1. 'The Forbidden Empire' at Centre for Fine Arts Brussels

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    artwork: Frans Pourbus The Younger

    BRUSSELS, BELGIUM - The Centre for Fine Arts Brussels presents The Forbidden Empire - Visions of the World by Chinese and Flemish Masters, on view through May 6, 2007.  Two continents, five centuries of art, two kinds of visual idiom.  The internationally famous artist Luc Tuymans and the curator Yu Hui initiate a dialogue between art from the southern Low Countries and China. Drawings and paintings by, among others, Van Eyck, Breughel, Rubens, Van Dyck, Jordaens, Ensor, Mellery, and Spilliaert confront works on paper and silk from the Ming and Qing dynasties, based in the Forbidden City in Beijing, from which the Chinese emperors ruled their domains.

    Says Luc Tuymans, "We try to open up the dialogue via the visual image, without detracting from the two traditions. We work with 'punctuation': for example, two groups of images from Chinese art are interrupted by a Western work."  How do the artists depict movement?  How do they deal with distance and detail?  With scale and depth?  What is the importance of the narrative element?  Of calligraphy and iconography? And what about the representation of shadow, the nude, the idea of original sin...?

    The Forbidden Empire breathes new life into the old masters and creates a bridge to a subsequent section with contemporary art. After it leaves the Centre for Fine Arts, the exhibition will travel, in a modified version, to the Palace Museum in the Forbidden City.  The exhibition was curated by Luc Tuymans and Yu Hui.

    artwork: Centre For Fine Arts BrusselsShortly after the First World War, the Belgian architect Victor Horta (1861-1947) began to plan the Centre for Fine Arts (Palais des Beaux-Arts/Paleis voor Schone Kunsten).  The building was part of his urban development project for the Mont des Arts/Kunstberg ("Mount of the Arts").

    Horta is primarily known for his mansions in pure art-nouveau style, built at the end of the nineteenth century.  In the Victor Horta Museum – Horta’s former private home and studio – it is possible to take a look behind the scenes.  In Horta’s work, architecture and interior design are inextricably bound together.  The leaded windows, cast-iron railings, floral decoration on the floors and walls, and furniture designed by Horta himself: all combine to create an unforgettable impression.

    Visit CENTRE FOR FINE ARTS, BRUSSELS  - Rue Ravensteinstraat 23 1000 - Brussels at : www.bozar.be/




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