Date
27 November 2024, 18.15-22.00 (CET)
Location
House of European History, Rue Belliard/straat 135, 1000 Brussels, Belgium

The films will be introduced in English by film curator Wouter Hessels and will be followed by a Q&A and discussion. 

Entrance to the screenings is free - registration in advance is mandatory.

Before the screening of each film, join us at 18.15 for a 45 minute tour for a guided tour of the Bellum et Artes temporary exhibition, assessing the Thirty Years' War through the lens of different kinds of art. The tour requires registration in advance (links below), and involves an 'active participation' method, based on 'Visible Thinking Routines'.

People in medieval clothes in barn

Nightwatching

Nightwatching is an extravagant fiction film by painter and filmmaker Peter Greenaway (born 1942) that imagines the personal life and art of the famous Dutch Golden Age painter Rembrandt van Rijn. It focuses on the creation of the 1642 painting, “The Night Watch”. Rembrandt (1606-1669), who lived and suffered a lot during the Thirty Years’ War, is one of the greatest visual artists of all time. Rembrandt pays a flamboyant tribute to the Dutch master.

Wednesday 27/11/2024 – 19.00

Peter Greenaway, Netherlands/UK/France/Germany/Poland/Canada, 2007, 134’ Original version

Register for guided tour (18.15 - 19.00)
Register for film screening (19.00 - 22.00)

Headshot - Wouter Hessels

About Wouter Hessels

Wouter Hessels studied Romance languages & literatures, philosophy and audiovisual and dramatic arts in Antwerp and Brussels. Since 1995 he teaches film and media history at RITCS (Royal Institute for Theatre, Cinema & Sound) in Brussels and film analysis at INSAS (Institut National Supérieur des Arts du Spectacle) in Brussels and at the Royal Academy for Fine Arts in Antwerp. From 2006 to 2011, he was a visiting professor film history at the Baltic Film, Media & Arts School (Tallinn University in Estonia) and from 2020-2022 visiting professor at the ULB (Free Universtity of Brussels). He has been teaching in Paris, Rome, Amsterdam, Berlin, Bologna, Prague, Istanbul, Rio de Janeiro, Capetown. In 2011-2012, he was director and curator of The Royal Belgian Film Archive (Cinematek) and now he works as a film curator for Gaasbeek Castle. He writes essays and opinion articles on art, film, media, politics and education. Wouter writes and performs poetry in Dutch, French, English and Italian. His life motto is “Long live life, love and the arts”.