The Star Malaysia

Brussels museum displays Manneken costumes

-

BRUSSELS: Brussels’ famous Manneken Pis statue has been cheekily urinating into its baroque fountain for 400 years, and for about as long, fans around the world have dressed up the naked little boy in colourful costumes.

From an Elvis Presley white-sequined jumpsuit, to Mickey Mouse, or a gilded 18th century French courtly gentleman, the landmark has an enviable made-to-measure wardrobe, even boasting top designer wear.

Now, a new museum showcases the outfits, some dating hundreds of years old, worn by the bronze little boy taking a very public leak and snapped in selfies alongside millions of tourists.

Curators Catherine Gauthier and Gonzague Pluvinage said that the around 60cm-tall statue, just off Brussels’ Grand Place, won a place in people’s hearts from the start.

Dressing it up soon became a tradition, not so much for modesty’s sake but as a way of affirming a connection with the city at a time of bloody conflict and upheaval across Europe.

The “oldest illustrati­on of a costumed Manneken Pis appears in a painting of 1615 while the earliest

outfit we have goes back to 1747”, Gauthier said.

The 1615 painting shows him as a shepherd boy in a white-spotted red cap and blue coat, wearing boots and surrounded by sheep, while urinating with great force and accuracy into a fountain.

“It seems that all the first costumes were provided by kings or the city,” Gauthier said.

The current Manneken Pis originates from 1619 when the Brussels authoritie­s asked sculptor Jerome Duquesnoy to make a statue of a small boy urinating who, according to one of many legends, put out a fire caused by besieging troops, sav-

ing the city.

“At that time, images or statues of a child urinating were common,” Pluvinage said.

“There was also a statue in central Brussels of a child spitting and then there was the fountain of the three maids, with water coming from their breasts,” he said.

“There have been clothes made for other statues like the Virgin Mary or Jesus since the end of the Middle Ages,” Gauthier said.

“The Manneken Pis, however, is the only secular statue in the world to have such a wardrobe, with some 965 individual costumes,” she said.

A colourful book, Garderobe de Manneken Pis or The Manneken Pis’ Wardrobe provides a record, starting with the first written reference to the statue in 1451.

After World War I, donors and costumes became more varied, Pluvinage said.

“They came from all over Europe, some from countries in Africa, in Asia or even from the Americas, as well as various associatio­ns, be they folk music, profession­al or student groups,” he said.

“Nowadays, Manneken Pis gets about 20 to 25 new costumes a year.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Clothes maketh the Manneken: A visitor looking at the historical collection of outfits created for the Manneken Pis statue (inset) at the Manneken Pis Wardrobe Museum in Brussels. — AFP
Clothes maketh the Manneken: A visitor looking at the historical collection of outfits created for the Manneken Pis statue (inset) at the Manneken Pis Wardrobe Museum in Brussels. — AFP
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia