Brussels Escorts
Escorts in Brussels

- Angelique
- Brussels

- Melina
- Brussels

- Emily
- Brussels

- Michelle
- Brussels

- Savane
- Brussels

- Roxanne
- Brussels

- Amina
- Brussels
Escorts available to travel to Brussels
Varying notice is required to book the following escorts for Brussels.

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Brussels Art Galleries
- The Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts located on Place Royal are made up of the Musée d’art Ancien and the Musée d’art Moderne. The museums are Brussels’ premier art galleries, the oldest museums in the country, and contain over 2500 works of art altogether from the ancient period (15th - 18th century) and modern era (post 19th century). The Musée d’art Ancien building, the larger of the two museums, is a Neo-Classical structure complete with Corinthian columns and busts of Flemish paintings, and is a dramatic presence on the square, as are the exhibits contained within it. Dating from the 18th century, the collection of works within the gallery is renowned as the best compilation of Flemish art in the world, with many of the Old Masters such as van Dyck and Rubens included. Pieter Paul Rubens was the leading supporter of Baroque art in Europe, combining Flemish accuracy with Italian creativity. His work, The Assumption of the Virgin, is one of the highlights of this gallery, and in this piece Rubens makes the background colour muted in order to bring out the blue colour of the Virgin’s robes. The Annuciation by the Master of Flémalle is another of the gallery’s masterpieces, which depicts the scene in which the Archangel Gabriel announces the coming of the Messiah, in juxtaposition with the prosaic everyday setting containing many everyday items. Other great works are the Madonna with Saint Anne and a Franciscan donor by Hugo van der Goes, and The Census at Bethlehem by Pieter Brueghel the Yonger. The museum is connected by an escalator to the Musée d’art Moderne.
The Musée d’art Moderne was not opened until 1984 and is situated in an unusual setting, with eight levels underground. There is however a shaft of light filtered from the Place du Musée that allows the pieces to be seen by natural daylight. There are also three levels above ground which are used for temporary exhibitions. In both museums the collections are arranged in chronological order, and in the Musée d’art Moderne the collection includes many celebrated 20th and 21st century artists, including the wonderful work of the Belgian Surrealists. The most popular pieces are Woman in a Blue Dress by Rik Wouters, which demonstrates the Fauvist artist’s trademark spatula painting technique, and The Domain of Arnheim by René Magritte, the largest of the artist’s works in the world, which depicts a poignantly evocative scene of a huge night-cast eagle-mountain, dominating the small bird’s nest in the foreground. Other star sights are the eerily peculiar Skeletons Fighting over a Pickled Herring by James Ensor, which demonstrates the artist’s fascination with the macabre; Composition by Pierre-Louis Flouquet, a famed Belgian painter, which incorporates use of Futurism and Cubism in a ‘plastic’ style to portray the two stylised human figures at its centre; View of London by Belgian Emile Claus, a refugee to London, who uses his own brand of Impressionism called Luminism, emphasising an interest in light effects to depict the damp fog of a London twilight, resulting in a precise definition in the painting that is almost life-like; and The Orange Market at Blidah by Henri Evenepoel, who is renowned for his use of bold colour and shading; in this piece the bright reds, oranges and yellows of the traders’ robes stand out against the overall commotion of the market. One of the most intriguing sculpture pieces is Draped Woman on Steps by renowned British artist Henry Moore, who is the world’s most exhibited sculptor. This piece uses his trademark style of fluid lines, which he utilises to contrast with the anxiety of the waiting woman.
Musée Wiertz located on Rue Vautier, is home to more than 160 pieces of the artist Antoine Wiertz work, including oil paintings, drawings and sculptures. The gallery is housed in the studio built for him by the state where he worked until his death in 1865. Following his death the studio was made into a museum, with the largest main room holding his biggest paintings which mainly portray Biblical and Homeric scenes. Also on display are his death mask and his personal grisly output such as the painting entitled Madness, Hunger and Crime.
Musées Royaux d’Art et d’Histoire, also known as Musée du Cinquantenaire, is a magnificent museum located within the equally spectacular Parc du Cinquantenaire to which is bears its name. This huge museum dates from the 1900s, but some of the pieces within it stem back to the 15th century. There are displays on the ancient communities in places such as Egypt, Greece, Persia, the Near East, Islam Byzantium, China, the Indian Subcontinent and the early civilisations in the Americas. The pieces include decorative arts from across the centuries, such as glassware, silverware, porcelain, lace and tapestries. The museum also features religious sculptures and stained glass arranged in the cloister-style courtyard