If you missed the first post on Antwerp, you can find an overview of the city and photos from the first day here.
Day two started with practical concerns. First up was the hunt for some sort of insole/insert. Despite the shoes being less than a month old, the padding in them couldn’t hold up to ten miles a day, especially not across cobblestones that create new pressure points with every step. Then there was the necessary evil of doing laundry, which comes up too often when taking a long trip with nothing but a backpack. At least shoe comfort was addressed before walking to the laundromat.
Afterward, the day was filled with a trip to an art museum, too many baked goods, and a night at the local playhouse. Sorting back through the photos, it’s a bit difficult to believe that so much fit into one day.
The Day in Photos
<break for a laundry>
Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten
Antwerp has been home to The Royal Museum of Fine Arts since 1810, and the current building was completed in 1894. As luck would have it, they had just reopened a few weeks earlier after eleven years of renovations.
A Paul Hollywood Food Tour
Fans of The Great British Baking Show will know the name, but many will not have seen his visit to Antwerp (click here to watch on YouTube). Sampling from a few of the featured locations allowed the culinary arts to make their own appearance after sculptors and painters had their turn.
Het Stadspark (literally “The City Park” – they really need to work on their creativity)
Bourla Theatre
The toneelhuis (stage house) at Bourla Theater was showing Vijand van het Volk (Enemy of the People), which included an actor, Stijn van Opstal, who was familiar from Netflix’s Tabula Rasa.
The play dates back to 1882, but is surprisingly relevant in today’s political environment. To summarize, a small town is dependent on tourism at its spas, but one of the locals discovers that their water source is poisoned. Instead of directing their attention to the problem at hand, the rest of the townspeople are angry at him for his findings. It’s been 140 years, but we still haven’t learned not to shoot the messenger/scientist.
The theater building was completed in 1834 and has been wonderfully expanded and renovated since. No one else showed up for the four-seat balcony box, so visibility was excellent, including before the show to take too many pictures of the hall.