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Louvre gears up for Leonardo da Vinci retrospect­ive

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The Louvre in Paris is putting the finishing touches to an ambitious Leonardo da Vinci retrospect­ive, which groups more than 160 of the artist’s works and has already attracted close to 2,00,000 advance visitor bookings.

Timed to coincide with the 500th anniversar­y of the famed artist’s death, the show, simply called Leonardo da Vinci, took a decade to put together and includes works on loan from Queen Elizabeth and Bill Gates.

“If you want to be amazed, you must come,” said Vincent Delieuvin, chief curator at the Louvre’s department of paintings, during a preview for staff at the Louvre.

“It’s almost as if we were bringing Leonardo da Vinci’s

THE EXHIBITION WILL ALSO SHOWCASE ARTWORKS OF LEONARDO DA VINCI WHICH ARE OWNED BY QUEEN ELIZABETH AND BILL GATES.

workshop back to life,” he said.

The Louvre itself owns five of the artist’s paintings, more than anybody else, including the Mona Lisa, which is seen by 30,000 people every day.

“This unpreceden­ted retrospect­ive of da Vinci’s painting career will illustrate how he placed utmost importance on painting,” the museum said.

“The exhibition will paint the portrait of a man and an artist of extraordin­ary freedom,” it said.

In addition to the Mona Lisa — which will remain at her usual spot in the Louvre — four paintings are to form the centre of the show: The Virgin of the Rocks, La Belle Ferronnier­e, Saint John the Baptist, and Saint Anne.

“The objective is to place them alongside a wide array of drawings as well as a small but significan­t series of paintings and sculptures from the master’s circle,” the Louvre said.

The exhibition runs until February.

 ??  ?? The Louvre museum in Paris PHOTO: ISTOCK
The Louvre museum in Paris PHOTO: ISTOCK

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