The Maagdenhuis Museum (Maidens' House Museum) is an art museum and historical museum located in a 17th-century historic building on Lange Gasthuisstraat, Antwerp, Belgium. The building was used as an orphanage for the maegdeckens, or maidens, from the mid-16th century to the end of the 19th century. The museum presents a collection of utensils used daily by the foundlings and the orphans; a collection of antique furniture, and a series of documents relating to the orphanage and the life in it from the 16th century to 19th century.[1][2][3][4]
The museum is located in a historic building dating from the sixteenth century. It was formerly an orphanage for young girls. The building started to function as an orphanage for little girls in 1552. The Maagdenhuis (Maidens' house) was significantly expanded in 1634–1636.
Today's white stone façade was built during the 1634-1636 renovation. The façade's bas-relief was probably designed by Cornelis Floris de Vriendt and dates back to 1564.[1] It portrays a group of orphaned girls (bottom left) and a teacher leading them into the orphanage (right). These two scenes are flanked by a pair of guarding Hermes figures, overhung by God, Christ as the Good Shepherd, and an allegorical dove. In 1882 the orphans moved to two new and larger buildings on Albert Grisarstraat Street, which replaced the Maidens’ House and the Boys’ Orphanage. The Maidens’ House finally closed and the building remained vacant. The larger buildings on Albert Grisarstraat Street were replaced by smaller institutions in the 20th century.[1][3][2][4]
Over the centuries, all these charitable institutions accumulated a bunch of artwork received as gifts and bequests from rich benefactors. The administrators of the two orphanages, the Board of Civilian Almshouses, moved 84 paintings to the former chapel of the Maidens’ House, which opened in 1884 as a museum.[1][3][2][4]
Finally, in 1925 the Commission of Civilian Almhouses, overseeing the orphanages, merged with the Office of Charity. The newfound organization (the Commissie van Openbare Onderstand, or COO) found itself with a huge art collection and decided to turn the chapel of the Lange Gasthuisstraat's building into a museum, which was opened in 1930.[1][3][2][4]
The museum gradually expanded its collection in the following decades, with the Royal Museum of Fine Arts returning several masterpieces to the Maaggdenhuis over the years.[1][3][2][4]
In 1976, all Belgian COOs (Public Poverty Commissions) were turned into Public Centers for Social Welfare. As a result, today the Maagdenhuis Museum is overseen by Antwerp's Public Social Welfare Center.[1][3][2][4]
Collection
21st-century replica of the uniform worn by the orphans of the Maagdenhuis based on the paintings of Herreyns and Joannes de Maré
In the orphanage's former chapel, which was the first room to be turned into a museum, there is a collection of utensils used by the orphans and the foundlings and objects that interest them, including porridge bowls, foundling dresses and identifiers, embroidered samplers, antique furniture; and a collection of documents regarding the Maagenhuis.
In the Reception, where there stood the administration of the Maidens' House and the catalogue with all the names of the orphans living at Maagdenhuis, there is a first assortment of paintings, which includes opera by Peter Ykens, Cornelis Schut and Erasmus Quellinus the Younger.[1]
In what used to be the large kitchen, or the groote ceucken, there is the Sixteenth-century Gallery, with artworks by painters such as Jacob de Backer and Michiel Coxie.[1][3][2]
At the end of the side corridor, to the right, there is the Van Der Meere Gallery, with a masterpiece by Jacob Jordaens and other paintings by artists such as Theodoor van Loon and Abraham de Vries.[1]
The Fifteenth-century Gallery is located in the smallest room of the Maagdenhuis Museum. Little is known about his rooms, except that three old women lived there in the 17th century, having donated funds to the almoners in exchange for a room and boarding at the Maagdenhuis.[1] This gallery includes several paintings by unknown masters, including a 15th-century Last Judgement, the Seven Acts of Mercy and the Seven Deadly Sins.[1][3][2]
In the Courtyard there stands the annex in which the orphans lived and worked. The courtyard accommodates several sculptures and inscriptions, among which a wooden, 17th-century statue by an unknown master, Wooden Clara; a copy of Van den Eynde's original sculpture The Virgin Mary with the Child Jesus in the chapel; and Sebastiaen van den Eynde's Portrait of Cornelis II Landschot, ca. 1656.
^ abcdefghijklVerhelst, Dirk (1996). Tot eerlick onderhoudt van meyskens cleene. Geschiedenis van het Maagdenhuis van Antwerpen. Antwerp, Belgium: OCMW Antwerpen.