Hello readers,
I've made no progress on the house lately, as I was busy with lots of other things: spending time with my mother, visiting exhibitions, making Christmas cards (another one of my hobbys), daydreaming about the mini house (a lot of that....) and the usual household chores, but you don't want to hear about that.
Exhibitions of miniatures in Brussels are rare enough to give them special attention. « Mini Life » was held at the Porte de Hal in Brussels. It featured old miniatures from the end of the 19th century, beginning of the 20th century.
I've made no progress on the house lately, as I was busy with lots of other things: spending time with my mother, visiting exhibitions, making Christmas cards (another one of my hobbys), daydreaming about the mini house (a lot of that....) and the usual household chores, but you don't want to hear about that.
Exhibitions of miniatures in Brussels are rare enough to give them special attention. « Mini Life » was held at the Porte de Hal in Brussels. It featured old miniatures from the end of the 19th century, beginning of the 20th century.
La Maison de Poupée bruxelloise |
The main attraction was « The Brussels dollhouse »,
labelled La maison de poupée bruxelloise.
It was made around 1900 by Jules Charlier, a Belgian engineer and electrician from Brussels. Although it was based on his own house, it’s not an exact copy. While
the real house had 3 floors, the miniature only has 2. The real house was
located on rue Froissart in Etterbeek, no. 54 (later changed to no.
70 in 1911 due to the expansion of the area). It was demolished in the 1990s
and no records have been kept other than a photograph of the facade. According
to the family, the miniature took around 10 years to make. Jules Charlier never
married and his sister, Jeanne Charlier, gave the dollhouse to her
sister-in-law, Marthe Verhas, who then donated it to the Musée des Beaux-Arts in 1941. No-one knows if the inside of the house was
copied from the real house, but it does show the style of
furniture common in middle-class houses of the early 19th century.
The miniature house opens on both sides
The miniature house opens on both sides
More information
on the Brussels dollhsouse and exhibition details can be found in the
exhibition brochure (€7.00 – lots of photos) available here: http://www.kmkg-mrah.be/fr/la-maison-de-poup%C3%A9e-bruxelloise.
More photos of the exhibition to come soon....
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