The Royal Museums of Art and History form a group of several museums; two of them are located in the
Parc du Cinquantenaire/Jubelpark: the
Art & History Museum (formerly the Cinquantenaire Museum), which is the institution's headquarters and its most important site, and the
Pavilion of Human Passions (1896), a building designed by
Victor Horta to house a
high-relief sculpture by
Jef Lambeaux. Closer to town, the
Halle Gate, a vestige of the
second walls of Brussels (1381), houses medieval collections. The
Musical Instruments Museum (MIM) is housed in an
Art Nouveau building, the former
Old England department store, on the
Mont des Arts/Kunstberg. In addition, the
Museums of the Far East, consisting of the
Japanese Tower, the Chinese Pavilion and the Museum of Japanese Art, are located a few kilometers from the city centre, in
Laeken.
Art & History Museum The
Art & History Museum is a museum of
antiquities and
ethnographic and
decorative arts that occupies most of the southern part of the Cinquantenaire complex. It is one of the constituents of the
Royal Museums for Art and History (RMAH), which itself is part of the Belgian
federal institute of the
Belgian Federal Science Policy Office (BELSPO), and is one of the
largest art museums in Europe. The museum consists of several parts, including a national collection of
artefacts from
prehistory to the
Merovingian period (), as well as from
classical antiquity of the
Near East,
Egypt,
Greece and
Rome. Artefacts from non-European civilisations, such as China, Japan, Korea,
pre-Columbian America, and the
Islamic world, are also on display. Additionally, a collection of European decorative arts includes pieces from the
Middle Ages to the 20th century, such as sculptures, furniture, tapestries, textiles, costumes, old
vehicles, etc. File:Park of the Cinquantenaire - Royal Museums of Art and History, Brussels, 2010 (HDR 2).jpg|
Art & History Museum File:Antiquity collection - Cinquantenaire Museum - Brussels, Belgium - DSC09067.jpg|Classical antiquity collection File:Islamic art collection - Cinquantenaire Museum - Brussels, Belgium - DSC09104.jpg|Islamic art collection File:American collections - Cinquantenaire Museum - Brussels, Belgium - DSC08962.jpg|American collection
Pavilion of Human Passions The
Pavilion of Human Passions, also known as the Horta-Lambeaux Pavilion, is a
neoclassical pavilion in the form of a
Greek temple that was built by the architect
Victor Horta in 1891–1897 in the Cinquantenaire Park. Although classical in appearance, the building shows the first steps of the young Horta towards
Art Nouveau. It was designed to serve as a permanent showcase for
The Human Passions, a monumental marble
relief by the sculptor
Jef Lambeaux. Since its completion, the building has remained almost permanently closed. Since 2014, it has periodically reopened to the public. File:Belgique - Bruxelles - Pavillon des Passions humaines - 01.jpg|
Pavilion of Human Passions File:Les passions humaines, de Jef Lambeaux.jpg|Detail of the relief made by
Jef Lambeaux Halle Gate The
Halle Gate is a former medieval
city gate and the last vestige of the
second walls of Brussels. Built in the 14th century, it was heavily restored in the 19th century in its current
neo-Gothic style by the architect
Henri Beyaert. It is now a museum dedicated to the medieval
City of Brussels. File:Porte de Hal - Face nord 01.jpg|
Halle Gate File:Bruxelles porte de Hal 900.jpg|Gothic Room
Musical Instrument Museum The
Musical Instruments Museum (MIM) is a music museum that is internationally renowned for its collection of over 8,000 instruments. Since 2000, the museum has been located in the former
Old England department store, built in 1899 by
Paul Saintenoy out of girded steel and glass in
Art Nouveau style, as well as the adjoining 18th-century
neoclassical building designed by
Barnabé Guimard. File:Old England facade, Brussels (DSCF7544).jpg|
Musical Instruments Museum (MIM) File:MiM 29-01-2019 13-58-42.jpg|Exhibition space
Museums of the Far East The
Museums of the Far East is a complex of three museums in
Laeken, in the north-west of the
City of Brussels. Consisting of the Chinese Pavilion, the
Japanese Tower and the Museum of Japanese Art, it is dedicated to
Oriental art and culture, specifically that of China and Japan. These sites have not been open to the public since 2013, and their restoration is expected by 2027. File:Japanse Toren-Japanese Tower - panoramio.jpg|
Japanese Tower of the
Museums of the Far East File:0 Laeken Pavillon chinois 1.JPG|Entrance to the Chinese Pavilion File:Musées Extrême-Orient 915.jpg|View of one of the principal rooms of the Chinese Pavilion ==See also==