The Press

Minister considers tour for Mona Lisa

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FRANCE: Tourists throng to the Louvre in Paris every day to see the Mona Lisa, but she may soon be taken on a ‘‘grand tour’’ of France to allow people in deprived areas to view her enigmatic smile.

Francoise Nyssen, the culture minister, is ‘‘seriously considerin­g’’ sending the painting to Lens, a former mining town in the north where the Louvre has an outpost.

She dismissed art experts’ warnings that Leonardo da Vinci’s 16th-century masterpiec­e is too fragile to be transporte­d.

‘‘We had the same reaction when we proposed to take the Bayeux Tapestry out of its museum,’’ she said yesterday. Emmanuel Macron, the French president, has offered to lend Britain the 11th-century embroidery of the Norman conquest.

Sylvain Robert, the mayor of Lens, is leading a campaign for the Mona Lisa to be exhibited temporaril­y at the Louvre-Lens, which is overlooked by slag heaps beside red-brick terraced houses and a chip shop.

Supporters of the local football club held up a huge banner with a picture of the Mona Lisa at a match last month, with a slogan reading: ‘‘Mona Lisa, the hearts of the people of Lens are beating for you.’’

Many townspeopl­e hope that struggling local businesses will benefit from visitors who come to see the work. Nyssen said: ‘‘Cultural offerings exist: why would they be confined to certain places and not accessible everywhere for all to enjoy?’’

Didier Rykner, an art historian, said it would be ‘‘irresponsi­ble and extremely dangerous’’ to subject it to further travel. ‘‘It is extremely fragile. The wood panel it is painted on is extremely thin and there is a crack, which if it widened would damage it irreversib­ly.’’ - Telegraph Group

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