The first thing you should do is climb a hill. In the town centre, an ancient
hidden alley called ruelle César winds up behind old houses to emerge on a
summit where you can look down on the old rooftops of Mons. This picturesque
southern Belgian town has a population of just 93,000, but numbers are boosted
in term time by students attending Mons university and the music
conservatory.
It’s easy to forget that Mons was once a mining town, because it’s now more
like Silicon Hill. Internet search giant Google has built a huge data centre
outside the town, creating a digital community among the abandoned pits. The
locals have responded in their own way by creating mock Google street views of
Mons, including one with two people paddling canoes down a Mons street pursued
by police officers (launches 24 January at
mons2015.eu/en/mons-street-review).
Mons locals are renowned for fighting a green dragon called Doudou. This
strange ceremony, known as the Ducasse de Mons, has medieval origins and is held
every year on the first Sunday after Pentecost (that’s 31 May this year) on the
main square. It involves men dressed in green leaves, a swinging dragon’s tail
and a man representing Saint George, who kills Doudou with a single pistol
shot.
The most stylish of recent European leaders comes from Mons. Local mayor Elio
di Rupo became prime minister of Belgium on 6 December 2011 after the country’s
record-breaking 541 days without a government. He transformed grey Belgian
politics with his Italian charm, smart red bow tie and fondness for posing in
swimming trunks. Now he is back running Mons.
Artist Arne Quinze’s
installation, The Passenger. Photograph: arnequinze/Instagram
The most impressive new work of modern art
is a sprawling wooden structure in rue de Nimy, installed on 6 December by Arne
Quinze. Called The Passenger, it hovers above a busy shopping street with
blood-red struts brushing against the law courts. The street had to be closed
off when the installation partly collapsed on 24 December, but the damaged parts
have now been repaired.
It’s hard to pick the strangest Mons event
of 2015. There’s an opening ceremony on 24 January involving dancing robots,
eight Finnish hot tubs, a re-enactment of the Woodstock festival and 18,000
people dressed in shiny aluminium ponchos (free, more details at mons2015.eu).
But the organisers hope to hit another high in February when they reconstruct a
traditional London working men’s club inside an old school building named La
Maison Folie. The aim of the four-day event (19-22 February) is to spice up Mons
with a mix of British eccentricity and cutting-edge culture.
The organisers of Mons 2015 want you to
get lost and discover unexpected places, so it is worth exploring the town’s
steep cobbled lanes, hidden gardens and secret courtyards. Along the way, you
will come across art installations, pop-up bars, street art and a poetry
installation on buildings stretching for 10 kilometres called The
Phrase.
BAM, the Beaux Arts
Mons, will host a Van Gogh exhibition focused on his early drawings and letters
to his brother. Photograph: Alamy
The biggest event in Mons’ year as
cultural capital is the Van Gogh exhibition. It will take place in the newly
renovated BAM museum (25 January-17 May, timed ticket €15), but don’t come
expecting starry nights or yellow sunflowers. The focus is on the period Van
Gogh spent as a preacher among the poor mining communities of the Borinage, just
south of Mons, with many of van Gogh’s early drawings, copies of paintings by
other artists, and letters written to his brother, Theo.
The weirdest museum in Mons is the
Mundaneum. It contains the remains of a vast collection of newspapers, posters,
catalogues and curiosities gathered in the early 20th century by the Belgian
philanthropist Paul Otlet. For years it lay forgotten in a Brussels underground
car park until it was snapped up by Mons, housed in an empty department store
and rebranded as the world’s first internet.
The most inspiring art gallery is located
in a restored 18th-century building that once belonged to a carriage maker.
Yvonne Legrand’s L’Art Recréation gallery at 72 rue de Nimy (no website)
displays contemporary glassware on battered tables, ancient cabinets and
salvaged wooden posts.
BAM, the Beaux Arts
Mons, will host a Van Gogh exhibition focused on his early drawings and letters
to his brother. Photograph: Alamy
The biggest event in Mons’ year as
cultural capital is the Van Gogh exhibition. It will take place in the newly
renovated BAM museum (25 January-17 May, timed ticket €15), but don’t come
expecting starry nights or yellow sunflowers. The focus is on the period Van
Gogh spent as a preacher among the poor mining communities of the Borinage, just
south of Mons, with many of van Gogh’s early drawings, copies of paintings by
other artists, and letters written to his brother, Theo.
The weirdest museum in Mons is the
Mundaneum. It contains the remains of a vast collection of newspapers, posters,
catalogues and curiosities gathered in the early 20th century by the Belgian
philanthropist Paul Otlet. For years it lay forgotten in a Brussels underground
car park until it was snapped up by Mons, housed in an empty department store
and rebranded as the world’s first internet.
The most inspiring art gallery is located
in a restored 18th-century building that once belonged to a carriage maker.
Yvonne Legrand’s L’Art Recréation gallery at 72 rue de Nimy (no website)
displays contemporary glassware on battered tables, ancient cabinets and
salvaged wooden posts.
One of the more subtle
rooms at the Dream hotel. Photograph:
PR
Try a local beer in La Cervoise on the Grand’Place. The interior is
furnished in traditional Belgian style, with leatherette benches, brass rails
and little hooks to hang your coat. The lengthy beer menu lists 170 brews,
including hard-to-find local specialities such as Quintine beers from the
witches’ town of Ellezelles (which claims to be birthplace of Hercule Poirot,
solely on the basis of a fake birth certificate) and lovely spicy, unfiltered La
Chouffe on tap.
The independent Plaza Art Cinema is a favourite of Luc and
Jean-Pierre Dardenne. These two brothers make acclaimed indie films set in
gritty Belgian industrial towns. Unlike most cinemas in French-speaking Belgium,
the Plaza Art screens international films in their original language rather than
dubbed into French.
At the Saint Symphorien War Cemetery, 2km east of Mons, German and
British soldiers are buried together in a beautiful verdant setting. The Duke
and Duchess of Cambridge stood among the graves on 4 August last year in a
moving ceremony to mark the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of war.
Don’t expect to be wowed if arriving by train. Top Spanish architect
Santiago Calatrava was commissioned to design a sublime new station, like the
one in nearby Liège, but this costly project won’t be finished until late 2015
at the earliest, so many of the expected two million visitors will have to pick
their way around a muddy construction site. It makes you wonder if you have got
the wrong Mons, or the wrong year, but this is definitely the right place and
the right time to visit.
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