Juliaan Lampens, House for the Architect’s Sister, Gavere, Belgium, 1968 (via dujardin)
Karel Burssens and Jeroen Verrecht of Office 88888, Lake Glow at Horst Castle, Holsbeek, Belgium, 2015
Fernand Khnopff, Memories of Flanders: A Canal In Bruges, Belgium, 1904 (via bluelantern)
Office KGDVS, Office Building for VOKA West-Flanders Chamber of Commerce, Kortrijk, Belgium, 2008-10
Jan van Eyck, Arnolfini Portrait, 1434
'The painting is a small full-length double portrait, which is believed to represent the Italian merchant Giovanni di Nicolao Arnolfini and his wife, presumably in their home in the Flemish city of Bruges. It is considered one of the most original and complex paintings in Western art history. The illusionism of the painting was remarkable for its time, in part for the rendering of detail, but particularly for the use of light to evoke space in an interior, for "its utterly convincing depiction of a room, as well of the people who inhabit it". Whatever meaning is given to the scene and its details, and there has been much debate on this, according to Craig Harbison the painting "is the only fifteenth-century Northern panel to survive in which the artist's contemporaries are shown engaged in some sort of action in a contemporary interior. It is indeed tempting to call this the first genre painting - a painting of everyday life - of modern times".'