The Free Press Journal

Louvre open all-night for Leonardo da Vinci exhibition

- AGENCIES /

It’s a half hour after midnight, and a huge crowd is massed in front of the illuminate­d glass pyramid at the Louvre for a rare nighttime visit to the museum’s most ambitious show in years, a landmark collection of works by the Renaissanc­e master Leonardo da Vinci. “It’s a cozy atmosphere, quite unusual. It feels almost private,” says Cherifa Tadjouri, admiring “The Battle of Anghiari” with her family at a time when most Paris nightbirds would be lining up for concerts or clubs.

Since Friday, the Louvre has opened its door for three nights of free visits to the show-stopping exhibition before it wraps up on Monday. The 30,000 tickets were snapped up in just three hours when they were made available on the museum’s website earlier this month, with people assigned time slots to avoid overcrowdi­ng.

Odile Poitier, 32, enjoyed the coffee, tea and madeleine cakes offered after the visit with her brother and some friends.

“Usually after a museum visit, you’re ready to head home, but here we can stay and chat, there’s no hurry, everyone's relaxed,” she told AFP.

Jean-Luc Martinez, the museum’s director, said the goal was for people to “feel at home” while soaking up the blockbuste­r show of 162 works, including loans by Queen Elizabeth II and the British Museum, Russia’s Hermitage and the Vatican.

“It's really well organised, we were able to get pretty close to all the works,” said Cora Yuan, a Chinese woman who lives in Paris.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India