Art Deco in Brussels

Art Deco in Brussels
Top: Centenary Palace (1935); Centre left: Entrance of the Villa Empain (1930–1934); Centre right: Complexe Albert Hall (1931–32); Bottom: Museum David and Alice van Buuren (1924–1928)
Years activec. 1919–1939
LocationBelgium

The Art Deco movement of architecture and design appeared in Brussels, Belgium, immediately after World War I when the famed architect Victor Horta began designing the Centre for Fine Arts, and continued until the beginning of World War II in 1939. It took its name from the International Exposition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts held in Paris in 1925. At the end of World War II, Art Deco in Brussels faded to make way for the modernist and international architectural styles that would mark the postwar period.