Boarded up but still beautiful
Locked but loved!
|
Braving the water! |
little speech. Once the metaphorical ribbon had been cut, a large contingent from a local swimming club, bravely, and possibly foolhardily, leapt into the canal while the hundreds of spectators, carefully keeping their collective distance from the cold, cold water, applauded and quietly queued in the warm sun for their beers. There was a lovely atmosphere of goodwill and community involvement which I notice these Bruggean events always seem to foster. It was so pleasant to be among the crowd, which was physically constricting while being psychologically relaxing and warmly enveloping. The whole affair was comfortably life-enhancing.
Undignified pose during the earlier assembly on Jan Van Eyckplein. |
On Saturday evening, we had had an early evening beer on the terrace of de Swaene,
in the sun along the Groenerei and chatted to Kathy and Terry, two
visitors to Brugge at the next table. We were, in fact, en route to the vernissage at
the Adornes Domein of Sisters’Art, an exhibition of
paintings and sculptures so, on an impulse, we took along our new
friends! We were all so amused, on arrival, by another guest at the exhibition opening, from my Thursday evening gathering as it happens, getting quite hot under the collar that the
refuse for the Blue Whale was reclaimed from the sea off Hawaii and not off Ostende or Blankenberghe!! Someone explained that the volume of plastic waste in the seas off Hawaii is almost enough to provide a solid walking platform hence the choice.
The current Triennale’s theme is The Liquid City, referring to the
present era in Brugge as one of transition; everything is changing, unstable
but also open and collaborative. It also suggests that the canals
that criss-cross and encircle the city are a metaphor for the
liquidity of ideas and dialogue that permeate the modern world and which have grown from the economic and cultural prosperity of mediaeval
Brugge. After all this high cultural endeavour, I was interested to
talk today to a lovely man who works here for around half of the
year; definitely not a Bruggeling who said, ‘I am SO angry about
the cost of this Triennale. The installations look good but the
money, surely, could have
been more wisely spent!’ I’m not too
sure about that; the interest has been phenomenal so far with tourist
numbers hugely increased at this opening weekend. And tourism is, after all, Brugge’s life blood.
Floating Island off the Potterierei |
installation but perhaps joint favourite is The Floating Island actually on the canal along the Potterierei near the Snaggardbrug. It is dreamy, especially when one is on it. The capacious structure is lined with white ropes, described as elastic nets which can support a body leaning over the water or lying in a hammock; they are also aesthetically pleasing. So visitors can lean, lie, sit while viewing the canal and beyond, or resting or dreaming. The Korean architectural practice OBBA, together with Dertien12, a Bruges architect's firm, have created additional public space within the Egg. They have also succeeded in providing a white area, interspersed with fluid shadows beneath the sun, which creates a feeling of peaceful solitude.
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