Showing posts with label Liège. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liège. Show all posts

August 23, 2010

Going East (2): 800 years of Crosier Art in Western Europe on show at Rheine (Germany)

A 3-hour drive away from Brussels lies the town of Rheine in Nordrhein-Westfalen: close to Holland and Belgium, and a bow's arrow from Niedersachsen. And adjacent to the German highway, but tucked away in greenery lies Kloster Bentlage, which the city of Rheine beautifully restored and which serves as municipal museum grounds.

This city museum now plays host to an exhibition highlighting 800 years of Crosier art in Western-Europe. Fittlingly, because in 1437 members of the order of the Holy Cross, Crosiers, settled in Rheine and built Kloster Bentlage. The order wasn't dissolved until 1803, when the monastery grounds came into the family Looz-Corswarem from Liège-Rhine territory.

The order of he Holy Cross was founded in the 13th century in Belgium in the city of Huy. From the river Meuse/Maas and other places in the Prince-Bishopric of Liège and the Rhineland, the order spread all over Europe, to places like Paris and London. St Agatha in Cuijk (Holland) for instance played an important role in the order's history in the 15th century.

Although the Crosier order of canons regular today is thriving on four continents, it must be very pleased to see that Rheine took the lead in an exhibition celebrating its origins and involving artefacts from at least three countries.

Our interest involves the many items on loan from places like Brussels, Liège, Denderleeuw and Cuijck for among others sculpture, manuscripts, and bindings, all handled and placed expertly by curators and conservators at Rheine.

The exhibition opened on 29 August 2010 with festivities and representation from the Crosier's Generalate. It remains on show until 27 February 2011.

Venue:
Museum Kloster Bentlage
Bentlager Weg 130
48432 Rheine
www.kloster-bentlage.de

Opening hours:
Wednesday-Sunday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.

February 25, 2010

Ardent Endeavor: un délice du Pays de Liège (part I)

Are book collectors and book curators worlds apart? The former might well be hoarding books since the age of 15. A he could have stored books under the beds of his children, and a she could have been briskly bidding at auction unbenownst to her husband. The book curator meanwhile may have prudently acquired a few precious items, and studied many more in the silence of the university library.

A collector is capable of pulling out each precious treasure in a sequence that would rival artillery fire, but rarely jots down basic information on so much as a notecard. The book curator or historian is able to x-ray a book, present it under peer review in the shape of statistical, material and bibliographic facts, which isn't to say that he or she remains obtuse to its beauty, or doesn't know a jolly good story or two.

United by their love of a similar object, the twain do meet: in bibliophile societies. Book historians may deliver the acumen for membership publications, whereas venerable collectors may bring up the memory of Baron such and such, and may have seen every elegant drawing room and château with a library.

Recently, an elegant mingling of both worlds has taken place in the city of Liège (Luik) and within the Société des Bibliophiles Liégeois, which resulted in a sumptuous publication: Florilège du livre en principauté de Liège du IXe au XVIIIe siècle (2009, ISBN 978-2-9600900-0-0).

This is merely the announcement; we hope to come back to the contents of this volume in the next two weeks.

Details:
Florilège du livre en principauté de Liège du IXe au XVIIIe siècle. Société des Bibliophiles Liégeois, 2009. 560 p. numerous color illustrations. Hard cover and colored dust-jacked. ISBN 978-2-9600900-0-0. Paul Bruyère and Alain Marchandisse, Scientific Editors. Available by subscription from the Société des Bibliophiles Liégeois.

April 29, 2009

Erasmus's Social Network: Talk at Erasmus House (30 April 2009)

2.0., Netlog, Facebook: sometimes one wonders how Vives and Erasmus would have dealt with these means of social networking. It's all the more exciting however to learn how a researcher today succeeds in unearthing the intellectual network of a humanist who lived 500 years ago.

Tomorrow, 30 April 2009 at 7.30 p.m., Franz Bierlaire, professor at ULg, University of Liège, and at the ULB , University of Brussels, delivers a talk, in French, at the Erasmus House at Brussels entitled "Le carnet d'adresses d'Erasme" or "Erasmus's address book".

Primary source is Erasmus's correspondence. Bierlaire will show to what extent the humanist's network helped to shape his writings.

Venue: Rue du Chapitre 31 Kapittelstraat 31, 1070 Brussels (Anderlecht). Metro: Saint-Guidon/Sint-Guido.