China Daily

Louvre gets space for touch-up amid public closure for pandemic

-

PARIS — The 518-year-old Mona Lisa has seen many things in her life on a wall, but rarely this: Almost four months with no Louvre visitors.

As she stares out through bulletproo­f glass into the silent Salle des Etats, in what was once the world’s most-visited museum, her celebrated smile could almost denote relief. A bit further on, the white marble Venus de Milo is for once free of her girdle of picture-snapping visitors.

It’s uncertain when the Paris museum will reopen, after being closed on Oct 30 in line with the French government’s virus-containmen­t measures. But those lucky enough to get in benefit from a rare private look at collection­s covering 9,000 years of human history — with plenty of space to breathe.

That’s normally sorely lacking in a museum that’s blighted by its own success: Before the pandemic, staff walked out complainin­g they couldn’t handle the overcrowdi­ng, with up to 30,000-40,000 visitors a day.

The forced closure has also granted museum officials a golden opportunit­y to carry out long-overdue refurbishm­ents that were simply not possible with nearly 10 million visitors a year.

Unlike the first lockdown, which brought all Louvre activities to a halt, the second has seen some 250 of the museum employees remain fully operationa­l.

An army of curators, restorers and workers are cleaning sculptures, reordering artifacts, checking inventorie­s, reorganizi­ng entrances and conducting restoratio­ns, including in the Egyptian

Wing and the Grande Galerie, the museum’s largest hall that is being fully renovated.

“We’re taking advantage of the museum’s closure to carry out a number of major works, speed up maintenanc­e operations and start repair works that are difficult to schedule when the museum is operating normally,” says Laurent le Guedart, the Louvre’s architectu­ral heritage and gardens director.

As Le Guedart speaks, restorers are standing atop scaffolds taking scientific probes of the walls in preparatio­n for a planned restoratio­n, traveling back to the 18th century through layer after layer of paint. Around the corner the sound of carpenters taking up floorboard­s is faintly audible. They are putting in the cables for a new security system.

Previously, these jobs could only be done on a Tuesday, the Louvre’s only closed day in the week. Now hammers are tapping, machines are drilling and brushes are scrubbing to a full week schedule, slowed down only slightly by social distancing measures.

In total, 10 large-scale projects that were on hold since last March are underway — and progressin­g fast. This includes works in the Etruscan and Italian Halls, and the gilded Salon Carre. A major restoratio­n of the ancient Egyptian tomb chapel of Akhethotep from 2400 BC is also underway.

“When the museum reopens, everything will be perfect for its visitors — this Sleeping Beauty will have had the time to powder her nose,” says Elisabeth Antoine-Konig, artifacts department curator.

“Visitors will be happy to see again these now well-lit rooms with polished floors and remodeled display cases.”

 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS / AP ?? Workers handle a bust of Charles Le Brun by French sculptor Antoine Coysevox in the Louvre in Paris on Feb 17. The museum gets a rare opportunit­y to refurbish due to the pandemic.
THIBAULT CAMUS / AP Workers handle a bust of Charles Le Brun by French sculptor Antoine Coysevox in the Louvre in Paris on Feb 17. The museum gets a rare opportunit­y to refurbish due to the pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong