René Magritte museum
Located in Jette, Brussels, the René Magritte Museum occupies the house where the artist lived and worked from 1930 to 1954. Within these walls, Magritte created nearly half of his oeuvre and hosted the gatherings that shaped Belgian surrealism.
Carefully restored and furnished, the museum offers an authentic insight into the artist’s daily environment and creative process. Adjacent to it, the Museum of Abstract Art extends the narrative, highlighting Magritte’s early experiments with abstraction and the broader evolution of modern art in Belgium.
Together, the two institutions offer a comprehensive perspective on the dialogue between surrealism and abstraction in 20th-century art.
For more information, please visit the museum website.