Kuwait Times

A decade in making, Louvre Abu Dhabi opens to the public

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ABU DHABI: The Louvre Abu Dhabi opened its doors to the public yesterday, drawing thousands of visitors as cosmopolit­an as the United Arab Emirates itself, a symbol of the Gulf nation’s ambitions on the global stage. Light streamed down from the vast domed ceiling, the open-air museum reminiscen­t of a traditiona­l Arabic marketplac­e. Online tickets sold out and hundreds more stood in line yesterday morning for the chance to see the works of the likes of Pablo Picasso and Rodin. Inside, Emirati teenagers in flowing black robes snapped selfies next to a towering oil painting of Napoleon Bonaparte.

Hundreds of Asian, European and Arab expatriate­s dressed in stylish attire roamed through the vast museum alongside Emirati couples in traditiona­l Arabic dress. “I’m so excited to see what’s in the Louvre. I don’t know how to pronounce it,” giggled Rachel Aquino, a Filipina nurse living in Abu Dhabi. “LOOV,” her friend Ruby Fullon, a fellow nurse from the Philippine­s, pronounced. Down the palatial rear steps of the open-air structure, Alex Viera and Marcelo de Paula from Brazil snapped photos on a platform jutting out over the sea, with traditiona­l dhow wooden ships moored in the background. “I’ve been to the Louvre in Paris three times... I think it’s very nice to see it here in a modern context,” said Viera.

The Louvre Abu Dhabi, the first museum to bear the Louvre name outside France, presents around 600 pieces and has been billed as “the first universal museum in the Arab world”. Under the 30-year agreement, France provides expertise, loans works of art and organizes temporary exhibition­s - in return for one billion euros ($1.16 billion).

The Louvre in France takes a Ä400-million share of that sum for the use of its name up to 2037. For the next 10 years, the mother ship in Paris will lend works to its Abu Dhabi partner on a voluntary basis, for a maximum of two years. For its permanent collection, the museum has acquired hundreds of pieces, dating from the earliest Mesopotami­an civilisati­ons to the present day.

On opening day, guided tours wound through the spacious galleries as Asian and African dance troupes performed in the open-air sections overlookin­g the sea. “It is not a copy of the Louvre,” said Badria Al-Mazimi, an architectu­ral engineer. The 26-year-old Emirati said she had visited the site when the museum was still under constructi­on and had eagerly anticipate­d the public opening.

“The beautiful thing is they made it not just one building, but like a little neighborho­od. When you walk around, you feel like you’re walking in an old Emirati quarter,” she said, beaming as her husband studied a Central Asian statuette dating from 1700 BC. “To see all these people from different nationalit­ies waiting in this long line to visit the Louvre - it’s something really special,” she said. “This is what you see when you travel abroad, and now it’s here, in the Emirates.”

“This museum actually goes beyond expectatio­ns because the museum is an icon in itself and ... under its beautiful roof it has so many nice pieces of art which brings the whole world together,” said Michaela StolzSchmi­tz, who lives in Dubai. Another visitor, Christine Bayhon, was similarly impressed. “We’ve seen it on the Internet so we sort of have an idea what it is, what it looks like but getting here and really being here and seeing all of this, I’m in awe,” Bayhon said. “It’s like, ‘Oh wow.’ I tried to capture it on my phone but I just couldn’t.” “I wanted to experience it for real, rather than just looking in the TV or in pictures,” fellow visitor Juliet Bayhon said.

More than a decade in the making, a VIP inaugurati­on was held on Wednesday, with French President Emmanuel Macron among the first visitors. The museum design, by France’s Pritzker prize-winning architect Jean Nouvel, conjures up the image of an Arab medina as seen through the eyes of a contempora­ry cinematogr­apher. A silvertone­d dome with perforated arabesque patterns appears to float over the white galleries, creating what Nouvel describes as a “rain of light”.

To reach the ground, each ray of light must cross eight layers of perforatio­ns, creating a constantly shifting pattern that mimics the shadows cast by palm trees or the roof of a traditiona­l Arab market. The Louvre Abu Dhabi is the first of three museums to open on Saadiyat Island, where the UAE plans to launch the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, designed by Frank Gehry, and Norman Foster’s Zayed National Museum. — Agencies

 ??  ?? ABU DHABI: Emirati women stand in front of a series of nine panels by American painter Cy Twombly at the Louvre Abu Dhabi yesterday. — AP
ABU DHABI: Emirati women stand in front of a series of nine panels by American painter Cy Twombly at the Louvre Abu Dhabi yesterday. — AP

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