Rendez-vous
About the exhibition
There is a Crack in Everything

Aaron Amar Bhamra, Adrien Vescovi, Akane Saijo, Alma Feldhandler, Ari Benjamin Meyers, Christiane Blattmann, Edith Dekyndt, Ethan Assouline, Gustav Metzger, Jean Katambayi Mukendi, Jochen Lempert, John Giorno, Kanitha Tith, Marianne Berenhaut, Mariko Matsushita, Michael Van den Abeele, Mira Mann, Mire Lee, mountaincutters, Oototol, Pélagie Gbaguidi, Prinz Gholam, Raha Raissnia, Richard Moszkowicz, Stéphane Mandelbaum, Wei Libo, Yalda Afsah, Yuyan Wang

Start 04 Sep 2025
End 14 Dec 2025

There is a Crack in Everything brings together more than 25 artists whose practices question the stability of identity, territory, and belonging.

External link
Boire ou Manger
07 Sep 2025
03:00 pm

“Boire ou Manger”: a series of small events dedicated to utilitarian objects and their containers

About the venue
Jewish Museum of Belgium

Midtown - Institution
Opening September 4, September 5-7, 11:00-18:00
Rue des Minimes 21, 1000, Bruxelles
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The Jewish Museum of Belgium, a cultural institution exclusively funded by the Belgian public authorities, has in recent years established itself as an important voice on the contemporary cultural scene. Through a bold program, it brings together leading figures of art with emerging generations, fully embodying Brussels’ cultural vitality. Guardian of an exceptional historical heritage, the Museum preserves and promotes collections composed mainly of artworks, archives, and objects from Belgian and diasporic Jewish communities.

The Museum is also actively engaged in the field. Through its exhibitions, public events, and educational initiatives – particularly with schools in the Brussels-Capital Region – it works daily against racism, antisemitism, Islamophobia, anti-LGBTQIA+ hate speech, and all forms of exclusion. Since 2020, more than 15,000 pupils from primary to higher education, both French- and Dutch-speaking, have taken part in its workshops on awareness and education for tolerance. This commitment was recognized in 2020 with the Democracy and Human Rights Prize awarded by the Parliament of the Wallonia-Brussels Federation.

The Museum reaffirms its attachment to the universal principles of justice and human dignity. Rooted in a history of transmission and openness, it places the recognition of the other – in both their identity and their otherness – at the very heart of its mission.