TArchaeologist, architect, urban planner and illustrator J.-C. Golvin and the archaeologists of Bliesbruck-Reinheim European Archaeological Park have imagined what the Reinheim villa’s owner might have seen on a long journey from Bliesbruck-Reinheim to Rome. Craftsmen and shopkeepers in the small town of Bliesbruck bought goods from the Empire’s far-flung cities. Some of the items were found during archaeological excavations and others, emblematic of the places the notable travelled through, dialogue with watercolours of towns, street scenes or indoor gardens. The show recreates much of Bliesbruck’s commercial, political and religious life. Period items on loan from Rome’s city museums give the show even more force.
Niki de Saint Phalle exhibition at Malbrouck Castle
Fénétrange’s night watchman
Until September 2010