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History
The Louvre was built by Philippe Auguste in 1204[,] and was originally
the royal château [chateau]
and
later transformed by Charles V between 1364 and 1380[.] and [It] was entirely
rebuilt from the time of François [Francois] I to the 19th century.
Once upon a time a palace of French kings
and princes, the Louvre is today the Palace of Arts and holds one of the
richest museums in the world. Its collection, which ranges from Egyptian
art of 5000 BC to nineteenth-century work, is divided into seven departments:
Oriental and Islamic Antiquities; Egyptian
Antiquities; Greek, Roman and Etruscan Antiquities;
Painting; Sculpture; Decorative Arts; and
Graphic Arts.
Mitterand's contribution to the Louvre
In 1981 President Miterrand initiated a rehabilitation
project called Le Grand Louvre. The visible part of this iceberg like building-site,
the Glass Pyramid designed by famous architect Ieoh Ming Pei, opens the
outstanding perspective toward the Grande
Arche de la Défense [Defense] with the Arc de Triomphe in the middle.
The Pyramid gives now access to the main entrance,
letting a delightful golden light filter through
the glass surface illuminating the floor below.
What's new
The huge renovation of Le Grand Louvre which
started in 1983 leads [led] to an increase of 22,000 square meters.
The basement is now occupied by the remains of the medieval castle originally
a big keep part [the great keep]of the [defensive]
wall
built under Philippe August in 1190 which have [has] been excavated
and displayed below the Cour Carrée [Carree]. Under the glass pyramid
leading to the main entrance of the Hall Napoléon [Napoleon] starts
the shopping gallery leading to several restaurants and cafeterias of the
Galerie du Carrousel under the reversed pyramid.
The Aile Richelieu is fully accessible to
wheel-chair visitors.
Temporary exhibits are
displayed below the pyramid in the Hall Napoléon [Napoleon] and
in Aile Richelieu and Aile Sully.
To help you find your way, the three wings
are colour
coded. Each level is also colour
coded and divided into ten sections[,] and each room is numbered. In 1993
the Museum celebrated the bicentenary of its
opening, and an extension to the Richelieu Wing [Aile Richelieu] opened
to celebrate the event. The
upheaval this
has caused will affect the building through the decade,
so changes and closures are expected.
Collection
Inside the Louvre
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This is one of the greatest art collections in the world. The core
collection was formed by François [Francois] 1, and added to by
Henri II and Catherine de Medicis. The Old Master collection was developed
by Louis XIV and important Spanish and Dutch works acquired by Louis XVI.
Most painting lovers come to view the exceptional collection of European
paintings which range from I400 to I900. The Grand Gallery running along
the south of the building is a stupendous
piece of design which showed the world what a picture gallery should look
like. Pierced by large windows, its walls are hung with some of the finest
works of the Italian Renaissance. On this
level is also the Spanish collection and the large scale nineteenth-century
French paintings. On the upper level artists from northem Europe are well
represented, along with earlier paintings from the French school.
Not to [M]iss
After spending around 2 hours, you can become acquainted
with
some of the most famous paintings in the world. For example, try to interpret
the enigmatic smile of Leonardo Da Vinci's
Mona Lisa, or admire the pertect [perfect]
proportions of the Venus of Milo (Sully wing [Aile Sully]). Michelangelo,
Bellin, Donatello and Maillol are some of the great sculptors also represented
here.
"Carrousel du Louvre"
The other major development is underground - a vast space stretching
from the Hall Napoleon, the main entrance to the museum, beneath the Pyramid
to beyond the Arc du Carrousel. Known as the "Espaces Carrousel du Louvre",
its central crossroads, place de la Pyramide Inversee, is fed
with daylight through an inverted pyramid,
a smaller model of the Pyramid. From the Hall Napoléon [Napoleon],
shops, restaurants, exhibition spaces - and bits of the old fortress's
outer defences - make up the cold, classy and commercial "Carrousel du
Louvre" gallery. Beyond are several auditoriums
and conference halls, car and bus parking
areas and new premises for the Louvre's research
department, unique in the world for having
its own particle accelerator to examine
subatomic
bits of works of art and archeological finds.
Before this subterranean complex was dug out,
archeologists discovered Stone Age tools, remnants of an Iron Age farm
growing lentils, peas, fruit and cereals,
a house dating from 300 BC, a fourteenth-century manor
house complete with wall-paintings and garden, and Catherine de Medicis'
unfinished Tuileries Palace.There will be direct access to the "Espace
Carrousel du Louvre" from the metro and from place du Carrousel. The
virtue of the new parking spaces will be to clear rue du Rivoli
and place du Palais- Royal of the lines of coaches disgorging
their passengers into the Louvre.
New Projects
New galleries are being planned in the coming years for Italian painting
and sculpture, for the vast collections of Egyptian and Greek art, tor
[for] works by the Etruscans and sculpture trom [from] the northern countries.
With its seven sections, the Musee du Louvre is colossal
in size, and owns an extroardinary number of works of art. About 28,000
are on display, which is a mere 5% or so of the Louvre's treasures, most
of which are being kept in storage in the cellars.
Surroundings
After crossing the Place du Carrousel, take a look at the new Louvre built
by Percier and Fontaine under the first Empire, and then by Visconti and
Lefuel under the second. It is here, in Napoleon's Courtyard,
that we see the most famous sign of the great Louvre's redevelopment,
the pyramid by the Sino-American architect leoh Ming Pei. Placed in the
center of the courtyard, this object 21.65 m high with a base 35.40 m square,
employs the most modern techniques for the use of steel, glass and aluminium.
Its proportions were calculated in accordance
with the Golden Number laws. The pyramid gives acces to the new spaces
in the museum, which have been entirely rearranged starting from this single,
central entrance. We finally reach the old Louvre via the famous Cour [Carree],
which possesses remarkable architectural elements; the facade
by Pierre Lescot; works by Lemercier including the Clock Pavilion.
Organized Tours
There are several tours possible depending on the time you have available.
You can wander about in leisurly fashion through the art of various countries
and centuries : you can make a closer examination of a specific artistic
style that interests you in particular, or take one of the official tours
that are ottered [offered] in various languages. A multilingual
brochure as well as a plan of the museum are available at the entrance
tree [free] of charge. And before leaving the neigborhood, take a look
at the two other special museums. The first is the Musee des Arts Decoratifs
; it displays art-works and furniture from the Middle Ages to the present.
A little further, is the Musee des Arts à [a] la Mode [et
de la Mode], with costumes and cloth [clothes]
from the 16th to the 20th centuries.
Note: Words in brackets mean editor's notes.
In this article, they represent the French accented letters spelt in English
version or editor's notes for better English.
For the original text,
please visit Le
Louvre.
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