
Summer! Time to enjoy the sun and to laze around on the beach. At Escher in The Palace we are full of summer cheer. During the holiday period we will be showing how Escher spent his holidays. For the first time ever photos of his beach holidays will be on display, along with beach fashion from the start of the previous century. As the icing on the cake we will be giving you the opportunity to get your photo taken in old-fashioned beachwear; this summer we are The Palace by the seaside.
Fresh, salty sea air. Feeling the wind in your hair and the heat of the sun on your skin. A trip to the seaside is refreshing, relaxing and washes all your cares away. Nowadays, we primarily consider a trip to the seaside to be a recreational activity, but in the 19
century it was also regarded as therapeutic. Bathing resorts such as Zandvoort, Katwijk and Scheveningen in particular surged in popularity. Not only did the elite enjoy the salty sea air, but they also believed in its therapeutic effects. Splashing around in the sea, in appropriate clothing, was advised for the system.

Maurits (with straw hat on the front row) with his companions in Zandvoort, 1905
Sea air in Zandvoort
At an early age Escher had to head to the sea to improve his health. He was underweight and had all manner of childhood illnesses. Which is why he had to visit the children’s guest house Villa Groot Kijkduin in Zandvoort. He slept in dormitories with children from across the nation and, health permitting, he would attend the village school, where he was badly bullied. It was a nightmare for him. Portrait photographer Anthonie Bakels took this photo of Escher and his fellow guest house residents in Zandvoort. Escher is the in the bottom row, second to the left. His face speaks volumes.
Fortunately, his stays in spa resorts did leave him with something positive: an intense love of the sea (I wrote about this already in Yearning for the sea). He takes his fiancée Jetta to the seaside, the photographs prior to their wedding are taken there, and he heads for the coast with his family later on too. Even to Zandvoort, where he stayed as a boy.

Maurits & Jetta at the beach in Viareggio, 1924
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