies such the Islamic State tried to impose, it is a question of eradicating the old world in order to build a brand new “radicalized” future. Where everyone is labeled under a certain category and views are scrutinized by a thought police and everyone made to conform to the new dogma.

As they say in politics, The road to hell is paved with good intentions. There is no better time than now to pick up and read once more “Brave New World” (Huxley) or “1984” (Orwell) in order to prepare for what’s to come if boundaries are not set now.


Bust of  Lieutenant General Émile Storms splashed with  red paint in the square de Meeus, Brussels
Bust of Lieutenant General Émile Storms splashed with red paint in the square de Meeus in Brussels

Another bust, this time of the Lieutenant General Émile Storms, who acted in Africa as a soldier, explorer and official for the Congolese Free State between 1882 & 1885. Strangely enough he was know for trying to suppress the East African slave trade.

June 14, 2020 0 comments
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Couple arriving on bike at parc du Viaduc in Ixelles
Parks

Parc du Viaduc

by Vincent June 10, 2020
written by Vincent

The Park du Viaduc is one of the lesser known green areas of Brussels. Hidden behind a street of the same name, it is very unlikely that you’ll meet here anyone else than residents of this Ixelles neighborhood. I am a big fan of these small lesser known parks where you can come and spend some quiet time reading a book or just relax under a peaceful apple tree. The place is always uncrowded, a little less on Wednesday afternoons when school is off or on holidays where you might encounter a few families with children investing the playground but even then there’s still plenty of room for everyone to coexist peacefully. Also a great place to enjoy a peaceful picnic with friends, just the right mix of shade, sun for everyone to enjoy on the well kept lawns . Park personnel are always present and do their little round and make sure that everyone respects the rules in a friendly and pleasant manner.

Parc du Viaduc is best for those who:

  • Are already in the neighborhood and are looking for a quiet and lesser known alternative
  • Those who love small parks
  • Those who don’t want to see too many people
  • Those who like to discover new places
Coupe relaxing on the lawn of parc du viaduc in Brussels
The place is usually always uncrowded
Parc du viaduc and Maison de la Solidarité in the back
Parc du viaduc and Maison de la Solidarité in the back
The pleasant little urban green space is well maintained
Man having a rest in parc du viaduc
At the entrance of Park of the Viaduct arriving with my bike
Path circling around parc du Viaduc
The path circling around the parc du Viaduc
kids playing in Park du viaduc Brussels
At the center of the park du Viaduc
Yellowed lawns by the hot sun at Parc du Viaduc
Laws near la maison de la solidarité
Path going all around the parc du Viaduc
A path circles all around the parc du Viaduc
Big green lawns of the quiet Parc du Viaduc
Big green lawns run through the quiet little Parc du Viaduc
Coupe relaxing on the lawns of the parc du viaduc
Coupe relaxing on the lawns of the parc du viaduc
Path circling around park du Viaduc
stone walkway across park du viaduc
Way out of the park
Toilets at Parc du viaduct in Brussels
Pilon vous souhaite un heureux caca 🙂
Entrance of the parc du viaduc by the walkway is just to the left
Entrance is on the left
Train tracks just right of the parc du viaduc
Train tracks run along down to Gare de la Chapelle where the EU institutions are
Grafiti art: Mèle toi de ton cul
Grafiti art: Mèle toi de ton cul outside of the park of the viaduct
June 10, 2020 0 comments
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