Louvre Museum
Richard Bitting
July 2 to July 6
 

Two Centuries as a Museum

The Louvre was not in any way originally intended to become a museum. The "salle des antiques" which Henri VI set up on the ground floor of the Grande Galerie was not accessible to the general public, nor was the king's cabinet of drawings, created in 1671, or the king's cabinet of paintings, to which access was reserved for a privileged few.

From the date when, under Louis XIV, most of its occupants left the Louvre, its vocation as a "palace of the arts" appeared a quite natural progression in the eyes of the resident artists and the academies. The idea of a Palace of the Muses or "Muséum", where one could view the royal collections, was born in 1747. The museum concept, which was quite new at the time, ran along the same lines as the Encyclopedia and the philosophy of the Enlightenment. From 1779, purchases and museographical projects demonstrate the imminence of its realization.

 

    

 

 


WINGED VICTORY OF SAMOTHRACE
(2nd or 3rd century B.C.)

The Glass Pyramid

Yang-ye is mistaken for Mona Lisa outside!

Napoleon Rides (with his hand on his tummy)