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PAINTING

France ready to stump up €80m for a Rembrandt

France might be short of cash right now but when it comes to art it is still willing to dig deep. The government has offered €80 million for a Rembrandt painting to hang in the Louvre.

France ready to stump up €80m for a Rembrandt
France is readyto pay €80 million, that's €80 million for a Rembrandt painting.

France said on Thursday it was willing to pay €80 million ($90 million) to acquire one of two Rembrandt paintings on sale by the Rothschild family for the Louvre museum.

The two full-length portraits of a young couple painted shortly before their wedding in 1634 have been owned by the wealthy Rothschild banking family since the mid-19th century and have rarely been seen in public.

Culture Minister Fleur Pellerin said the offer had been submitted and would be “exceptionally financed by the Bank of France”.

Pellerin and her Dutch counterpart Jet Bussemaker wrote to the Rothschilds in July proposing that the Louvre and Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam each buy one of the paintings.

On Monday, the Netherlands said it was hoping to buy both artworks, with the government footing half the 160 million euro bill, while the Rijksmuseum would raise the rest.

However, the joint acquisition seemed back on the table in what Pellerin described as “an innovative solution that would strengthen the cultural cooperation between France and the Netherlands.”

She said the two artworks would alternate between the museums.

The portraits of Maerten Soolmans and Oopjen Coppit are believed to be in the collection of Eric de Rothschild.

The artnet website said they have only been publicly viewed once in the past 150 years.

“It is of utmost importance to us that the paintings, which are now in private hands, should come under public ownership so that they are accessible to the public and remain in Europe,” Bussemaker told Dutch radio on Monday.

“Art belongs to us all collectively,” she said, adding it “would be highly undesirable” if the paintings were sold “to some rich oil nation”.

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TOURISM

New guide to Paris museums – showing only the nudes

There are lots of guides to the visual splendours of Paris' museums and art galleries - but for those with a short attention span comes a new one, showing only nude or erotic artworks.

New guide to Paris museums - showing only the nudes
Find your way straight to the most erotic works in Paris galleries. Photo: Guiseppe Cacace/AFP

The online guides to the Louvre and Musée d’Orsay museums are produced by the porn website Pornhub and provide a list of the best erotic artworks in each museum, plus directions of how to get there – so you don’t need to waste your time looking at paintings of people in clothes.

The Classic Nudes series has been ruffling some feathers since it was posted online earlier in July, with the Uffizi museum in Florence threatening to sue. Bosses at the Louvre have said only that they are ‘dismayed’, while the Musée d’Orsay has remained silent on the subject.

The guide for the Musée d’Orsay lists 11 erotic artworks, together with a tongue-in-cheek commentary, and a location for each piece within the museum.

The Sleep by Gustave Courbet. Photo by FRANCOIS GUILLOT / AFP

Among the works featured are;

  • Le déjeuner sur l’herbe by Edouard Manet (1863) – which features a group having a picnic in which the woman has lost her clothes (the men remain fully dressed in three-piece suits and ties).
  • Un combat des coqs by Jean-Léon Gérôme (1846) – a nude couple watching a cock fight (that’s cockerels fighting, just to be clear).
  • L’origine du monde by Gustave Courbet (1866) – more than 150 years after it was first painted, the intimate close-up of female genitalia is still making waves. In 2019 Facebook had to pay damages to a French teacher whose account was closed when he posted a picture of the famous artwork.

The guide for the Louvre includes:

Nude young Man by Hippolyte Flandrin. Photo by KENZO TRIBOUILLARD / AFP
  • Portrait of Madeleine by Marie Guillemine Benoist (1800) – groundbreaking in several senses, this painting is one of the few on the list by a woman, and shows a topless black woman, painted just six years after the abolition of slavery in France’s colonies. 
  • Diane sortant du bain by François Boucher (1742) – one of many paintings on the list showing women having a bath, this features the Greek goddess Diana and her favourite nymph apparently surprised by the artist in the process of drying off after a bath. 
  • Le Jeune homme nu by Hippolyte Flandrin (1835) – most of the flesh shown in both the galleries is female (because that’s the patriarchy for you) but here we have a more rare male nude, a study of a young man sitting and looking rather sad and pensive.

As is hopefully clear, the Pornhub guides are explicit in nature and not suitable for children.

Both museums, however, form a great day out for all the family and contain a lot of fully-clothed artwork too. At present both are operating reduced visitor numbers due to health rules, so advance booking to recommended.

IN DETAIL: When do France’s top tourist sites reopen?

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