René Magritte Museum

This article is about the museum in Jette. For the constituent museum of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, see Magritte Museum.
The ground floor of the museum

René Magritte Museum is a museum at Rue Esseghem in Jette, a municipality in Brussels, devoted to the Belgian surrealist painter René Magritte.[1] The museum is located in the house where Magritte lived and worked for 24 years, between 1930 and 1954.[2]

The ground floor of the house there is an apartment where Magritte and his wife Georgette lived, whereas the first and the second floors display the biographical exposition.[1]

Magritte and his wife moved in 1954 to a bigger apartment in Schaerbeek, which, as they thought, was in better agreement with their social status. The testament of Magritte's wife, however, indicated that the house in Jette is the most important for the biography of Magritte. In 1993, André Garitte, an art collector and a fan of Belgian surrealisme, bought the house, restored it, and in 1998, celebrating 100 years of Magritte, the museum was open to the public. In 2009, the museum reopened after an extensive restoration.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 "René Magritte Museum". Museum website. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  2. "René Magritte Museum toont ongeziene werken van kunstenaar" (in Dutch). De Redactie. 21 February 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2016.
  3. Mund, Sabine (2009). "André Garitte: Magritte au quotidien" (PDF). 2009 (in French). Retrieved 28 May 2016.

Coordinates: 50°52′37″N 4°20′09″E / 50.8769°N 4.3358°E / 50.8769; 4.3358

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