Just south of the Grande-Place is
place Rihour , a largely modern
square with an old palace that now
houses the tourist office, hidden behind
an ugly war monument of gigantic
proportions. Close by, the busiest
shopping street,
rue de Béthune ,
leads into place de Béthune, which has
some excellent cafés, and beyond to the
Musée des Beaux-Arts on place de
la République (Mon 2-6pm, Wed-Sun
10am-6pm, Fri till 7pm; 30F/¬4.57). The
recent redesign is rather disappointing
- too sleek and spacious to create any
coherence to the collection - but the
museum does contain some important works.
Flemish painters form the core of the
collection, from "primitives" like Dirck
Bouts, through the northern Renaissance
to Ruisdael, de Hooch and the
seventeenth-century schools. Other works
include Goya's interpretation of youth
and old age,
Les Jeunes et Les
Vieilles , and a scattering of
Impressionists, including Monet and
Renoir. Ceramics are well represented in
one of the two rooms on the ground floor;
the other room displays a small
collection of nineteenth-century
sculpture.
A couple of blocks to the south of
the museum, on rue de Fleurus, is
Maison Coilliot , a ceramics shop
and one of the few houses built by
Hector Guimard, who made his name
designing the Art Nouveau entrances to
the Paris métro. Built at the height of
the Art Nouveau movement, it's as
striking today as it obviously was to
the conservative burghers of Lille (there
are no other such buildings in Lille),
but it also displays the somewhat
muddled eclecticism of the style, coming
over as half brick-faced mansion, half
timber-framed cottage. East of the
museum, near the triumphal arch of
Porte de Paris , the city's Hôtel
de Ville is also worth a quick look,
executed in a bizarre, Flemish Art Deco
style, with a tall belfry and viewing
platform (closed at the time of writing
- check for details with the tourist
office).