The Citizen (KZN)

Louvre reopens, but with limited access

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Paris – The Louvre, the world’s most-visited museum, reopened yesterday after its coronaviru­s closure, but with nearly a third of its galleries still shut.

The vast former palace of France’s kings has lost more than €40 million (about R764 million) in ticket sales during the nearfour-month lockdown and director Jean-Luc Martinez admitted it could have a few more lean years ahead as the world adapts to the virus.

Although most of the museum’s most popular draws, like the Mona Lisa and its vast antiquitie­s collection will be accessible, other galleries where social distancing is more difficult will remain closed.

Nor will there be any crowding in front of Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiec­e for a selfie, with visitors warned that they will have to stick to standing on well-distanced spots marked on the floor.

To avoid bottleneck­s, arrows will guide visitors through the labyrinth of galleries, with doubling back banned.

Some 70% of the Louvre’s 9.6 million visitors last year were from overseas and with tourism at a standstill, Martinez said that numbers could drop sharply.

“We are losing 80% of our public,” he said. “We are going to be at best 20 to 30% down on last summer – between 4 000 and 10 000 visitors a day,” he estimated.

The museum hopes to attract more French visitors to fill the gap as it embarks on a campaign to shake off its elitist image before the Paris Olympics in 2024.

Martinez said he wanted to build on the outreach success of the Louvre’s outpost museum in Lens, a poor former mining town in northern France.

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