Isabel Lowyck is taking on the role as the new Director of Gaasbeek Castle

On the eve of the reopening of Gaasbeek Castle, Isabel Lowyck is starting as its new director. She previously worked for museums such as M Leuven and the Art & History Museum, as well as for various organisations such as the Belgian National Orchestra and Guide-ID. She plans to continue the exhibition policy of the Castle and give a more important role in the future to themes such as sustainability and inclusion.

On 1 February, Isabel Lowyck (born 1973) will take on the role of Director of Gaasbeek Castle. An interest in culture and the arts have been a common thread throughout her education and career. She studied art and cultural studies at the KU Leuven with an internship at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and began her career at the Art & History Museum as an educational employee. After that she was active in the Flemish Museum Association as the project coordinator for Museum Night, Museum Evenings and the Youth Museum Days. In 2005, she founded AmuseeVous, a non-profit organisation which brings young people and museums closer together. In 2009, she started working at M Leuven as Head of Division Audience Building and, from 2018, she became a freelancer for various organisations (Shaved Monkey (Manager), the Belgian National Orchestra (Marketing Manager) and Guide-ID (Business Manager for Belgium and France). Since 2022, she has also been teaching the 'Educational Heritage Disclosure' course to Design Sciences students at the University of Antwerp.

Dialogue between heritage and contemporary art

In recent years, Gaasbeek Castle has been building up an exhibition policy in which heritage enters into dialogue with contemporary art. She would like to continue that policy:

"Collaborations with living artists are vital to me. They are the bridge-builders par excellence between the past and the present and possess the gift of stimulating the imagination. In these busy and turbulent times, we can all find peace in beauty."

Attention to sustainability, inclusion and community collaboration

In addition, Lowyck is looking forward to embedding ICOM's new, broader museum definition into the Castle's policies. She wants to give themes such as sustainability, inclusion and community collaboration a (more important) role in addition to its core missions. She plans to develop the entire heritage site, of which the Castle is the icing on the cake, into a contemporary and engaging place.

Luc Delrue, Secretary General of the Department of Culture, Youth and Media:

"Isabel is a passionate museum employee. She spearheaded the 1 euro scheme, worked for the Museum Association in the early years of the organisation and showed her abilities by helping to put M Leuven on the map. With her knowledge and commitment, Isabel is sure to write a fantastic story for Gaasbeek Castle in the years to come. In addition, she will work hard to position it as an attraction in the Flemish and international heritage landscape."

Lowyck takes over the torch from her predecessor, Luc Vanackere, who is retiring after nineteen years at the helm of the castle. Gaasbeek Castle will be closed for restoration work for a very short time before reopening its doors to visitors on 1 July 2023.


Do you have any questions for the Department of Culture, Youth and Media? Please contact Mattijs Deraedt, Deputy Spokesman for the department, at [email protected] or on +32 (0)2 553 42 89.

Do you have any questions for the office of the Flemish Minister of Culture, Jan Jambon? Please contact Spokesman Olivier Van Raemdonck at [email protected] or on +32 (0)470 99 91 01.

Tess Thibaut

Press and communications, Gaasbeek Castle

 

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About Gaasbeek Castle

Gaasbeek Castle sits enthroned amidst the rolling hills of Pajottenland just outside Brussels. The medieval castle has had an eventful history, evolving from a strategic stronghold to a spacious country house. The Count of Egmond, was one of its best-known owners. The present building was given its romantic restyling at the end of the nineteenth century by the enigmatic French Marchioness Arconati Visconti. She was the daughter-in-law of aristocrats Giuseppe and Costanza Arconati Visconti, who, between 1821 and 1839, turned the castle into a unique meeting place for intellectual exchanges between exiled Italian politicians, European writers and scientists. Marie Arconati Visconti was also interested in the great intellectual debates of her time, as her correspondence with and support for Alfred Dreyfus testify. She set up the castle as a museum for her considerable art collection and treated it like a historical theatre set. The dream castle created then is still something of a time machine with its historic interiors, tapestries, paintings, furniture, sculptures and other valuable objects.

The castle park, with its centuries-old trees, ponds, lanes, winding paths and occasional historic buildings, is the ideal place for winding down. The estate also includes a unique museum garden where old varieties of fruit and vegetables are cultivated. 

Contact

Kasteelstraat 40 1750 Gaasbeek (Lennik)

+3225310130

[email protected]

www.kasteelvangaasbeek.be