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Impressionist masterpieces set for Tour de France to mark milestone anniversary

The world's leading museum of Impressionist art is sending an unprecedented number of its masterpieces on tour in France to mark the movement's 150th anniversary.

Impressionist masterpieces set for Tour de France to mark milestone anniversary
Paintings by French impressionist artist Edouard Manet (Photo by FRANCOIS GUILLOT / AFP)

Impressionism was born in April 1874 when a group of painters including Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir and Paul Cezanne – tired of being rejected by the government-backed Paris Salon – held their own independent show.

The Musee d’Orsay, which today holds the world’s largest Impressionist collection, will send 178 of its 400 key works on a “Tour de France”, spreading them around 34 museums in early 2024.

It will also hold an exhibition from March to August, reuniting many of the works from the first show in 1874, set alongside more traditional works favoured by the Salon to show the contrast with the revolutionary Impressionists.

The exhibition will then travel to the USA, to be exhibited in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, from September 8th, 2024, to January 19th, 2025.

Among the works will be Monet’s “Impression, Soleil Levant” (Impression, Rising Sun) of 1872. It was an art critic’s sarcastic response to the painting that gave the movement its name.

As is increasingly common at major exhibitions, there will be a virtual reality segment, immersing visitors in the Paris of that era, and allowing them to experience what it was like at that first ground-breaking exhibition.

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CULTURE

Mona Lisa could get a room of her own at Paris Louvre gallery

The Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci, the world's most famous portrait, could get a room of its own in the Louvre, the museum's president said on Saturday.

Mona Lisa could get a room of her own at Paris Louvre gallery

Such a move would give visitors, many of whom visit the Louvre for the iconic painting alone, a better experience, Laurence des Cars told the France Inter broadcaster.

“It’s always frustrating when you don’t give visitors the best possible reception, and that is the case for the Mona Lisa,” she said. “A better solution seems necessary to me today,” she said, adding that the Louvre was in contact with the culture ministry about potential solutions.

The Louvre, the world’s most popular museum, welcomed close to nine million visitors in 2023.

Des Cars said 80 percent of them — 20,000 people per day — braved the crowd to catch a glimpse of the Mona Lisa’s enigmatic smile, often taking selfies in front of the painting.

The Mona Lisa currently hangs in the Louvre’s Salle des Etats (State Room), the museum’s biggest, in a protective glass case, but Da Vinci’s masterwork is not alone there.

It is accompanied by works by 16th-century Venetian masters, and across the room hangs the Louvre’s biggest painting, The Wedding at Cana by Paolo Veronese.

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