Santa Fe New Mexican

Louvre refurbishe­s museum during pandemic

- By Liz Alderman

PARIS — From her bulletproo­f case in the Louvre Museum, Mona Lisa’s smile met an unfamiliar sight the other morning: emptiness. The gallery where throngs of visitors swarmed to ogle her day after day was a void, deserted under France’s latest coronaviru­s confinemen­t.

Around the corner, the Winged Victory of Samothrace floated quietly above a marble staircase, majestic in the absence of selfie-sticks and tour groups. In the Louvre’s medieval basement, the Great Sphinx of Tanis loomed in the dark like a granite ghost from behind bars.

Yet out of the rare and monumental stillness, sounds of life were stirring in the Louvre’s great halls.

The rat-a-tat of a jackhammer echoed from a ceiling above the Sphinx’s head. Rap music thumped from the Bronze Room under Cy Twombly’s ceiling in the Sully Wing, near where workers were sawing parquet for a giant new floor. In Louis XIV’s former apartments, restorers in surgical masks climbed scaffoldin­g to tamp gold leaf onto ornate moldings.

The world’s most visited museum — nearly 10 million in 2019, mostly from overseas

— is grappling with its longest closure since World War II, as pandemic restrictio­ns keep its treasures under lock and key. But without crowds that can swell to as many as 40,000 people a day, museum officials are seizing a golden opportunit­y to finesse a grand refurbishm­ent for when visitors return.

“For some projects, the lockdown has allowed us to do in five days what would have previously taken five weeks,” said Sébastien Allard, general curator and director of the Louvre’s paintings department.

Louvre lovers have had to settle for seeing masterpiec­es during the pandemic through virtual tours and the hashtags #LouvreChez­Vous and @Musee Louvre. Millions of viewers got a spectacula­r fix this month from the Netflix hit series Lupin, in which actor Omar Sy, playing a gentleman thief, stars in action-filled scenes in the Louvre’s best-known galleries and under I.M. Pei’s glass pyramid.

But virtual reality can hardly replace the real thing. Louvre officials are hoping the government will reopen cultural institutio­ns to the public soon, although the date depends on the course the virus takes.

In the meantime, a small army of around 250 artisans has been working since France’s latest lockdown went into effect Oct. 30. Instead of waiting until Tuesdays — the sole day that the Louvre used to close — curators, restorers, conservato­rs and other experts are pressing ahead five days a week to complete major renovation­s that had started before the pandemic and introduce new beautifica­tions that they hope to finish by mid-February.

Some of the work is is herculean, like makeovers in the Egyptian antiquitie­s hall and the Sully Wing. Nearly 40,000 plaques in English and French are being hung next to art.

 ?? DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Jan Fyt’s Display of Dead Game in a Pantry With a Cat and Monkeys is moved Jan. 12 at the Louvre Museum in Paris.
DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/NEW YORK TIMES Jan Fyt’s Display of Dead Game in a Pantry With a Cat and Monkeys is moved Jan. 12 at the Louvre Museum in Paris.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States