Belgium's Royal Museum of Fine Arts (1875-81) includes four different art museums, which collectively are considered one of the largest and first-class artwork galleries within the international. The museum grew out of a collection first installation in 1797 and changed into at the beginning housed in the former palace of Charles of Lorraine. This became transferred to the newly hooked up Musées Royaux in 1846. The Musée Old Masters holds a set of famous works by Flemish and Dutch Old Masters. Well-acknowledged works on display here encompass Gerard David's Adoration of the Magi, Rogier van der Weyden's The Mourning of Christ, Pietà through Petrus Christus, and Dirk Bouts' Judgement of the Emperor Otto. The halls of the Musée Modern concentrate on art work from the late 19th century to the present. It combines temporary exhibition halls with the basement galleries of the Musée Fin-de-Siècle, devoted to paintings from the length among 1884 and 1914, whilst Brussels became one of Europe's cultural capitals. Neighboring the primary constructing is the Musée Magritte, committed to the paintings of Belgian surrealist artist René Magritte. It is the most important Magritte collection in the international.