Bird motif from a Belouch
tribal rug.
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Part of one of the huge beer tents
on the Burg.
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After that, to the Burg to one of the two main sites for the
weekend’s Brugge Beer Festival where huge crowds of mainly happy,
talkative men filled both enormous marquees on the Burg and on the
Lion guarding one half of the many superb fireplaces
in the Gruuthuse Museum.
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Markt. As we declined to join the long, long queue for tokens without which beer purchase was impossible and in a nod to my need to sit down and relax, we wandered home for a tranquil seat and a free beer in peace. Mussels at de Schilder in Jan Van Eyckplein completed the day in time for them to dash off to Dunkirk while I retreated to my sanctuary thinking back on the treasures available to visitors to [and residents in] Brugge!
Sunday I managed to remember the open weekend for the Gruuthuse Museum,
closed these several years for extensive renovation. The public was
allowed in to see the renovations so far and to follow a route
through the Gruuthuse to look at the progress made while the nearby
Arentshuis museum hosted a small exhibition of mainly 18th and 19th century Gruuthuse treasures called Gruuthuse in Chivalrous
Company. It
was delightful but even more so was the sight of a lovely book on
Frank Brangwyn, the English artist born in Brugge who left a large
body of his work to the city. The
Arentshuis is a temple to Brangwyn.
I discovered the book, Brangwyn
at War was for sale in the Museum shop opposite and bought it, since
when I dip into it when I can. A marvellous and informative read.
Frank Brangwyn |
This immensely productive and talented artist had become one of Britain’s most renowned artists by the turn of the 20th century with an international following, becoming, in effect, a polymath, a quintessential artist-craftsman. But, compared say, to William Morris, Brangwyn's name is not widely remembered now.
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