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The Louvre,[a] or the Louvre Museum (French: Musée du Louvre [myze dy luvʁ] ), is a national art museum in Paris, France, and one of the most famous museums in the world. It is located on the Right Bank of the Seine in the city's 1st arrondissement (district or ward) and home to some of the most canonical works of Western art, including the Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, and Winged Victory. The museum is housed in the Louvre Palace, originally built in the late 12th to 13th century under Philip II. Remnants of the Medieval Louvre fortress are visible in the basement of the museum. Due to urban expansion, the fortress eventually lost its defensive function, and in 1546 Francis I converted it into the primary residence of the French kings.[6]

Key Information

The building was redesigned and extended many times to form the present Louvre Palace. In 1682, Louis XIV chose the Palace of Versailles for his household, leaving the Louvre primarily as a place to display the royal collection, including, from 1692, a collection of ancient Greek and Roman sculpture.[7] In 1692, the building was occupied by the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres and the Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture, which in 1699 held the first of a series of salons. The Académie remained at the Louvre for 100 years.[8] During the French Revolution, the National Assembly decreed that the Louvre should be used as a museum to display the nation's masterpieces. The palace and exhibition space was expanded in the 19th century and again in the 20th.

The museum opened on 10 August 1793 with an exhibition of 537 paintings, the majority of the works being royal and confiscated church property. Because of structural problems with the building, the museum was closed from 1796 until 1801. The collection was increased under Napoleon, after the Napoleonic looting of art in Europe, Egypt, and Syria, and the museum was renamed Musée Napoléon, but after Napoleon's abdication, many works seized by his armies were returned to their original owners.[citation needed] The collection was further increased during the reigns of Louis XVIII and Charles X, and during the Second French Empire the museum gained 20,000 pieces. Holdings have grown steadily through donations and bequests since the Third Republic. The collection is divided into eight departments: Egyptian Antiquities; Near Eastern Antiquities; Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Antiquities; Islamic Art; Sculpture; Decorative Arts; Paintings; Prints and Drawings.

The Musée du Louvre contains approximately 500,000 objects[9] and displays 35,000 works of art in eight curatorial departments with more than 60,600 m2 (652,000 sq ft) dedicated to the permanent collection.[2] The Louvre exhibits sculptures, objets d'art, paintings, drawings, and archaeological finds. At any given point in time, approximately 38,000 objects from prehistory to the 21st century are being exhibited over an area of 72,735 m2 (782,910 sq ft), making it the largest museum in the world. It received 8.7 million visitors in 2024, ranking it as the most-visited art museum, and most-visited museum of any category, in the world.[10]

Location and visiting

[edit]
Aerial view of the Tuileries Gardens on the left, with the Louvre Palace on the right (2018)

The Louvre museum is located inside the Louvre Palace, in the centre of Paris, adjacent to the Tuileries Gardens. The two nearest Métro stations are Louvre–Rivoli and Palais Royal–Musée du Louvre, the latter having a direct underground access to the Carrousel du Louvre commercial mall.[11]

Before the Grand Louvre overhaul of the late 1980s and 1990s, the Louvre had several street-level entrances, most of which are now permanently closed. Since 1993, the museum's main entrance has been the underground space under the Louvre Pyramid, or Hall Napoléon, which can be accessed from the Pyramid itself, from the underground Carrousel du Louvre, or (for authorised visitors) from the passage Richelieu connecting to the nearby rue de Rivoli. A secondary entrance at the Porte des Lions, near the western end of the Denon Wing, was created in 1999 but is not permanently open.[12]

The museum's entrance conditions have varied over time. Prior to the 1850s, artists and foreign visitors had privileged access. At the time of initial opening in 1793, the French Republican calendar had imposed ten-day "weeks" (French: décades), the first six days of which were reserved for visits by artists and foreigners and the last three for visits by the general public.[13]: 37  In the early 1800s, after the seven-day week had been reinstated, the general public had only four hours of museum access per week, between 2pm and 4pm on Saturdays and Sundays.[14]: 8  In 1824, a new regulation allowed public access only on Sundays and holidays; the other days the museum was open only to artists and foreigners, except for closure on Mondays.[13]: 39  That changed in 1855 when the museum became open to the public all days except Mondays.[13]: 40  It was free until 1922, when an entrance fee was introduced except on Sundays.[13]: 42  Since its post-World War II reopening in 1946,[13]: 43  the Louvre has been closed on Tuesdays, and habitually open to the public the rest of the week except for some holidays.

The use of cameras and video recorders is permitted inside, but flash photography is forbidden.[15]

Beginning in 2012, Nintendo 3DS portable video game systems were used as the official museum audio guides. The following year, the museum contracted Nintendo to create a 3DS-based audiovisual visitor guide.[16] Entitled Nintendo 3DS Guide: Louvre, it contains over 30 hours of audio and over 1,000 photographs of artwork and the museum itself, including 3D views,[17] and also provides navigation thanks to differential GPS transmitters installed within the museum.[18]

The upgraded 2013 Louvre guide was also announced in a special Nintendo Direct featuring Satoru Iwata and Shigeru Miyamoto demonstrating it at the museum,[19] and 3DS XLs pre-loaded with the guide are available to rent at the museum.[20] The 3DS Louvre guide was scheduled to be retired in September 2025 and will be replaced by a different guide system.[21]

History

[edit]

Before the museum

[edit]
Below-ground portions of the medieval Louvre are still visible.[22]: 32 

The Louvre Palace, which houses the museum, was begun by King Philip II in the late 12th century to protect the city from the attack from the west, as the Kingdom of England still held Normandy at the time. Remnants of the Medieval Louvre are still visible in the crypt.[22]: 32  Whether this was the first building on that spot is not known, and it is possible that Philip modified an existing tower.[23]

The origins of the name "Louvre" are somewhat disputed. According to the authoritative Grand Larousse encyclopédique, the name derives from an association with a wolf hunting den (via Latin: lupus, lower Empire: lupara).[23][24] In the 7th century, Burgundofara (also known as Saint Fare), abbess in Meaux, is said to have given part of her "Villa called Luvra situated in the region of Paris" to a monastery,[25] even though it is doubtful that this land corresponded exactly to the present site of the Louvre.

The Louvre Palace has been subject to numerous renovations since its construction. In the 14th century, Charles V converted the building from its military role into a residence. In 1546, Francis I started its rebuilding in French Renaissance style.[26] After Louis XIV chose Versailles as his residence in 1682, construction works slowed to a halt. The royal move away from Paris resulted in the Louvre being used as a residence for artists, under Royal patronage.[26][22]: 42 [27] For example, four generations of craftsmen-artists from the Boulle family were granted Royal patronage and resided in the Louvre.[28][29][30]

Meanwhile, the collections of the Louvre originated in the acquisitions of paintings and other artworks by the monarchs of the House of France. At the Palace of Fontainebleau, Francis collected art that would later be part of the Louvre's art collections, including Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa.[31]

The Cabinet du Roi consisted of seven rooms west of the Galerie d'Apollon on the upper floor of the remodelled Petite Galerie. Many of the king's paintings were placed in these rooms in 1673, when it became an art gallery, accessible to certain art lovers as a kind of museum. In 1681, after the court moved to Versailles, 26 of the paintings were transferred there, somewhat diminishing the collection, but it is mentioned in Paris guide books from 1684 on, and was shown to ambassadors from Siam in 1686.[32]

By the mid-18th century there were proposals to create a public gallery in the Louvre. Art critic Étienne La Font de Saint-Yenne in 1747 published a call for a display of the royal collection. On 14 October 1750, Louis XV decided on a display of 96 pieces from the royal collection, mounted in the Galerie royale de peinture of the Luxembourg Palace. A hall was opened by Le Normant de Tournehem and the Marquis de Marigny for public viewing of the "king's paintings" (Tableaux du Roy) on Wednesdays and Saturdays. The Luxembourg gallery included Andrea del Sarto's Charity and works by Raphael; Titian; Veronese; Rembrandt; Poussin or Van Dyck. It closed in 1780 as a result of the royal gift of the Luxembourg palace to the Count of Provence (the future king, Louis XVIII) by the king in 1778.[33] Under Louis XVI, the idea of a royal museum in the Louvre came closer to fruition.[34] The comte d'Angiviller broadened the collection and in 1776 proposed to convert the Grande Galerie of the Louvre – which at that time contained the plans-reliefs or 3D models of key fortified sites in and around France – into the "French Museum". Many design proposals were offered for the Louvre's renovation into a museum, without a final decision being made on them. Hence the museum remained incomplete until the French Revolution.[33]

Revolutionary opening

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The Louvre finally became a public museum during the French Revolution. In May 1791, the National Constituent Assembly declared that the Louvre would be "a place for bringing together monuments of all the sciences and arts".[33] On 10 August 1792, Louis XVI was imprisoned and the royal collection in the Louvre became national property. Because of fear of vandalism or theft, on 19 August, the National Assembly pronounced the museum's preparation urgent. In October, a committee to "preserve the national memory" began assembling the collection for display.[35]

Antonio Canova's Psyche Revived by Cupid's Kiss was commissioned in 1787 and donated in 1824.[36]

The museum opened on 10 August 1793, the first anniversary of the monarchy's demise, as Muséum central des Arts de la République. The public was given free access on three days per week, which was "perceived as a major accomplishment and was generally appreciated".[37] The collection showcased 537 paintings and 184 objects of art. Three-quarters were derived from the royal collections, the remainder from confiscated émigrés and Church property (biens nationaux).[38][22]: 68-69  To expand and organise the collection, the Republic dedicated 100,000 livres per year.[33] In 1794, France's revolutionary armies began bringing pieces from Northern Europe, augmented after the Treaty of Tolentino (1797) by works from the Vatican, such as the Laocoön and Apollo Belvedere, to establish the Louvre as a museum and as a "sign of popular sovereignty".[38][39]

The early days were hectic. Privileged artists continued to live in residence, and the unlabelled paintings hung "frame to frame from floor to ceiling".[38] The museum closed in May 1796 due to structural deficiencies. It reopened on 14 July 1801, arranged chronologically and with new lighting and columns.[38] On 15 August 1797, the Galerie d'Apollon was opened with an exhibition of drawings. Meanwhile, the Louvre's Gallery of Antiquity sculpture (musée des Antiques), with artefacts brought from Florence and the Vatican, had opened in November 1800 in Anne of Austria's former summer apartment, located on the ground floor just below the Galerie d'Apollon.

Napoleonic era

[edit]

On 19 November 1802, Napoleon appointed Vivant Denon, a scholar and polymath who had participated in the Egyptian campaign of 1798–1801, as the museum's first director, in preference to alternative contenders such as antiquarian Ennio Quirino Visconti, painter Jacques-Louis David, sculptor Antonio Canova and architects Léon Dufourny or Pierre Fontaine.[40] On Denon's suggestion in July 1803, the museum itself was renamed Musée Napoléon.[41]: 79 

The collection grew through successful military campaigns.[22]: 52  Acquisitions were made of Spanish, Austrian, Dutch, and Italian works, either as the result of war looting or formalised by treaties such as the Treaty of Tolentino.[42] At the end of Napoleon's First Italian Campaign in 1797, the Treaty of Campo Formio was signed with Count Philipp von Cobenzl of the Austrian Monarchy. This treaty marked the completion of Napoleon's conquest of Italy and the end of the first phase of the French Revolutionary Wars. It compelled Italian cities to contribute pieces of art and heritage to Napoleon's "parades of spoils" through Paris before being put into the Louvre Museum.[43] The Horses of Saint Mark, which had adorned the basilica of San Marco in Venice after the sack of Constantinople in 1204, were brought to Paris where they were placed atop Napoleon's Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel in 1797.[43] Under the Treaty of Tolentino, the two statues of the Nile and Tiber were taken to Paris from the Vatican in 1797, and were both kept in the Louvre until 1815. (The Nile was later returned to Rome,[44] whereas the Tiber has remained in the Louvre to this day.) The despoilment of Italian churches and palaces outraged the Italians and their artistic and cultural sensibilities.[45]

After the French defeat at Waterloo, the looted works' former owners sought their return. The Louvre's administrator, Denon, was loath to comply in absence of a treaty of restitution. In response, foreign states sent emissaries to London to seek help, and many pieces were returned, though far from all.[42][22]: 69 [46] In 1815 Louis XVIII finally concluded agreements with the Austrian government[47][48] for the keeping of works such as Veronese's Wedding at Cana which was exchanged for a large Le Brun or the repurchase of the Albani collection.

From 1815 to 1852

[edit]
The Venus de Milo was added to the Louvre's collection during the reign of Louis XVIII.

For most of the 19th century, from Napoleon's time to the Second Empire, the Louvre and other national museums were managed under the monarch's civil list and thus depended much on the ruler's personal involvement. Whereas the most iconic collection remained that of paintings in the Grande Galerie, a number of other initiatives mushroomed in the vast building, named as if they were separate museums even though they were generally managed under the same administrative umbrella. Correspondingly, the museum complex was often referred to in the plural ("les musées du Louvre") rather than singular.[49]

During the Bourbon Restoration (1814–1830), Louis XVIII and Charles X added to the collections. The Greek and Roman sculpture gallery on the ground floor of the southwestern side of the Cour Carrée was completed on designs by Percier and Fontaine. In 1819 an exhibition of manufactured products was opened in the first floor of the Cour Carrée's southern wing and would stay there until the mid-1820s.[41]: 87  Charles X in 1826 created the Musée Égyptien and in 1827 included it in his broader Musée Charles X, a new section of the museum complex located in a suite of lavishly decorated rooms on the first floor of the South Wing of the Cour Carrée. The Egyptian collection, initially curated by Jean-François Champollion, formed the basis for what is now the Louvre's Department of Egyptian Antiquities. It was formed from the purchased collections of Edmé-Antoine Durand, Henry Salt and the second collection of Bernardino Drovetti (the first one having been purchased by Victor Emmanuel I of Sardinia to form the core of the present Museo Egizio in Turin). The Restoration period also saw the opening in 1824 of the Galerie d'Angoulême, a section of largely French sculptures on the ground floor of the Northwestern side of the Cour Carrée, many of whose artefacts came from the Palace of Versailles and from Alexandre Lenoir's Musée des Monuments Français following its closure in 1816. Meanwhile, the French Navy created an exhibition of ship models in the Louvre in December 1827, initially named musée dauphin in honour of Dauphin Louis Antoine,[50] building on an 18th-century initiative of Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau. This collection, renamed musée naval in 1833 and later to develop into the Musée national de la Marine, was initially located on the first floor of the Cour Carrée's North Wing, and in 1838 moved up one level to the 2nd-floor attic, where it remained for more than a century.[51]

Ceiling decorations designed by Félix Duban in the Salon Carré (left) and Salle des Sept-Cheminées (right), late 1840s
The display in the Salon Carré, painted by Giuseppe Castiglione in 1861 following its repurposing of the late 1840s Veronese's Wedding at Cana is visible on the left, and his Supper in the House of Simon (now at the Palace of Versailles) is on the right.

Following the July Revolution, King Louis Philippe focused his interest on the repurposing of the Palace of Versailles into a Museum of French History conceived as a project of national reconciliation, and the Louvre was kept in comparative neglect. Louis-Philippe did, however, sponsor the creation of the musée assyrien to host the monumental Assyrian sculpture works brought to Paris by Paul-Émile Botta, in the ground-floor gallery north of the eastern entrance of the Cour Carrée. The Assyrian Museum opened on 1 May 1847.[52] Separately, Louis-Philippe had his Spanish gallery displayed in the Louvre from 7 January 1838, in five rooms on the first floor of the Cour Carrée's East (Colonnade) Wing,[53] but the collection remained his personal property. As a consequence, the works were removed after Louis-Philippe was deposed in 1848, and were eventually auctioned away in 1853.

The short-lived Second Republic had more ambitions for the Louvre. It initiated repair work, the completion of the Galerie d'Apollon and of the salle des sept-cheminées, and the overhaul of the Salon Carré (former site of the iconic yearly Salon) and of the Grande Galerie.[22]: 52  In 1848, the Naval Museum in the Cour Carrée's attic was brought under the common Louvre Museum management,[51] a change which was again reversed in 1920. In 1850 under the leadership of curator Adrien de Longpérier, the musée mexicain opened within the Louvre as the first European museum dedicated to pre-Columbian art.[54]

Second Empire

[edit]

The rule of Napoleon III was transformational for the Louvre, both the building and the museum. In 1852, he created the Musée des Souverains in the Colonnade Wing, an ideological project aimed at buttressing his personal legitimacy. In 1861, he bought 11,835 artworks including 641 paintings, Greek gold and other antiquities of the Campana collection. For its display, he created another new section within the Louvre named Musée Napoléon III, occupying a number of rooms in various parts of the building. Between 1852 and 1870, the museum added 20,000 new artefacts to its collections.[55]

The main change of that period was to the building itself. In the 1850s architects Louis Visconti and Hector Lefuel created massive new spaces around what is now called the Cour Napoléon, some of which (in the South Wing, now Aile Denon) went to the museum.[22]: 52-54  In the 1860s, Lefuel also led the creation of the pavillon des Sessions with a new Salle des Etats closer to Napoleon III's residence in the Tuileries Palace, with the effect of shortening the Grande Galerie by about a third of its previous length. A smaller but significant Second Empire project was the decoration of the salle des Empereurs below the Salon carré.[citation needed]

From 1870 to 1981

[edit]
Memorial plaques honouring the Louvre's defenders in May 1871

The Louvre narrowly escaped serious damage during the suppression of the Paris Commune. On 23 May 1871, as the French Army advanced into Paris, a force of Communards led by Jules Bergeret [fr] set fire to the adjoining Tuileries Palace. The fire burned for forty-eight hours, entirely destroying the interior of the Tuileries and spreading to the north west wing of the museum next to it. The emperor's Louvre library (Bibliothèque du Louvre) and some of the adjoining halls, in what is now the Richelieu Wing, were separately destroyed. But the museum was saved by the efforts of Paris firemen and museum employees led by curator Henry Barbet de Jouy.[56]

Following the end of the monarchy, several spaces in the Louvre's South Wing went to the museum. The Salle du Manège was transferred to the museum in 1879, and in 1928 became its main entrance lobby.[57] The large Salle des Etats that had been created by Lefuel between the Grande Galerie and Pavillon Denon was redecorated in 1886 by Edmond Guillaume [fr], Lefuel's successor as architect of the Louvre, and opened as a spacious exhibition room.[58][59] Edomond Guillaume also decorated the first-floor room at the northwest corner of the Cour Carrée, on the ceiling of which he placed in 1890 a monumental painting by Carolus-Duran, The Triumph of Marie de' Medici originally created in 1879 for the Luxembourg Palace.[59]

The Louvre's monumental Escalier Daru, topped by the Winged Victory of Samothrace, took its current appearance in the early 1930s.

Meanwhile, during the Third Republic (1870–1940) the Louvre acquired new artefacts mainly via donations, gifts, and sharing arrangements on excavations abroad. The 583-item Collection La Caze, donated in 1869 by Louis La Caze, included works by Chardin; Fragonard, Rembrandt and Watteau.[22]: 70-71  In 1883, the Winged Victory of Samothrace, which had been found in the Aegean Sea in 1863, was prominently displayed as the focal point of the Escalier Daru.[22]: 70-71  Major artefacts excavated at Susa in Iran, including the massive Apadana capital and glazed brick decoration from the Palace of Darius there, accrued to the Oriental (Near Eastern) Antiquities Department in the 1880s. The Société des amis du Louvre was established in 1897 and donated prominent works, such as the Pietà of Villeneuve-lès-Avignon. The expansion of the museum and its collections slowed after World War I, however, despite some prominent acquisitions such as Georges de La Tour's Saint Thomas and Baron Edmond de Rothschild's 1935 donation of 4,000 prints, 3,000 drawings, and 500 illustrated books.

From the late 19th century, the Louvre gradually veered away from its mid-century ambition of universality to become a more focused museum of French, Western and Near Eastern art, covering a space ranging from Iran to the Atlantic. The collections of the Louvre's musée mexicain were transferred to the Musée d'Ethnographie du Trocadéro in 1887. As the Musée de Marine was increasingly constrained to display its core naval-themed collections in the limited space it had in the second-floor attic of the northern half of the Cour Carrée, many of its significant holdings of non-Western artefacts were transferred in 1905 to the Trocadéro ethnography museum, the National Antiquities Museum in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, and the Chinese Museum in the Palace of Fontainebleau.[60] The Musée de Marine itself was relocated to the Palais de Chaillot in 1943. The Louvre's extensive collections of Asian art were moved to the Guimet Museum in 1945. Nevertheless, the Louvre's first gallery of Islamic art opened in 1893.[61]

Generalfeldmarschall Gerd von Rundstedt is seen with a plaster model of the Venus de Milo,[62] while visiting the Louvre with the curator Alfred Merlin on 7 October 1940.
Seating designed by Pierre Paulin in the late 1960s, Grande Galerie
Marc Saltet [fr]'s 1972 museography for the Salon Carré, with "dos-à-dos" seat designed in 1967 by Pierre Paulin

In the late 1920s, Louvre Director Henri Verne devised a master plan for the rationalisation of the museum's exhibitions, which was partly implemented in the following decade. In 1932–1934, Louvre architects Camille Lefèvre [fr] and Albert Ferran redesigned the Escalier Daru to its current appearance. The Cour du Sphinx in the South Wing was covered by a glass roof in 1934. Decorative arts exhibits were expanded in the first floor of the North Wing of the Cour Carrée, including some of France's first period room displays. In the late 1930s, The La Caze donation was moved to a remodelled Salle La Caze above the salle des Caryatides, with reduced height to create more rooms on the second floor and a sober interior design by Albert Ferran.[citation needed]

During World War II, the Louvre conducted an elaborate plan of evacuation of its art collection. When Germany occupied the Sudetenland, many important artworks such as the Mona Lisa were temporarily moved to the Château de Chambord. When war was formally declared a year later, most of the museum's paintings were sent there as well. Select sculptures such as Winged Victory of Samothrace and the Venus de Milo were sent to the Château de Valençay.[63] On 27 August 1939, after two days of packing, truck convoys began to leave Paris. By 28 December, the museum was cleared of most works, except those that were too heavy and "unimportant paintings [that] were left in the basement".[64] In early 1945, after the liberation of France, art began returning to the Louvre.[65]

New arrangements after the war revealed the further evolution of taste away from the lavish decorative practices of the late 19th century. In 1947, Edmond Guillaume's ceiling ornaments were removed from the Salle des Etats,[59] where the Mona Lisa was first displayed in 1966.[66] Around 1950, Louvre architect Jean-Jacques Haffner [fr] streamlined the interior decoration of the Grande Galerie.[59] In 1953, a new ceiling by Georges Braque was inaugurated in the Salle Henri II, next to the Salle La Caze.[67] In the late 1960s, seats designed by Pierre Paulin were installed in the Grande Galerie.[68] In 1972, the Salon Carré's museography was remade with lighting from a hung tubular case, designed by Louvre architect Marc Saltet [fr] with assistance from designers André Monpoix [fr], Joseph-André Motte and Paulin.[69]

In 1961, the Finance Ministry accepted to leave the Pavillon de Flore at the southwestern end of the Louvre building, as Verne had recommended in his 1920s plan. New exhibition spaces of sculptures (ground floor) and paintings (first floor) opened there later in the 1960s, on a design by government architect Olivier Lahalle.[70]

Grand Louvre

[edit]

In 1981, French President François Mitterrand proposed, as one of his Grands Projets, the Grand Louvre plan to relocate the Finance Ministry, until then housed in the North Wing of the Louvre, and thus devote almost the entire Louvre building (except its northwestern tip, which houses the separate Musée des Arts Décoratifs) to the museum which would be correspondingly restructured. In 1984 I. M. Pei, the architect personally selected by Mitterrand, proposed a master plan including an underground entrance space accessed through a glass pyramid in the Louvre's central Cour Napoléon.[22]: 66 

The open spaces surrounding the pyramid were inaugurated on 15 October 1988, and its underground lobby was opened on 30 March 1989. New galleries of early modern French paintings on the 2nd floor of the Cour Carrée, for which the planning had started before the Grand Louvre, also opened in 1989. Further rooms in the same sequence, designed by Italo Rota, opened on 15 December 1992.[citation needed]

On 18 November 1993, Mitterrand inaugurated the next major phase of the Grand Louvre plan: the renovated North (Richelieu) Wing in the former Finance Ministry site, the museum's largest single expansion in its entire history, designed by Pei, his French associate Michel Macary, and Jean-Michel Wilmotte. Further underground spaces known as the Carrousel du Louvre, centred on the Inverted Pyramid and designed by Pei and Macary, had opened in October 1993. Other refurbished galleries, of Italian sculptures and Egyptian antiquities, opened in 1994. The third and last main phase of the plan unfolded mainly in 1997, with new renovated rooms in the Sully and Denon wings. A new entrance at the porte des Lions opened in 1998, leading on the first floor to new rooms of Spanish paintings.[citation needed]

As of 2002, the Louvre's visitor count had doubled from its pre-Grand-Louvre levels.[71]

21st century

[edit]
Ceiling by Cy Twombly installed in 2010 in the Salle des Bronzes, before the room's redesign in 2021

President Jacques Chirac, who had succeeded Mitterrand in 1995, insisted on the return of non-Western art to the Louvre, upon a recommendation from his friend the art collector and dealer Jacques Kerchache [fr]. On his initiative, a selection of highlights from the collections of what would become the Musée du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac was installed on the ground floor of the Pavillon des Sessions and opened in 2000, six years ahead of the Musée du Quai Branly itself.

The main other initiative in the aftermath of the Grand Louvre project was Chirac's decision to create a new department of Islamic Art, by executive order of 1 August 2003, and to move the corresponding collections from their prior underground location in the Richelieu Wing to a more prominent site in the Denon Wing. That new section opened on 22 September 2012, together with collections from the Roman-era Eastern Mediterranean, with financial support from the Al Waleed bin Talal Foundation and on a design by Mario Bellini and Rudy Ricciotti.[72][73][74]

In 2007, German painter Anselm Kiefer was invited to create a work for the North stairs of the Perrault Colonnade, Athanor. This decision announces the museum's reengagement with contemporary art under the direction of Henri Loyrette, fifty years after the institution's last order to a contemporary artists, George Braque.[75]

In 2010, American painter Cy Twombly completed a new ceiling for the Salle des Bronzes (the former Salle La Caze), a counterpoint to that of Braque installed in 1953 in the adjacent Salle Henri II. The room's floor and walls were redesigned in 2021 by Louvre architect Michel Goutal to revert the changes made by his predecessor Albert Ferran in the late 1930s, triggering protests from the Cy Twombly Foundation on grounds that the then-deceased painter's work had been created to fit with the room's prior decoration.[76]

That same year, the Louvre commissioned French artist François Morellet to create a work for the Lefuel stairs, on the first floor. For L'esprit d'escalier Morellet redesigned the stairscase's windows, echoing their original structures but distorting them to create a disturbing optical effect.[77]

On 6 June 2014, the Decorative Arts section on the first floor of the Cour Carrée's northern wing opened after comprehensive refurbishment.[78]

In January 2020, under the direction of Jean-Luc Martinez, the museum inaugurated a new contemporary art commission, L'Onde du Midi by Venezuelan kinetic artist Elias Crespin. The sculpture hovers under the Escalier du Midi, the staircase on the South of the Perrault Colonnade.[79]

The Louvre, like many other museums and galleries, felt the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the arts and cultural heritage. The museum closed after the end of the day on 29 February 2020,[80] and it did not reopen until 6 July.[81] The museum operated with limited capacity until 29 October, when it was ordered closed again due to an increase in COVID cases in France,[82] and reopened on 19 May 2021.[83] As a result, the museum recorded only 2.7 million visitors in 2020, down from 9.6 million in 2019 and a record 10.2 million in 2018.[84]

In preparation for the 2024 Olympics, the Louvre staged an exhibit about the Games' history that links their ancient beginnings to the modern era.[85]

Attendance rose to 8.9 million in 2023, 14 percent above 2022, but still short of the record of 10.2 million in 2018.[86]

In January 2025, French President Emmanuel Macron announced plans for a renovation and expansion of the Louvre, including a room solely for the Mona Lisa. The planned renovation and expansion was a result of the increasing number of visitors each year to the Louvre.[87] On 16 June 2025, the museum's employees went on strike in protest against chronic issues such as overcrowding, understaffing and "untenable" working conditions.[88][89]

On 19 October 2025, the Louvre was subjected to a robbery through a forced window in the Galerie d'Apollon. The museum reported that jewellery had been stolen, and the perpetrators fled by motorbike.[90] They used a construction platform left by the building to enter a window and leave with their score.[91] The museum was closed for the day.[92] French interior minister Laurent Nuñez said the robbery involved intruders entering the museum via a basket lift using a platform mounted on a lorry and then cut into the window using what appeared to be angle grinders.[93] Nine major pieces of jewellery from the crowns of France were taken in a few minutes.[94] Eight pieces were stolen, including an emerald necklace that belonged to Empress Marie-Louise and three jewels that belonged to queens Marie-Amelie and Hortense.[95] The ninth item, the Crown of Empress Eugénie, was recovered the same day in a street close to the Louvre but in a damaged condition.[96]

On 25 October, two of the suspected thieves were arrested: one was trying to fly to Algeria, and the other to Mali. [97]

Collections

[edit]

The Musée du Louvre owns 615,797 objects[1] of which 482,943 are accessible online since 24 March 2021[98] and displays 35,000 works of art in eight curatorial departments.[2]

The Louvre is home to one of the world's most extensive collections of art, including works from diverse cultures and time periods. Visitors can view iconic works like the Mona Lisa and the Winged Victory of Samothrace, as well as pieces from ancient civilisations such as Egypt, Greece, and Rome. The museum also features collections of decorative arts, Islamic art, and sculptures.[99]

Egyptian antiquities

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The department, comprising over 50,000 pieces,[22]: 74  includes artefacts from the Nile civilisations which date from 4,000 BC to the 4th century AD.[100] The collection, among the world's largest, overviews Egyptian life spanning Ancient Egypt, the Middle Kingdom, the New Kingdom, Coptic art, and the Roman, Ptolemaic, and Byzantine periods.[100]

The department's origins lie in the royal collection, but it was augmented by Napoleon's 1798 expeditionary trip with Dominique Vivant, the future director of the Louvre.[22]: 76-77  After Jean-François Champollion translated the Rosetta Stone, Charles X decreed that an Egyptian Antiquities department be created. Champollion advised the purchase of three collections, formed by Edmé-Antoine Durand, Henry Salt, and Bernardino Drovetti; these additions added 7,000 works. Growth continued via acquisitions by Auguste Mariette, founder of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Mariette, after excavations at Memphis, sent back crates of archaeological finds including The Seated Scribe.[22]: 76-77 [101]

Guarded by the Great Sphinx of Tanis, the collection is housed in more than 20 rooms. Holdings include art, papyrus scrolls, mummies, tools, clothing, jewellery, games, musical instruments, and weapons.[22]: 76-77 [100] Pieces from the ancient period include the Gebel el-Arak Knife from 3400 BC, The Seated Scribe, and the Head of King Djedefre. Middle Kingdom art, "known for its gold work and statues", moved from realism to idealisation; this is exemplified by the schist statue of Amenemhatankh and the wooden Offering Bearer. The New Kingdom and Coptic Egyptian sections are deep, but the statue of the goddess Nephthys and the limestone depiction of the goddess Hathor demonstrate New Kingdom sentiment and wealth.[100][101]

Near Eastern antiquities

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Ancient sculpture exhibited in the Department of Near Eastern Antiquities at the Louvre Museum

Near Eastern antiquities, the second newest department, dates from 1881 and presents an overview of early Near Eastern civilisation and "first settlements", before the arrival of Islam. The department is divided into three geographic areas: the Levant, Mesopotamia (Iraq), and Persia (Iran). The collection's development corresponds to archaeological work such as Paul-Émile Botta's 1843 expedition to Khorsabad and the discovery of Sargon II's palace.[100][22]: 119  These finds formed the basis of the Assyrian museum, the precursor to today's department.[100]

The museum contains exhibits from Sumer and the city of Akkad, with monuments such as the Prince of Lagash's Stele of the Vultures from 2450 BC and the stele erected by Naram-Sin, King of Akkad, to celebrate a victory over barbarians in the Zagros Mountains. The 2.25-metre (7.38 ft) Code of Hammurabi, discovered in 1901, displays Babylonian Laws prominently, so that no man could plead their ignorance. The 18th-century BC mural of the Investiture of Zimrilim and the 25th-century BC Statue of Ebih-Il found in the ancient city-state of Mari are also on display at the museum.[102]

A significant portion of the department covers the ancient Levant, including the Sarcophagus of Eshmunazar II discovered in 1855, which catalysed Ernest Renan's 1860 Mission de Phénicie. It contains one of the world's largest and most comprehensive collections of Canaanite and Aramaic inscriptions. The section also covers North African Punic antiquities (Punic = Western Phoenician), given the significant French presence in the region in the 19th century, with early finds including the 1843 discovery of the Ain Nechma inscriptions.

The Persian portion of Louvre contains work from the archaic period, like the Funerary Head and the Persian Archers of Darius I,[100][103] and rare objects from Persepolis.[104]

Greek, Etruscan, and Roman

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Greek antiquities in Room 11

The Greek, Etruscan, and Roman department displays pieces from the Mediterranean Basin dating from the Neolithic to the 6th century.[105] The collection spans from the Cycladic period to the decline of the Roman Empire. This department is one of the museum's oldest, and contains works acquired by Francis I.[100][22]: 155-58  Initially, the collection focused on marble sculptures, such as the Venus de Milo. Works such as the Apollo Belvedere arrived during the Napoleonic Wars, of which some were returned after Napoleon I's fall in 1815. Other works, such as the Borghese Vase, were bought by Napoleon. Later in the 19th century, the Louvre acquired works including vases from the Durand collection and bronzes.[22]: 92 [105]

The archaic is demonstrated by jewellery and pieces such as the limestone Lady of Auxerre, from 640 BC; and the cylindrical Hera of Samos, c. 570–560 BC.[100][106] After the 4th century BC, focus on the human form increased, exemplified by the Borghese Gladiator. The Louvre holds masterpieces from the Hellenistic era, including The Winged Victory of Samothrace (190 BC) and the Venus de Milo, symbolic of classical art.[22]: 155  The long Galerie Campana displays an outstanding collection of more than one thousand Greek potteries. In the galleries paralleling the Seine, much of the museum's Roman sculpture is displayed.[105] The Roman portraiture is representative of that genre; examples include the portraits of Agrippa and Annius Verus; among the bronzes is the Greek Apollo of Piombino.

Islamic art

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The Islamic art collection, the museum's newest, spans "thirteen centuries and three continents".[108] These exhibits, of ceramics, glass, metalware, wood, ivory, carpet, textiles, and miniatures, include more than 5,000 works and 1,000 shards.[109] Originally part of the decorative arts department, the holdings became separate in 2003. Among the works are the Pyxide d'al-Mughira, a 10th century ivory box from Andalusia; the Baptistery of Saint-Louis, an engraved brass basin from the 13th or 14th century Mamluk period; and the 10th century Shroud of Saint-Josse from Iran.[22]: 119-121 [108] The collection contains three pages of the Shahnameh, an epic book of poems by Ferdowsi in Persian, and a Syrian metalwork named the Barberini Vase.[109] In September 2019, a new and improved Islamic art department was opened by Princess Lamia bint Majed Al Saud. The new department exhibits 3,000 pieces were collected from Spain to India via the Arabian peninsula dating from the 7th to the 19th centuries.[110]

Sculptures

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The Cour Marly of the Louvre, where many French sculptures are exhibited

The sculpture department consists of works created before 1850 not belonging in the Etruscan, Greek, and Roman department.[111] The Louvre has been a repository of sculpted material since its time as a palace; however, only ancient architecture was displayed until 1824, except for Michelangelo's Dying Slave and Rebellious Slave.[22]: 397-401  Initially the collection included only 100 pieces, the rest of the royal sculpture collection being at Versailles. It remained small until 1847, when Léon Laborde was given control of the department. Laborde developed the medieval section and purchased the first such statues and sculptures in the collection, King Childebert and stanga door, respectively.[22]: 397-401  The collection was part of the Department of Antiquities but was given autonomy in 1871 under Louis Courajod, a director who organised a wider representation of French works.[111][22]: 397-401  In 1986, all post-1850 works were relocated to the new Musée d'Orsay. The Grand Louvre project separated the department into two exhibition spaces; the French collection is displayed in the Richelieu Wing, and foreign works in the Denon Wing.[111]

The collection's overview of French sculpture contains Romanesque works such as the 11th-century Daniel in the Lions' Den and the 12th-century Virgin of Auvergne. In the 16th century, Renaissance influence caused French sculpture to become more restrained, as seen in Jean Goujon's bas-reliefs, and Germain Pilon's Descent from the Cross and Resurrection of Christ. The 17th and 18th centuries are represented by Gian Lorenzo Bernini's 1640–1 Bust of Cardinal Richelieu, Étienne Maurice Falconet's Woman Bathing and Amour menaçant, and François Anguier's obelisks. Neoclassical works includes Antonio Canova's Psyche Revived by Cupid's Kiss (1787).[22]: 397-401  The 18th and 19th centuries are represented by the French sculptors like Alfred Barye and Émile Guillemin.

Decorative arts

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Some of the Second Empire style rooms of the apartments of Napoleon III

The Objets d'art collection spans the time from the Middle Ages to the mid-19th century. The department began as a subset of the sculpture department, based on royal property and the transfer of work from the Basilique Saint-Denis, the burial ground of French monarchs that held the Coronation Sword of the Kings of France.[112][22]: 451-454  Among the budding collection's most prized works were pietre dure vases and bronzes. The Durand collection's 1825 acquisition added "ceramics, enamels, and stained glass", and 800 pieces were given by Pierre Révoil. The onset of Romanticism rekindled interest in Renaissance and Medieval artwork, and the Sauvageot donation expanded the department with 1,500 middle-age and faïence works. In 1862, the Campana collection added gold jewellery and maiolicas, mainly from the 15th and 16th centuries.[22]: 451-454 [113]

The works are displayed on the Richelieu Wing's first floor and in the Apollo Gallery, named by the painter Charles Le Brun, who was commissioned by Louis XIV (the Sun King) to decorate the space in a solar theme. The medieval collection contains the coronation crown of Louis XV, Charles V's sceptre, and the 12th century porphyry vase.[114] The Renaissance art holdings include Giambologna's bronze Nessus and Deianira and the tapestry Maximillian's Hunt.[112] From later periods, highlights include Madame de Pompadour's Sèvres vase collection and Napoleon III's apartments.[112]

In September 2000, the Louvre Museum dedicated the Gilbert Chagoury and Rose-Marie Chagoury Gallery to display tapestries donated by the Chagourys, including a 16th-century six-part tapestry suite, sewn with gold and silver threads representing sea divinities, which was commissioned in Paris for Colbert de Seignelay, Secretary of State for the Navy.

Painting

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Mona Lisa; by Leonardo da Vinci, c. 1503–1506, perhaps continuing until c. 1517; oil on poplar panel; 77 cm × 53 cm

The painting collection has more than 7,500 works[13]: 229  from the 13th century to 1848 and is managed by 12 curators who oversee the collection's display. Nearly two-thirds are by French artists, and more than 1,200 are Northern European. The Italian paintings compose most of the remnants of Francis I and Louis XIV's collections, others are unreturned artwork from the Napoleon era, and some were bought.[118][22]: 199-201, 272–273, 333–335  The collection began with Francis, who acquired works from Italian masters such as Raphael and Michelangelo[119] and brought Leonardo da Vinci to his court.[120][121] After the French Revolution, the Royal Collection formed the nucleus of the Louvre. When the d'Orsay train station was converted into the Musée d'Orsay in 1986, the collection was split, and pieces completed after the 1848 Revolution were moved to the new museum. French and Northern European works are in the Richelieu Wing and Cour Carrée; Spanish and Italian paintings are on the first floor of the Denon Wing.[22]: 199 

Exemplifying the French School are the early Avignon Pietà of Enguerrand Quarton; the anonymous painting of King Jean le Bon (c. 1360), possibly the oldest independent portrait in Western painting to survive from the postclassical era;[22]: 201  Hyacinthe Rigaud's Louis XIV; Jacques-Louis David's The Coronation of Napoleon; Théodore Géricault's The Raft of the Medusa; and Eugène Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People. Nicolas Poussin, the Le Nain brothers, Philippe de Champaigne, Le Brun, La Tour, Watteau, Fragonard, Ingres, Corot, and Delacroix are well represented.[122]

Northern European works include Johannes Vermeer's The Lacemaker and The Astronomer; Caspar David Friedrich's The Tree of Crows; Rembrandt's The Supper at Emmaus, Bathsheba at Her Bath, and The Slaughtered Ox.

The Italian holdings are notable, particularly the Renaissance collection.[123] The works include Andrea Mantegna and Giovanni Bellini's Calvarys, which reflect realism and detail "meant to depict the significant events of a greater spiritual world".[124] The High Renaissance collection includes Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa, Virgin and Child with St. Anne, St. John the Baptist, and Madonna of the Rocks. The Baroque collection includes Giambattista Pittoni's The Continence of Scipio, Susanna and the Elders, Bacchus and Ariadne, Mars and Venus, and others Caravaggio is represented by The Fortune Teller and Death of the Virgin. From 16th century Venice, the Louvre displays Titian's Le Concert Champetre, The Entombment, and The Crowning with Thorns.[22]: 378 [125]

The La Caze Collection, a bequest to the Musée du Louvre in 1869 by Louis La Caze, was the largest contribution of a person in the history of the Louvre. La Caze gave 584 paintings of his personal collection to the museum. The bequest included Antoine Watteau's Commedia dell'arte player of Pierrot ("Gilles"). In 2007, this bequest was the topic of the exhibition "1869: Watteau, Chardin... entrent au Louvre. La collection La Caze".[126]

Some of the best known paintings of the museum have been digitised by the French Centre for Research and Restoration of Museums of France.[127]

Prints and drawings

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The prints and drawings department encompasses works on paper.[22]: 496  The origins of the collection were the 8,600 works in the Royal Collection (Cabinet du Roi), which were increased via state appropriation, purchases such as the 1,200 works from Fillipo Baldinucci's collection in 1806, and donations.[22]: 92 [128] The department opened on 5 August 1797, with 415 pieces displayed in the Galerie d'Apollon. The collection is organised into three sections: the core Cabinet du Roi, 14,000 royal copper printing-plates, and the donations of Edmond de Rothschild,[129] which include 40,000 prints, 3,000 drawings, and 5,000 illustrated books. The holdings are displayed in the Pavillon de Flore; due to the fragility of the paper medium, only a portion are displayed at one time.[22]: 496 

Management, administration, partnerships

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Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa is the Louvre's most popular attraction.
Restoration workshops in the Louvre

The Louvre is owned by the French government. Since the 1990s, its management and governance have been made more independent.[130][131][132][133] Since 2003, the museum has been required to generate funds for projects.[132] By 2006, government funds had dipped from 75 percent of the total budget to 62 percent. Every year, the Louvre now raises as much as it gets from the state, about €122 million. The government pays for operating costs (salaries, safety, and maintenance), while the rest – new wings, refurbishments, acquisitions – is up to the museum to finance.[134] A further €3 million to €5 million a year is raised by the Louvre from exhibitions that it curates for other museums, while the host museum keeps the ticket money.[134] As the Louvre became a point of interest in the book The Da Vinci Code and the 2006 film based on the book, the museum earned $2.5 million by allowing filming in its galleries.[135][136] In 2008, the French government provided $180 million of the Louvre's yearly $350 million budget; the remainder came from private contributions and ticket sales.[131]

The Louvre employs a staff of 2,000 led by Director Jean-Luc Martinez,[137] who reports to the French Ministry of Culture and Communications. Martinez replaced Henri Loyrette in April 2013. Under Loyrette, who replaced Pierre Rosenberg in 2001, the Louvre has undergone policy changes that allow it to lend and borrow more works than before.[130][132] In 2006, it loaned 1,300 works, which enabled it to borrow more foreign works. From 2006 to 2009, the Louvre lent artwork to the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia, and received a $6.9 million payment to be used for renovations.[132]

In 2009, Minister of culture Frédéric Mitterrand approved a plan that would have created a storage facility 30 km (19 mi) northwest of Paris to hold objects from the Louvre and two other national museums in Paris's flood zone, the Musée du Quai Branly and the Musée d'Orsay; the plan was later scrapped. In 2013, his successor Aurélie Filippetti announced that the Louvre would move more than 250,000 works of art[138] held in a 20,000 square metres (220,000 sq ft) basement storage area in Liévin; the cost of the project, estimated at €60 million, will be split between the region (49%) and the Louvre (51%).[139] The Louvre will be the sole owner and manager of the store.[138] In July 2015, a team led by British firm Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners was selected to design the complex, which will have light-filled work spaces under one vast, green roof.[138][140]

In 2012, the Louvre and the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco announced a five-year collaboration on exhibitions, publications, art conservation and educational programming.[141][142] The €98.5 million expansion of the Islamic Art galleries in 2012 received state funding of €31 million, as well as €17 million from the Alwaleed Bin Talal Foundation founded by the eponymous Saudi prince. The Republic of Azerbaijan, the Emir of Kuwait, the Sultan of Oman and King Mohammed VI of Morocco donated in total €26 million. In addition, the opening of the Louvre Abu Dhabi is supposed to provide €400 million over the course of 30 years for its use of the museum's brand.[72] Loyrette has tried to improve weak parts of the collection through income generated from loans of art and by guaranteeing that "20% of admissions receipts will be taken annually for acquisitions".[132] He has more administrative independence for the museum and achieved 90 percent of galleries to be open daily, as opposed to 80 percent previously. He oversaw the creation of extended hours and free admission on Friday nights and an increase in the acquisition budget to $36 million from $4.5 million.[131][132]

In March 2018, an exhibition of dozens of artworks and relics belonging to France's Louvre Museum was opened to visitors in Tehran, as a result of an agreement between Iranian and French presidents in 2016.[143] In the Louvre, two departments were allocated to the antiquities of the Iranian civilisation, and the managers of the two departments visited Tehran. Relics belonging to Ancient Egypt, Rome and Mesopotamia as well as French royal items were showcased at the Tehran exhibition.[144][145][146]

Iran's National Museum building was designed and constructed by French architect André Godard.[147] Following its time in Tehran, the exhibition is set to be held in the Khorasan Grand Museum in Mashhad, northeastern Iran in June 2018.[148]

On the 500th anniversary of Leonardo da Vinci's death, the Louvre held the largest ever single exhibit of his work, from 24 October 2019 to 24 February 2020.[149][150] The event included over a hundred items: paintings, drawings and notebooks. A full 11 of the fewer than 20 paintings that Da Vinci completed in his lifetime were displayed.[151] Five of them are owned by the Louvre, but the Mona Lisa was not included because it is in such great demand among visitors to the Louvre museum; the work remained on display in its gallery. Salvator Mundi was also not included since the Saudi owner did not agree to move the work from its hiding place. Vitruvian Man, however, was on display, after a successful legal battle with its owner, the Galleria dell'Accademia in Venice.[152][153]

In 2021, a Renaissance era ceremonial helmet and breastplate stolen from the museum in 1983 were recovered. The museum noted that the 1983 theft had "deeply troubled all the staff at the time." There are few publicly accessible details on the theft itself.[154][155]

The current director of the Louvre is Laurence des Cars, who was selected by French president Emmanuel Macron in 2021.[156][157] She is the first woman to hold this position.[158] During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Louvre has launched a digital platform where most of its works, including those that are not on display, can be seen. The database includes more than 482,000 illustrated records, representing 75% of the Louvre's collections.[159] The museum was visited by over 7.6 million visitors in 2022, up 170 percent from 2021, but still below the 10.8 million visitors in 2018 before the COVID-19 pandemic.[160]

In 2023, the Louvre Museum in Paris implemented a significant change in its pricing policy, marking the first price increase since 2017.[161] The decision to raise ticket prices by 30% is part of a broader strategy aimed at supporting free entry during the Olympics and effectively managing the anticipated crowd. Director Laurence des Cars has introduced measures to regulate attendance, including capping daily visitors at 30,000 and planning a new entrance to alleviate congestion. These efforts are geared towards ensuring a top-notch experience for art enthusiasts during the Olympic Games, as the museum expects to host approximately 8.7 million visitors this year, with a remarkable 80% seeking to view the Mona Lisa.

Archaeological research

[edit]
List of excavations that benefited the Louvre (Rotonde d'Apollon)

The Louvre's ancient art collections are to a significant extent the product of excavations, some of which the museum sponsored under various legal regimes over time, often as a companion to France's diplomacy and/or colonial enterprises. In the Rotonde d'Apollon, a carved marble panel lists a number of such campaigns, led by:

The rest of the plaque combines donors of archaeological items, many of whom were archaeologists themselves, and other archaeologists whose excavations contributed to the Louvre's collections:

Satellites and offshoots

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Several museums in and outside France have been or are placed under the Louvre's administrative authority or linked to it through exclusive partnerships, while not being located in the Louvre Palace. Since 2019, the Louvre has also maintained a large art storage and research facility in the Northern French town of Liévin, the Centre de conservation du Louvre [fr], which is not open to the public.[162]

Musée de Cluny (1926–1977)

[edit]

In February 1926, the Musée de Cluny, whose creation dates back to the 19th century, was brought under the aegis of the Louvre's department of decorative arts (Objets d'Art).[163] That affiliation was terminated in 1977.[164]

Musée du Jeu de Paume (1947–1986)

[edit]

The Jeu de Paume building in the Tuileries Garden, initially intended as a sports venue, was repurposed from 1909 as an art gallery. In 1947, it became the exhibition space for the Louvre's collections of late 19th and early 20th paintings, most prominently Impressionism, as the Louvre Palace was lacking space to display them, and was consequently brought under direct management by the Louvre's Département des Peintures. In 1986, these collections were transferred to the newly created Musée d'Orsay.[165]

Musée du Petit Palais, Avignon (since 1976)

[edit]

The Musée du Petit Palais opened in 1976 in the former urban mansion of the archbishops of Avignon, close to the Papal Palace in Avignon. An initiative led by Avignon Mayor Henri Duffaut [fr] and Louvre President-Director Michel Laclotte, part of its permanent collection is made of artworks from the Collection Campana [fr] deposited by the Louvre. On 2 April 2024, a new agreement between the City of Avignon and the Louvre allowed its rebranding as Musée du Petit Palais – Louvre en Avignon.[166]

Gypsothèque du Louvre (since 2001)

[edit]

The gypsothèque (plaster cast gallery) of the Louvre is a collection of plaster casts that was formed in 1970 by the reunion of the corresponding inventories of the Louvre, the Beaux-Arts de Paris and the Art and Archaeology Institute of the Sorbonne University, the latter two following depredations during the May 68 student unrest. Initially called the Musée des Monuments Antiques from 1970 to 1978, the project was subsequently left unfinished and only came to fruition after being brought under the Louvre's management by ministerial decision in 2001.[167] It is located in the Petite Écurie, a dependency of Versailles Palace, and has been open to the public since 2012.[168]

Musée Delacroix (since 2004)

[edit]

The small museum located in Eugène Delacroix's former workshop in central Paris, created in the 1930s, has been placed under management by the Louvre since 2004.[169]

Louvre-Lens (since 2012)

[edit]

The Louvre-Lens follows a May 2003 initiative by then culture minister Jean-Jacques Aillagon to promote cultural projects outside of Paris that would make the riches of major Parisian institutions available to a broader French public, including a satellite (antenne) of the Louvre.[170] After several rounds of competition, a former mining site in the town of Lens was selected for its location and announced by Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin on 2004-11-29. Japanese architects SANAA and landscape architect Catherine Mosbach were respectively selected in September 2005 to design the museum building and garden. Inaugurated by President François Hollande on 2012-12-04, the Louvre-Lens is run by the Hauts-de-France region under a contract (convention scientifique et culturelle) with the Louvre for art loans and brand use. Its main attraction is an exhibition of roughly 200 artworks from the Louvre on a rotating basis, presented chronologically in a single large room (the Galerie du Temps or "gallery of time") that transcends the geographical and object-type divisions along which the Parisian Louvre's displays are organised. The Louvre-Lens has been successful at attracting around 500,000 visitors per year until the COVID-19 pandemic.[171]

Louvre Abu Dhabi (since 2017)

[edit]

The Louvre Abu Dhabi is a separate entity from the Louvre, but the two entities have a multifaceted contractual relationship that allows the Emirati museum to use the Louvre name until 2037, and to exhibit artworks from the Louvre until 2027.[172] It was inaugurated on 2017-11-08 and opened to the public three days later. A 30-year agreement, signed in early 2007 by French Culture Minister Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres and Sheik Sultan bin Tahnoon Al Nahyan, establishes that Abu Dhabi shall pay €832,000,000 (US$1.3 billion) in exchange for the Louvre name use, managerial advice, art loans, and special exhibitions.[173] The Louvre Abu Dhabi is located on Saadiyat Island and was designed by the French architect Jean Nouvel and engineering firm of Buro Happold.[174] It occupies 24,000 square metres (260,000 sq ft) and is covered by an iconic metallic dome designed to cast rays of light mimicking sunlight passing through date palm fronds in an oasis. The French art loans, expected to total between 200 and 300 artworks during a 10-year period, come from multiple museums, including the Louvre, the Centre Georges Pompidou, the Musée d'Orsay, Versailles, the Guimet Museum, the Musée Rodin, and the Musée du quai Branly.[175]

Controversies

[edit]

The Louvre is involved in controversies that surround cultural property seized under Napoleon I,[176][page needed] as well as during World War II by the Nazis.[177][178] In the early 2010s, workers' rights in the construction of Louvre Abu Dhabi were also a point of controversy for the museum.[179]

Napoleonic looting

[edit]

Napoleon's campaigns acquired Italian pieces by treaties, as war reparations, and Northern European pieces as spoils, as well as some antiquities excavated in Egypt, though the vast majority of the latter were seized as war reparations by the British army and are now part of collections of the British Museum. On the other hand, the Dendera zodiac is, like the Rosetta Stone, claimed by Egypt even though it was acquired in 1821, before the Egyptian Anti-export legislation of 1835. The Louvre administration has thus argued in favour of retaining this item despite requests by Egypt for its return. The museum participates too in arbitration sessions held via UNESCO's Committee for Promoting the Return of Cultural Property to Its Countries of Origin.[180] The museum consequently returned in 2009 five Egyptian fragments of frescoes (30 cm x 15 cm each) whose existence of the tomb of origin had only been brought to the authorities attention in 2008, eight to five years after their good-faith acquisition by the museum from two private collections and after the necessary respect of the procedure of déclassement from French public collections before the Commission scientifique nationale des collections des musées de France.[181]

Nazi looting

[edit]

During Nazi occupation, thousands of artworks were stolen.[182] But after the war, 61,233 articles of more than 150,000 seized artworks returned to France and were assigned to the Office des Biens Privés.[183] In 1949, it entrusted 2,130 unclaimed pieces (including 1,001 paintings) to the Direction des Musées de France in order to keep them under appropriate conditions of conservation until their restitution and meanwhile classified them as MNRs (Musées Nationaux Recuperation or, in English, the National Museums of Recovered Artwork). Some 10% to 35% of the pieces are believed to come from Jewish spoliations[184] and until the identification of their rightful owners, which declined at the end of the 1960s, they are registered indefinitely on separate inventories from the museum's collections.[185]

They were exhibited in 1946 and shown all together to the public during four years (1950–1954) in order to allow rightful claimants to identify their properties, then stored or displayed, according to their interest, in several French museums including the Louvre. From 1951 to 1965, about 37 pieces were restituted. Since November 1996, the partly illustrated catalogue of 1947–1949 has been accessible online and completed. In 1997, Prime Minister Alain Juppé initiated the Mattéoli Commission, headed by Jean Mattéoli, to investigate the matter and according to the government, the Louvre is in charge of 678 pieces of artwork still unclaimed by their rightful owners.[186] During the late 1990s, the comparison of the American war archives, which had not been done before, with the French and German ones as well as two court cases which finally settled some of the heirs' rights (Gentili di Giuseppe and Rosenberg families) allowed more accurate investigations. Since 1996, the restitutions, according sometimes to less formal criteria, concerned 47 more pieces (26 paintings, with 6 from the Louvre including a then displayed Tiepolo), until the last claims of French owners and their heirs ended again in 2006.[citation needed]

According to Serge Klarsfeld, since the now complete and constant publicity which the artworks got in 1996, the majority of the French Jewish community is nevertheless in favour of the return to the normal French civil rule of prescription acquisitive of any unclaimed good after another long period of time and consequently to their ultimate integration into the common French heritage instead of their transfer to foreign institutions like during World War II.[citation needed]

Construction of Louvre Abu Dhabi

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In 2011, over 130 international artists urged a boycott of the new Guggenheim museum as well as Louvre Abu Dhabi, citing reports, since 2009, of abuses of foreign construction workers on Saadiyat Island, including the arbitrary withholding of wages, unsafe working conditions, and failure of companies to pay or reimburse the steep recruitment fees being charged to labourers.[187][188] According to Architectural Record, Abu Dhabi has comprehensive labour laws to protect the workers, but they are not conscientiously implemented or enforced.[189] In 2010, the Guggenheim Foundation placed on its website a joint statement with Abu Dhabi's Tourism Development and Investment Company (TDIC) recognising the following workers' rights issues, among others: health and safety of the workers; their access to their passports and other documents that the employers have been retaining to guaranty that they stay on the job; using a general contractor that agrees to obey the labour laws; maintaining an independent site monitor; and ending the system that has been generally used in the Persian Gulf region of requiring workers to reimburse recruitment fees.[190]

In 2013, The Observer reported that conditions for the workers at the Louvre and New York University construction sites on Saadiyat amounted to "modern-day slavery".[191][192] In 2014, the Guggenheim's Director, Richard Armstrong, said that he believed that living conditions for the workers at the Louvre project were now good and that "many fewer" of them were having their passports confiscated. He stated that the main issue then remaining was the recruitment fees charged to workers by agents who recruit them.[193][194] Later in 2014, the Guggenheim's architect, Gehry, commented that working with the Abu Dhabi officials to implement the law to improve the labour conditions at the museum's site is "a moral responsibility."[189] He encouraged the TDIC to build additional worker housing and proposed that the contractor cover the cost of the recruitment fees. In 2012, TDIC engaged PricewaterhouseCoopers as an independent monitor required to issue reports every quarter. Labour lawyer Scott Horton told Architectural Record that he hoped the Guggenheim project will influence the treatment of workers on other Saadiyat sites and will "serve as a model for doing things right."[189][195]

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from Grokipedia
The Louvre Museum (French: Musée du Louvre) is the world's most-visited art museum and a central historic monument in Paris, France, housed within the expansive Louvre Palace in the 1st arrondissement. Originally constructed as a medieval fortress around 1190 by King Philip II to defend against invasions from the west, the site evolved into a royal residence beginning in the 14th century under Charles V, with major Renaissance expansions under Francis I in the 16th century that introduced Italian architectural influences and established it as a center of artistic patronage. Transformed into a public museum on 10 August 1793 amid the French Revolution, its initial collection comprised confiscated royal and ecclesiastical treasures, setting a precedent for nationalization of cultural heritage that expanded through subsequent acquisitions, including artifacts from Napoleonic campaigns. Spanning eight curatorial departments—Near Eastern Antiquities, Egyptian Antiquities, Greek, Etruscan and Roman Antiquities, , , , Paintings, and Prints and Drawings—the Louvre preserves over 500,000 documented works chronicling human civilization from to the mid-19th century, with tens of thousands on view across 72,735 square meters of exhibition space. Its holdings feature masterpieces such as Leonardo da Vinci's , the statue, and the , drawing scholarly acclaim for their artistic and historical depth while sparking debates over provenance due to wartime acquisitions and colonial-era transfers. In , the museum welcomed 8.7 million visitors, surpassing pre-pandemic peaks and affirming its global preeminence, though this surge has strained infrastructure originally designed for far fewer, prompting operational challenges and calls for sustainable management.

Location and Architecture

Physical Site and Palace Layout

The Louvre Palace occupies a site on the right bank of the Seine River in the , , centered at coordinates 48.8606°N 2.3376°E. The complex spans approximately 210,000 square meters, making it the largest palace principally used as a . Its layout forms a U-shaped enclosure, with the open western side facing the , and internal spaces organized around multiple courtyards that facilitate visitor circulation and exhibition display. The structure comprises three primary wings named after historical French figures: the Richelieu Wing to the north, aligned parallel to the and representing the most recent major addition; the Sully Wing to the east, which encircles the historic Cour Carrée; and the Denon Wing to the south, extending westward alongside the river. These wings interconnect across five levels, encompassing galleries, staircases, and service areas, with the collections distributed to optimize thematic groupings while preserving architectural integrity. Key internal features include the Cour Carrée, a square courtyard in the Sully Wing serving as the nucleus of the original palace enclosure, and the larger Cour Napoléon, which houses the central glass pyramid and provides underground access linking all wings via a lobby system. Additional courtyards, such as Cour Visconti, Cour Khorsabad, Cour Puget, and Cour Marly, are integrated into the wings for specialized displays, including monumental sculptures. Principal entrances are located at the Pyramid in Cour Napoléon, Porte des Arts, Passage Richelieu, and Carrousel du Louvre underground, accommodating high visitor volumes while directing flow to the wing interiors.

Architectural Evolution and Key Features

The Louvre originated as a medieval fortress constructed between 1190 and 1200 under Philip II Augustus to defend the western approaches to along the River. The structure featured a square donjon approximately 28 meters on each side with walls up to 7 meters thick, surrounded by a and eight cylindrical towers, serving primarily as a integrated into the city's fortifications. By 1364, under King Charles V, the fortress was adapted into a royal residence with the addition of Gothic-style galleries and pavilions, marking the transition from defensive to residential use while retaining its imposing walls. In the 16th century, during the , King Francis I initiated major transformations starting in 1528 by demolishing the original keep to create a more suitable royal palace. Architect Pierre Lescot designed the iconic facade in 1546, introducing classical elements like pilasters and pediments inspired by architecture, which formed the core of the Cour Carrée enclosure completed under later monarchs. Subsequent additions by architects such as Jean Bullant under Henry II extended the palace's Renaissance character, emphasizing symmetry and ornate decoration. The 17th century saw further expansions under and , with architects Jacques Lemercier and constructing the northern Louvre wing between 1624 and 1640, blending French classical style with emerging influences. The eastern facade's , designed by and completed in 1674, stands as a key neoclassical feature with its rhythmic sequence of 40 Corinthian columns and a pediment, symbolizing the grandeur of despite initial controversy over its deviation from traditional French orders. Much of the palace remained incomplete until the mid-19th century, when commissioned architects Louis Visconti and Hector Lefuel to unify the sprawling complex by enclosing the remaining gaps between the Louvre and the adjacent . From 1852 to 1868, their "New Louvre" project added the Richelieu, Sully, and wings, featuring opulent pavilions like the and extensive sculptural ornamentation, resulting in a cohesive ensemble of over 680 meters in perimeter that harmonized , , and Second Empire styles. In the late , the Grand Louvre initiative, launched in 1983 under President , addressed overcrowding by creating an underground entrance designed by , culminating in the glass pyramid inaugurated on March 29, 1989. The pyramid, standing 21 meters tall with 673 rhomboidal glass panes supported by a , serves as a luminous over the visitor concourse while preserving the historic facades' visibility, though initially criticized for its modernist contrast, it has since integrated as a functional and symbolic entry point. Key architectural features include the Cour Carrée's courtyard with its arcaded ground floor, the Perrault Colonnade's austere elegance, and the 19th-century wings' lavish interiors such as the Escalier Mollien staircase, which exemplify Beaux-Arts grandeur with marble balustrades and allegorical sculptures. The palace's evolution reflects iterative adaptations driven by security needs, royal prestige, and public access demands, resulting in a layered of styles unified by and monumental scale.

Access and Visitor Facilities

The Louvre Museum is accessible via multiple entrances, including the main entrance, the underground entrance connected to the and metro, the Richelieu wing entrance for groups and those with reduced mobility, and the Porte des Lions entrance when available. Visitors undergo security checks at all entry points, with large bags and suitcases discouraged due to limited storage capacity. Public transportation provides efficient access, with the nearest metro stations being Palais Royal - Musée du Louvre (lines 1 and 7) offering direct underground linkage to the Carrousel entrance, and Pyramides (line 14) for surface access. Bus lines 21, 27, 39, 67, 68, 69, 72, 74, 85, and 95 stop nearby, while serves Tuileries station a short walk away; Batobus river shuttles and Vélib' bike rentals are also viable options. Parking is available at the lot (1 Avenue du Général Lemonnier), open daily from 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m., with reduced rates for visitors with disabilities arranged on-site. The museum operates from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday, Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday, extending to 9:45 p.m. on Wednesday and Friday, and closing Tuesdays plus major holidays (January 1, May 1, December 25); on December 24 and 31, 2025, it closes at 5:00 p.m., with last entry one hour prior and rooms cleared 30 minutes before closing. General admission costs €22, free for those under 18 or under 26 residing in the EU/EEA, with advance online time-slot booking required via ticket.louvre.fr to manage crowds and ensure entry, particularly during peak periods. Free admission applies first Fridays after 6:00 p.m. (except July-August) and July 14, subject to capacity. Visitor facilities include free self-service lockers under the for items up to 55 x 35 x 20 cm (must be retrieved same day), restrooms with baby-changing stations throughout, and free "Louvre_Wifi_Gratuit" network (one-hour sessions, renewable). Audio guides in multiple languages rent for €6, covering key works, while bookshops and gift outlets sell merchandise; several restaurants and cafés operate within and , offering quick bites to full meals. Accessibility features prioritize those with disabilities, granting free entry for the plus one companion upon of , priority queue-skipping at entrances, and free loans of wheelchairs, folding stools, canes, and sensory bags from the assistance area under the (contact +33 1 40 20 53 17 for special equipment). Compatible includes low-floor buses on listed routes and elevators at metro stations; the Carrousel offers drop-off proximity. Crowd management relies on timed tickets, recommending early or late slots to minimize waits, as the museum handles millions annually without overcapacity risks when pre-booked.

Historical Development

Medieval Fortress and Royal Palace

The Louvre was initially constructed as a fortress by King (Philip Augustus) starting in 1190, as part of defensive walls to protect from western invasions, particularly Anglo-Norman threats after conflicts with . Completed around 1202, the structure consisted of a square enclosure with seven towers, a central cylindrical donjon rising 15 meters in diameter and up to 30 meters high, and a surrounding moat fed by the , emphasizing its role as a garrison rather than a residence. The fortress remained primarily defensive through the 13th century, with minimal residential use, until King Charles V undertook extensive renovations between 1364 and 1380 to transform it into a royal palace. Charles V, seeking to centralize power away from the insecure , added four new towers to the corners, constructed a grande salle for ceremonies capable of seating 2,000, and installed a royal library with over 1,200 manuscripts, making the Louvre the kingdom's administrative and intellectual hub. He resided there from 1364, fortifying it further against urban unrest during the . Under later Valois kings, the palace evolved amid intermittent use; Charles VI maintained it despite his mental instability, but by the 15th century, preferences shifted toward other residences like the Hôtel Saint-Pol. Significant Renaissance transformation began under Francis I after 1515, who demolished the old donjon in 1528 to eliminate "austere" medieval remnants and commissioned Pierre Lescot to design Italianate facades, including the Lescot Wing completed in the 1540s. Henry II continued expansions, such as the Salle des Caryatides in 1550, blending fortified elements with opulent decoration to symbolize monarchical grandeur. The Louvre served as a primary royal residence through the 16th and early 17th centuries, hosting courts, councils, and collections, though Louis XIV's focus on Versailles from the 1660s diminished its centrality, leaving it as a secondary administrative site by the late . Archaeological excavations since have uncovered the fortress foundations beneath the current palace, confirming the layered evolution from to ensemble.

Revolutionary Establishment as Public Museum

During the , the , previously a royal residence, was nationalized as property of the French Republic following the abolition of the in 1792. The revolutionary government sought to repurpose the confiscated royal collections—seized from the crown, nobility, and clergy under laws designating them as biens nationaux—to serve the public interest rather than monarchical privilege. On 26 May 1791, the National Constituent Assembly issued a designating the Louvre for use as a public museum dedicated to , marking the initial step toward transforming the site from an elite enclave into a national institution aimed at educating citizens in republican ideals. The Musée Central des Arts officially opened on 10 August 1793 in the Grande Galerie of the Louvre, coinciding with the first anniversary of the storming of the and the effective end of royal authority. This inaugural exhibition featured 537 paintings, primarily drawn from the former royal holdings at Versailles and , as well as ecclesiastical treasures confiscated during the Revolution's campaign against church properties. Admission was initially free, with access intended for the broader public, though practical limitations arose amid the , including controlled entry to prioritize artists, scholars, and "useful citizens" over casual visitors. The establishment reflected Enlightenment principles of universal access to knowledge and art as tools for civic formation, positioning the museum as a symbol of the Republic's break from absolutist traditions. Under the , the museum operated six days per ten-day décade, closing on the tenth for maintenance, which facilitated wider attendance than the sporadic royal viewings of the past. Despite logistical challenges—such as incomplete installations and political —the opening drew thousands, underscoring the revolutionary intent to democratize while centralizing it under state control.

Napoleonic Acquisitions and Expansion

Under Napoleon's direction, the Louvre, renamed the Musée Napoléon in , underwent significant enrichment of its collections through a combination of purchases, commissions, and requisitions from conquered territories across . Dominique Vivant Denon, appointed director in 1802, played a central role in overseeing these efforts, accompanying military campaigns to select artworks and prioritizing pieces that enhanced France's cultural prestige. By 1814, the museum held nearly 5,000 additional items, drawn from royal collections, confiscated church properties, sales by exiles, and spoils from regions including , , , and . Military conquests formed the basis for many acquisitions, with Napoleon's Italian campaigns from 1796–1797 yielding hundreds of paintings and sculptures, such as works requisitioned from Italian churches and convents dissolved under French influence. personally curated selections during these expeditions, focusing on masterpieces to rival established collections in and . The Egyptian campaign of 1798–1801 contributed antiquities, including elements later displayed in dedicated rooms planned by , though many artifacts were lost or diverted due to British intervention at sea. Commissions under included iconic paintings like Jacques-Louis David's (completed 1807) and Antoine-Jean Gros's Napoleon at Eylau (1808), alongside purchases such as Pierre-Paul Prud'hon's portrait of Empress Joséphine. Physical alterations prioritized display and accessibility over major new construction. In 1800, architects Charles Percier and Pierre Fontaine designed a staircase and hallway leading to the , with the room itself retaining its 17th-century form but adapted for imperial use. The Grande Galerie received refurbishments, including overhead lighting and double-height archways to better showcase paintings, while a new entrance added in 1805 featured a bust of by Lorenzo Bartolini. These changes, executed under architects like Reymond, Percier, and Fontaine, accommodated the influx of spoils and positioned the museum as a symbol of French dominance. Following Napoleon's abdication in 1814 and defeat at Waterloo in 1815, approximately 5,000 items were repatriated to their countries of origin under the Treaty of Paris and subsequent agreements, though key works like Paolo Veronese's The Wedding at Cana of Galilee (1563) remained after negotiations. This restitution reflected Allied demands to reverse the requisitions, underscoring the contingent nature of the Napoleonic buildup, yet the era established the Louvre's model as a centralized repository of global art.

19th-Century Restorations and Growth

The 19th century marked a period of significant architectural expansion for the Louvre Palace under Napoleon III, fulfilling long-standing royal ambitions to create a unified grand complex. In 1852, architect Louis Visconti was commissioned to design the "Nouveau Louvre" project, which sought to connect the Louvre with the Tuileries Palace by filling in the courtyards between them, thereby enclosing a vast rectangular perimeter. This initiative represented the culmination of the "Grand Design" envisioned by French monarchs since the Renaissance, transforming fragmented structures into a coherent monumental ensemble. Following Visconti's death in 1854, Hector Lefuel assumed direction of the works, refining the plans with heightened ornamentation in a Neo-baroque style characteristic of the Second Empire. Construction proceeded at an unprecedented pace, with the new wings—including the Richelieu Wing—incorporating extensive gallery spaces, administrative areas, and lavish interiors such as the Napoleon III apartments fitted out around 1861. Key portions, including the Pavillon de l'Horloge and surrounding facades, were inaugurated on August 14, 1857, in a low-key ceremony amid ongoing building efforts. The project effectively doubled the palace's footprint, adding over 200,000 square meters of space and enabling the to accommodate its growing collections more effectively. Major construction concluded by 1869, though the full integration with the Tuileries persisted until the latter's destruction by fire during the 1871 , after which the Louvre's eastern facade faced an open vista. Restorations in this era were secondary to expansion but included repairs to earlier structures damaged by revolutionary upheavals and the need to adapt spaces for public exhibition, supporting the 's evolution into a premier repository of from antiquity to the . Throughout the century, the collections expanded via state purchases, private donations, and bequests, with steady acquisitions reinforcing the Louvre's focus on Western historical development.

20th-Century Modernizations and Challenges

During World War II, the Louvre faced existential threats from Nazi occupation, prompting Director Jacques Jaujard to orchestrate the evacuation of nearly 4,000 artworks starting in September 1939 to châteaux in rural France, thereby preventing looting and destruction. This preemptive action, anticipating the fall of France, ensured the survival of masterpieces like the Mona Lisa and Winged Victory of Samothrace, which were crated and relocated multiple times for security. The museum closed to the public in 1939, and while the Germans occupied the building from 1940, they found it largely empty of valuables; post-liberation in 1944, collections were gradually repatriated and reinstalled by 1947, marking a successful preservation effort amid wartime devastation. Post-war reconstruction focused on restoring galleries and adapting to peacetime demands, but by the mid-20th century, the Louvre grappled with aging ill-suited to rising numbers and expanding collections. Efforts included departmental reorganizations and incremental updates to display spaces, though comprehensive modernization lagged until the . The Grand Louvre project, launched in 1981 under President , addressed these deficiencies through a 15-year overhaul costing approximately 1 billion francs (equivalent to about €150 million today), reorganizing 50,000 square meters of exhibition space and creating underground facilities for storage, offices, and parking. Architect redesigned the Cour Napoléon with a glass pyramid entrance, inaugurated on , 1989, which unified disparate wings and symbolized transparency while accommodating up to 4 million annual visitors—double the pre-project capacity. Persistent challenges emerged from surging tourism, with visitor numbers climbing from around 2 million in the early 1970s to over 5 million by the 1990s, straining ventilation, climate control, and crowd flow in the historic palace. Conservation issues, including pollution-induced damage to facades and inadequate security against thefts—exemplified by the 1971 attempted burglary of the Mona Lisa—highlighted vulnerabilities in the aging structure. Labor disputes and funding constraints further complicated operations, as unions protested working conditions amid the project's disruptions, underscoring tensions between preservation and public access in a museum transitioning from royal repository to global icon.

21st-Century Developments and Recent Events

In the early 2000s, the Louvre pursued decentralization through satellite institutions to expand its reach and alleviate pressure on the Paris site. The Louvre-Lens, opened on December 4, 2012, in the northern French city of Lens, features a 28,000-square-meter building designed by Sanaa architects Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, emphasizing chronological displays of loaned artworks to foster regional cultural access. Since inception, it has received over 3,000 loans from the Paris collection, more than any other external venue, drawing approximately 500,000 visitors annually and contributing to post-industrial revitalization in the area. Similarly, the Louvre Abu Dhabi, inaugurated on November 11, 2017, on Saadiyat Island in the United Arab Emirates, operates under a 30-year licensing agreement valued at €1 billion, allowing use of the Louvre name and curatorial expertise in exchange for loans and revenue sharing. Designed by Jean Nouvel with a floating dome filtering sunlight across 55 buildings, it houses 600,000 square feet of galleries presenting universal art from antiquity to modernity, attracting over 1.2 million visitors in its first year despite criticisms of cultural commodification in a Gulf context. Visitor numbers surged in the , cementing the Louvre's status as the world's most-visited museum, with 10.2 million attendees in 2018 and sustained post-pandemic recovery to 8.7 million in 2024, driven by global but exacerbating infrastructure strains designed for half that capacity. led to operational challenges, including a staff strike on June 15, 2025, that closed the museum for a day to protest , maintenance backlogs, and insufficient funding amid 30 million annual passersby in central . These pressures prompted French President Emmanuel Macron's announcement on January 28, 2025, of an €800 million, decade-long "Louvre Demain" masterplan to renovate technical systems, add 3,000 square meters of underground exhibition space beneath the Cour Carrée, relocate the Mona Lisa to a dedicated gallery for better viewing, and introduce a new accessible entrance along the Colonnade du Louvre, aiming to accommodate 12 million visitors yearly by 2031 while enhancing . An international design competition launched in June 2025 shortlisted five teams, including and , focusing on modular infrastructure renewal without altering the historic envelope. A brazen daylight on October 19, 2025, underscored persistent security vulnerabilities amid high traffic and deferred investments. Four thieves, disguised as construction workers, breached the Galerie d'Apollon and stole eight 19th-century Napoleonic jewelry pieces— replicas valued at €88 million—in under four minutes, exploiting lax perimeter controls during early morning hours. The closed for investigation until October 22, 2025, with director Laurence des Cars citing delayed security upgrades due to budget constraints despite record revenues, prompting calls for enhanced and funding prioritization over expansion. This incident followed years of minor thefts and highlighted causal risks from understaffed monitoring in a facility handling millions, though no core collection items were affected.

Collections

While the Louvre has no official ranking of its most famous artworks, several pieces are widely regarded as iconic due to visitor crowds, media prominence, and scholarly recognition. These include Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa (1503–1519), the Venus de Milo (c. 150–100 BCE), the Winged Victory of Samothrace (c. 190 BCE), Eugène Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People (1830), Paolo Veronese's The Wedding Feast at Cana (1563), Théodore Géricault's The Raft of the Medusa (1818–1819), Jacques-Louis David's The Coronation of Napoleon (1805–1807), Michelangelo's The Dying Slave (1513–1516), the Code of Hammurabi (c. 1750 BCE), and the Seated Scribe (c. 2500 BCE). These works span various departments and exemplify the museum's breadth.

Ancient Near Eastern and Egyptian Antiquities

The Department of Near Eastern Antiquities preserves artifacts from ancient Mesopotamian, Syrian, Anatolian, and ian civilizations, spanning from the Neolithic era to the Achaemenid period ending in 331 BC. Formed in 1881 from earlier Assyrian holdings exhibited since 1847, the collection features monumental sculptures, cuneiform-inscribed , and decorative reliefs primarily housed in the Richelieu Wing's ground and upper floors. Among its most prominent items is the , a 2.25-meter dating to approximately 1792–1750 BC, which records 282 laws attributed to the Babylonian king ; it was excavated in 1901–1902 from in modern and entered the Louvre's holdings shortly thereafter. Additional key pieces include the of Archers, glazed brick panels from depicting Elamite warriors circa 404–359 BC, illustrating advanced polychrome techniques in Persian architecture. The Department of Egyptian Antiquities maintains the world's richest assemblage of Nile Valley artifacts, exceeding 50,000 items from predynastic times around 4000 BC through the Roman era to the AD. Initial public display began in 1827 with four rooms, spurred by Jean-François Champollion's 1822 decipherment of hieroglyphs, though systematic growth accelerated via excavations led by figures like starting in the 1850s. The collection emphasizes funerary practices, royal iconography, and daily life representations, displayed across two floors in the Sully Wing, including the Crypt of the Sphinx beneath the courtyard. A standout artifact is , a lifelike painted figure with inlaid eyes from the Old Kingdom's Fifth Dynasty (c. 2620–2500 BC), unearthed by Mariette in 1850 at Saqqara's tombs and exemplifying non-royal realism in Egyptian sculpture. Other Egyptian highlights encompass the Chapel of Akhethotep, a reconstructed tomb facade from (c. 2494–2345 BC) adorned with reliefs of elite banquets and offerings, and statues such as Amon Protecting Tutankhamun, a figure from the 18th Dynasty (c. 1332–1323 BC) symbolizing divine safeguarding of the . Acquisitions stemmed from French diplomatic gifts, 19th-century digs, and purchases, with the collection's scale reflecting Egypt's centralized bureaucratic and religious output over three millennia, though post-colonial repatriation debates have spotlighted items like obelisks and sarcophagi obtained during Napoleonic campaigns. These departments collectively underscore the Louvre's role in preserving primary evidence of early , legal codification, and monumental art from cradle-of-civilization regions, with artifacts analyzed through stratigraphic and epigraphic methods to reconstruct societal hierarchies and technological advances. Conservation efforts address degradation from environments, such as salt on Mesopotamian ivories, while ongoing research integrates and material sourcing to refine chronologies independent of textual biases in ancient records.

Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Artifacts

The Department of Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Antiquities encompasses artifacts from the prehistoric era through the late Roman period, including sculptures, ceramics, jewelry, and mosaics primarily from the Mediterranean region. The collection originated with acquisitions by French collectors in the via diplomatic missions and travels, expanding significantly under royal patronage starting in 1692 when relocated select antiquities to the Louvre. Further enrichment occurred through purchases like the Tochon collection in 1818, which added archaeological objects to the predominantly marble-based holdings. Greek artifacts form a core of the department, featuring Hellenistic masterpieces that exemplify dynamic realism and anatomical precision. The Aphrodite of Milos, a statue dated to circa 150–100 BCE, was unearthed in fragments on the island of Melos in April 1820 by local farmer Yorgos Kentrotas and acquired by French naval officer Olivier Voutier on behalf of the Marquis de Rivière for 6,000 francs. Presented to King , it entered the Louvre in 1821, its armless form—likely depicting the adjusting her or holding an apple—symbolizing classical ideals of beauty amid debates over its Hellenistic rather than purely classical origins. Another iconic piece, the (Nike), carved from around 190 BCE by an artist of the Rhodian school possibly Pythokritos, commemorates a naval triumph and was excavated in 1863 by French archaeologist Charles Champoiseau from the sanctuary of the Great Gods on . Standing over 8 feet tall on a ship prow base of gray Lartos , the statue's wind-swept and absent arms—originally extended in —convey motion and triumph, installed at the Louvre's since 1884. Etruscan holdings highlight funerary and domestic arts from central Italy circa 8th–1st centuries BCE, with terracotta works demonstrating technical prowess and cultural distinctiveness from Greek influences. The Sarcophagus of the Spouses, a painted terracotta piece from Cerveteri dated 520–510 BCE, depicts a reclining couple in intimate companionship, underscoring Etruscan societal norms of marital equality atypical in contemporaneous Greek art. Additional items include bucchero ceramics and bronze vessels, such as a vase shaped as a woman's head borrowing Hellenistic forms but executed in Etruscan style, reflecting trade and stylistic exchange. Roman antiquities, comprising imperial-era sculptures, portraits, and decorative elements, often include copies of Greek originals alongside original works showcasing portrait realism and imperial . Notable examples encompass busts like the Agrippa from 25–24 BCE and the Young Slave from the late 2nd to early CE, illustrating shifts from republican to more idealized provincial styles. The collection also features mosaics and inscriptions from and the eastern provinces, acquired through excavations and bequests, providing evidence of Roman cultural dissemination across the empire.

Medieval to Renaissance Sculptures and Decorative Arts

The Louvre's Department of Sculptures houses works spanning the to the early , with holdings of medieval Gothic stone carvings, wooden figures, and marbles primarily from French, Italian, and northern European origins. This department evolved from early 19th-century displays, incorporating and secular pieces that illustrate technical advancements in polychromy and anatomical realism during these periods. Prominent examples include Buonarroti's Dying Slave and Rebellious Slave, both carved in between 1513 and 1516 as part of an unrealized scheme for Pope Julius II's tomb. The (height 2.09 meters) portrays a nude male figure in languid repose, evoking themes of spiritual captivity and release through its unfinished surface, which exposes the block's raw form. The (height 2.15 meters) depicts muscular tension against bonds, symbolizing resistance and incomplete liberation, with the figure's head turned away from the viewer. These statues entered the French royal collection in the mid-16th century via the banker Roberto Strozzi, who received them from the artist before presenting them to King Francis I. Medieval sculptures in the collection emphasize French Gothic production, featuring reliefs and statues from cathedrals such as elongated Virgins and apostles that demonstrate the era's shift toward naturalistic drapery and expressive gestures, often originally polychromed for liturgical settings. Notable among decorative metalworks is the equestrian statuette tentatively attributed to Charles V or , a piece from an Italian workshop dating to circa 1350–1375, exemplifying late medieval equestrian portraiture with its dynamic pose and detailed armor. The Department of Decorative Arts complements these with over 1,000 medieval objects, including enamels, carved ivories, and reliquaries, alongside approximately 8,000 and early 17th-century items such as bronze statuettes, tapestries, and furniture showcasing Mannerist ornamentation and classical revival motifs. These collections, displayed primarily in the Richelieu Wing, highlight artisanal techniques like work and , acquired through royal patronage and 19th-century state initiatives to represent chronological evolution in European craftsmanship.

Islamic and Oriental Collections

The Louvre's Department of Islamic Art maintains one of Europe's largest collections of artifacts from Islamic civilizations, comprising over 3,000 objects dating from the 7th to the 19th centuries across regions from Spain to India. These encompass diverse media such as ceramics, glassware, metalwork, ivories, wood carvings, stone and stucco architectural fragments, textiles, carpets, and illuminated manuscripts, reflecting technical innovations and stylistic evolutions tied to historical Islamic patronage and trade networks. The department originated with initial acquisitions in 1793 during the museum's founding, evolving into dedicated galleries by 1893 within the Department of Decorative Arts before gaining autonomous status in 2003 under President Jacques Chirac's initiative to elevate recognition of Islamic cultural contributions. Permanent galleries, inaugurated on September 18, 2012, occupy renovated spaces in the Cour Visconti beneath a 1,500-square-meter undulating aluminum and canopy with a golden finish, designed by architects and Rudy Ricciotti to evoke traditional Islamic vaulting while integrating with the Louvre's . The displays emphasize chronological and geographical progression, highlighting shared motifs like arabesques, geometric patterns, and , alongside regional variations such as Fatimid lusterware from (10th–12th centuries), Mamluk metalwork from and (13th–16th centuries), and Safavid ceramics from Persia (16th–17th centuries). Notable artifacts include the Baptistère de Saint Louis, a mid-14th-century hammered brass basin inlaid with gold and silver depicting princely hunts and figures, originally commissioned for the court in and later owned by French kings; the Monzon Lion, a 12th-century Spanish ivory pyxis lid carved with a motif symbolizing strength in Almohad artistry; and early Qur'anic folios on from the 8th–10th centuries, showcasing script variants. Other highlights feature a 16th-century Iznik tile panel from the tomb of Sultan in , valued for its turquoise and cobalt-blue floral designs, and a 13th-century glass bottle from bearing a Crusader , illustrating cross-cultural exchanges. These pieces, many acquired through 19th-century excavations, purchases, and bequests like those from the , underscore the collection's depth in documenting Islamic material culture without reliance on narrative figuration due to aniconic traditions. The Louvre's Oriental collections, referring to select Asian holdings, are comparatively modest following the 1945 transfer of most Asian art—primarily Chinese porcelains, Japanese prints, and Southeast Asian textiles accumulated since —to the Musée Guimet. Remaining items, numbering around 120 in the Pavillon des Sessions, include Chinese jades, scrolls, and bronzes from the 18th–19th centuries, as well as Indian miniatures and Japanese ceramics, displayed to represent broader non-Western traditions alongside African and Oceanic works rather than forming a dedicated Asian department. These artifacts, often from private collections like that of Grandidier, highlight imperial Chinese craftsmanship and Mughal influences but prioritize contextual integration over exhaustive coverage.

European Paintings and Drawings

The Department of Paintings encompasses European works from the 13th to the mid-19th century, representing schools across , , the , , , and , with a focus on pre-1848 pieces excluding rare exceptions. The collection totals approximately 7,500 paintings, managed to prioritize conservation and thematic display in wings such as and Richelieu, where rotations prevent light damage to oils on and panel. Italian holdings dominate in scale and renown, featuring Leonardo da Vinci's (oil on poplar panel, c. 1503–1506), acquired by Francis I in 1518 and celebrated for its subtle modeling and atmospheric perspective achieved through layering. Paolo Veronese's The Wedding Feast at Cana (oil on canvas, 1562–1563), seized from during Napoleon's campaigns in 1797, measures 6.77 by 9.94 meters and depicts Christ's miracle with over 130 figures in a architectural setting. Additional gems include Raphael's (tempera on panel, c. 1504–1506) and works by and , reflecting 's coloristic innovations and Florence's linear precision. French paintings emphasize and , exemplified by Jacques-Louis David's (oil on canvas, 1784), commissioned for Louis XVI's brother and embodying stoic republican virtues through stark geometry and dramatic lighting. Théodore Géricault's (oil on canvas, 1818–1819) documents the 1816 shipwreck scandal with raw anatomical detail and pyramidal composition, critiquing naval incompetence via survivor testimonies. Eugène Delacroix's (oil on canvas, 1830) captures the July Revolution's barricade heroism, its dynamic figures and tricolor flag underscoring causal links between Bourbon restoration failures and popular uprising. Northern European selections include Flemish primitives like Jan van Eyck's influence in the Annunciation (oil on panel, c. 1430s, attributed to workshop), showcasing early oil glazing for jewel-like realism, and Dutch Golden Age pieces such as Georges de La Tour's chiaroscuro candlelit interiors. Spanish contributions feature Diego Velázquez's The Spinners (oil on canvas, c. 1655–1660), acquired in 1813, with its dual-scene mythology and naturalistic brushwork derived from studio observations. The Department of Prints and Drawings maintains over 130,000 European items from the 15th to 19th centuries, including preparatory sketches, engravings, and illuminated manuscripts, with strengths in Italian masters like Michelangelo's red chalk studies and French academicians' anatomical sheets. Light-sensitive, these rarely display permanently, instead featured in rotations or the Edmond de bequest of 6,000 works emphasizing 18th-century French caricature and . Conservation prioritizes acid-free storage and climate control, enabling scholarly access via the consultation room for verification against auction records and inventories.

Operations and Management

Administrative Structure and Funding

The Louvre Museum is administered by the Établissement public du Louvre, an autonomous public administrative body established to operate the institution independently while remaining under the oversight of the . This structure allows for operational flexibility in curatorial, conservation, and visitor management decisions, distinct from direct ministerial control, though major policy alignments with national cultural priorities are required. The executive leadership is headed by the President-Director, a position appointed by the on the recommendation of the Minister of Culture. has held this role since her appointment on 28 May 2021, marking the first time a woman has led the ; she oversees strategic direction, , and international partnerships. is provided by a board that includes the President-Director, four state representatives (such as the Director General of Heritage or their delegate), elected representatives from museum staff, and other appointed members to ensure balanced input on administrative, financial, and curatorial matters. The museum's annual operating surpasses €200 million, with funding sourced from a mix of public subsidies, self-generated revenues, and private contributions to sustain collections maintenance, exhibitions, and infrastructure. Approximately 40% derives from French government allocations, reflecting its status as a national heritage asset; another 40% comes from ticket admissions, which generated significant income amid over 10 million annual visitors pre-pandemic; and the remaining 20% from commercial activities including licensing, shop sales, and sponsorships. Supplementary funding is augmented by the Louvre Endowment Fund, which disburses over €14 million yearly toward , preservation, and acquisitions, sourced from private donations and international campaigns. Revenues from affiliated ventures, such as the partnership, also contribute to capital projects, including a €1 billion restoration initiative announced in January to address overcrowding and facility decay, partly financed by raising non-EU visitor ticket prices from €22 to €29 effective that year. This diversified model underscores reliance on tourism-driven income, which has proven volatile—dropping sharply during closures—while government support ensures baseline stability amid fiscal pressures on public institutions.

Visitor Management and Economic Impact

The Louvre Museum manages an annual influx of approximately 8.7 million visitors as of 2024, maintaining its position as the world's most-visited despite falling short of the pre-pandemic peak of 10.2 million in 2018. Visitor numbers stabilized at 8.9 million in 2023 before a slight decline, attributed to factors including the ' disruptions and broader recovery patterns. Of these, about 68% are international tourists, underscoring the museum's global draw. To address overcrowding, which exceeds the facility's original design capacity by more than double, the Louvre employs timed-entry ticketing systems, particularly for high-demand exhibitions such as the 2019 show, where advance booking became mandatory to distribute crowds and prevent bottlenecks at key artworks like the Mona Lisa. Online reservations and capped daily admissions help regulate flow, though implementation varies; general entry often relies on queue management and security staffing rather than strict limits. These measures stem from empirical observations of visitor behavior, including studies using data that reveal sequential movement patterns favoring popular zones, leading to density spikes that degrade experiences. Persistent challenges include visitor frustration from long waits and cramped viewing—evident in 2025 reports of "dazed" tourists vowing not to return—and staff strikes, such as the June 2025 closure protesting unsustainable mass pressures on and personnel. Economically, the Louvre generates €200–250 million in annual from tickets, merchandise, and auxiliary services, bolstering Paris's sector. A dedicated impact analysis estimates its broader contribution at a gross value of €938 million to the French , including a net tax gain of €39 million and the creation of 12,738 to 18,090 jobs, primarily through induced spending by visitors on lodging, dining, and . This multiplier effect arises from the museum's role as a tourism anchor, drawing spending that cascades into local businesses, though critics note that such figures may overstate net benefits by underaccounting for congestion costs and public subsidies required for operations. Proposed renovations, budgeted at €700–800 million, aim to sustain this impact amid rising attendance forecasts, but labor disputes highlight tensions between pursuits and sustainable capacity.

Conservation, Security, and Infrastructure Challenges

The Louvre faces significant conservation challenges due to the aging infrastructure of its historic buildings, which include medieval foundations and 19th-century expansions prone to water infiltration and unstable environmental conditions. In January 2025, museum president reported widespread water leaks and temperature fluctuations in exhibition spaces, posing direct risks to fragile artworks through humidity damage and material degradation. These issues stem from deferred maintenance on structures over 800 years old, exacerbating vulnerabilities to climate variability; for instance, the museum has relocated non-displayed artifacts to a climate-resilient storage facility in northern to mitigate flood risks heightened by global warming patterns observed since the early . The Louvre Conservation Centre conducts ongoing preservation treatments and research, but des Cars estimated a €500 million need to address across degraded areas. Infrastructure strains compound these conservation threats, primarily through and inadequate in a facility spanning 72,735 square meters with 380,000 objects. The attracted 8.7 million visitors in 2024, prompting a cap of 30,000 daily entrants, yet staff strikes in June 2025 halted operations due to unmanaged crowds, understaffing, and resulting bottlenecks that hinder climate control and artifact handling. This , driven by post-pandemic travel surges, has led to complaints of long queues, poor , and a "physical ordeal" for visitors, while accelerating wear on HVAC systems and structural elements already compromised by leaks. Maintenance backlogs, including proliferating damage in high-traffic zones, reflect chronic underfunding relative to visitor revenue, with des Cars warning that unchecked deterioration endangers long-term operational viability. Security vulnerabilities persist despite layered protections like and guards, as evidenced by a brazen , 2025, heist in the Apollo Gallery where four thieves used power tools and a basket lift to steal nine Napoleonic-era jewels—including a worn by III's wife—in approximately seven minutes during public hours. The raid exploited daytime distractions from crowds and gaps in perimeter monitoring, with only five guards present instead of the prior six and insufficient external cameras, prompting director des Cars to concede systemic failures. This incident aligns with rising French museum burglaries—nine in 2023 and 21 in 2024—shifting toward smash-and-grab tactics targeting portable high-value items amid perceived "soft targets" in undersecured historic sites. Post-heist closures for investigation underscored how such breaches not only risk irreplaceable losses but also amplify public scrutiny of between visitor access and protective measures.

Research and Archaeology

Louvre's Excavation Programs

The Louvre Museum's excavation programs, coordinated through its curatorial departments, have historically contributed to the enrichment of its collections and the advancement of archaeological knowledge, with a focus on sites linked to ancient civilizations represented in its holdings. These efforts date back to the , when French archaeologists affiliated with the museum, such as Paul-Émile Botta, initiated digs at Khorsabad in starting in 1843, uncovering the palace of the Assyrian king and yielding monumental sculptures like figures that formed the nucleus of the Near Eastern Antiquities collection. Similarly, excavations at in during the early under Jacques de Morgan recovered artifacts from the Achaemenid period, including glazed brick decorations from Darius I's palace, which were allocated to the Louvre under partage agreements with host countries. In the realm of Egyptian antiquities, the Louvre's involvement began prominently with Auguste Mariette's missions in the 1850s, including the discovery of the at , from which over 5,900 objects were shipped to between 1852 and 1853, establishing key elements of the department's holdings. More recent programs resumed at in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, targeting tombs like that of Akhethotep, whose sculpted walls were acquired in 1903 following earlier explorations. However, cooperation faced interruptions; in 2009, suspended the Louvre's excavations after the museum declined to repatriate fragments from a Theban suspected of illicit , highlighting tensions over artifact ownership and ethical sourcing in modern . Since , the Louvre has expanded its fieldwork, roughly doubling the number of active sites by through collaborative missions with local institutions and experts, emphasizing scientific documentation over acquisition amid evolving international norms against cultural export. Ongoing excavations that year included and Bawit in , El-Hassa in , Paykend in , Apollonia Pontica in , Orgame in , in , in , and sites in Iran's region, often led by departmental curators to study settlement patterns, funerary practices, and . In , programs have included urban at the Louvre site itself, where 1980s digs in the Cour Carrée and Cour Napoléon uncovered remnants of Philippe Auguste’s 12th-century fortress, including the donjon foundation and moats, providing evidence of medieval defensive architecture predating the palace's transformation. These initiatives integrate excavation data with collection analysis, yielding publications and temporary displays that contextualize artifacts, though outcomes are constrained by geopolitical factors—such as the halt of Syrian operations due to conflict—and stricter provenance requirements that prioritize in-situ preservation over museum transfers. Departments like Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Antiquities have participated less in recent digs, relying more on historical acquisitions from 19th-century European missions, but contribute through joint ventures in the Mediterranean basin. Overall, the programs underscore a shift from exploratory collection-building to research-oriented fieldwork, supported by the museum's conservation resources and international partnerships.

Scientific Analysis and Provenance Studies

The Centre de recherche et de restauration des musées de (C2RMF), situated in subterranean laboratories beneath the Louvre, conducts scientific analyses on approximately 500 cultural artifacts annually to authenticate materials, determine manufacturing techniques, and assess conservation needs. These examinations employ non-invasive methods such as (PIXE) and gamma-ray emission (PIGE) spectrometry via the AGLAE facility, which detects trace elements in pigments, metals, and ceramics without damaging objects. analysis has been utilized at the Louvre for over 14 years to characterize archaeological and artistic materials, enabling distinctions between authentic ancient works and modern forgeries based on elemental composition and aging markers. Provenance studies at the Louvre, formalized in 2020 under director , systematically investigate the ownership histories of acquisitions, particularly the roughly 14,000 works obtained between 1933 and 1945, to identify potential Nazi-era confiscations or colonial-era seizures. Led by historian Emmanuelle Polack, this initiative cross-references archival documents, auction records, and dealer ledgers, often integrating C2RMF's material analyses to corroborate or refute claimed origins—for instance, by verifying pigment authenticity against historical trade routes. A 2022 partnership with extended this research, focusing on World War II-era purchases through shared expertise in tracing pre-1945 sales. Scientific intersects with in cases like the Louvre's examination of the , where infrared reflectography and X-radiography revealed underdrawings and panel construction inconsistent with Leonardo da Vinci's known methods, challenging attribution claims despite supportive elemental analyses. Such multidisciplinary approaches prioritize empirical data over stylistic conjecture, though limitations persist: scientific tests confirm material age but cannot independently establish legal transfer chains, necessitating archival validation. The incorporates these methods into training, emphasizing research methodologies that combine spectrometry with historical documentation for robust assessments.

Educational Outreach and Publications

The Louvre Museum maintains the , a higher education institution established under the French Ministry of Culture, which provides specialized training in , , , , and through a structured curriculum comprising three cycles of study. This school, located within the museum premises, facilitates classes in exhibition rooms several times per week and offers summer and winter schools in for museum professionals and advanced students, including practical visits to heritage sites. The museum's education department conducts outreach initiatives tailored to youth and schools, including guided tours, workshops, lectures, and customized experiences such as school trips to enhance accessibility to its collections. These programs emphasize hands-on learning in art history and cultural heritage, with the Louvre serving as an accredited training organization for courses in cultural interpretation and related fields. Funding for such efforts is supported through endowments and corporate partnerships dedicated to educational and social projects. In publications, the Louvre produces exhibition catalogues, collection guides, scholarly art books, and historical essays available via its official shop, alongside an online collections database documenting over 500,000 works spanning Egyptian antiquities to 19th-century European art. These resources facilitate research and public engagement, with digital access enabling detailed entries on masterpieces and lesser-known artifacts.

Affiliated Institutions

Domestic Branches and Satellites

The , the primary domestic satellite of the Musée du Louvre, opened on December 4, 2012, in Lens, northern France, approximately 200 kilometers from , on the site of a former basin. This outpost was established as part of a French government initiative to decentralize national cultural collections, responding to a 2004 call for regional proposals where the region, proposing Lens among other sites, was selected to host the branch. The project aimed to revitalize the economically depressed former mining town by fostering tourism and cultural engagement, with the museum designed by Japanese architects Kazuyo Sejima and of , in collaboration with New York-based Imrey Culbert, featuring a low-slung glass-and-concrete structure spanning 28,000 square meters on 20 hectares of reclaimed wasteland. The Louvre-Lens operates under a 20-year agreement with the central Louvre, receiving long-term loans of artworks from its collections rather than permanent transfers, emphasizing chronological and thematic displays over departmental silos. Its flagship Galerie du Temps exhibits over 200 masterpieces spanning 5,000 years of , from ancient Mesopotamian artifacts to 19th-century European paintings, arranged linearly to highlight historical continuities without nationalistic framing. Additional spaces include temporary exhibition galleries, a 5,000-square-meter , and educational facilities, drawing an average of 500,000 visitors annually and ranking as France's third-most-visited provincial museum as of recent years. Funding combines state subsidies, regional contributions, and ticket revenues, with operations managed jointly by the Louvre and local authorities to promote accessibility, including free admission for those under 18 from the . Adjacent to Louvre-Lens, the Louvre Conservation Centre in Liévin, inaugurated in November 2019, serves as a specialized satellite facility focused on preservation rather than public exhibition, housing laboratories for restoration, storage for 250,000 objects from the Louvre's reserves, and training programs to safeguard France's national heritage amid space constraints in . This 23,000-square-meter center, built on former land, addresses logistical pressures on the main Louvre by centralizing technical operations, though it remains non-public-facing and supports broader collection without constituting a visitor-oriented branch. No other permanent domestic satellites exist, reflecting a targeted rather than expansive strategy.

International Partnerships and Extensions

The Louvre's primary international extension is the , established through an intergovernmental agreement signed on March 6, 2007, between the governments of and the . This partnership, managed by Agence France-Muséums on behalf of thirteen French public institutions including the Musée du Louvre, grants the use of the Louvre name for 30 years in exchange for €965 million paid in installments, plus an additional €25 million for . The museum, designed by architect and opened to the public on November 11, 2017, on , aims to showcase universal human creativity through a collection spanning ancient to , with providing curatorial expertise, long-term loans of artworks, and organization of temporary exhibitions. Under the agreement, commits to lending up to 300 works over a decade for the permanent collection and facilitating blockbuster exhibitions, such as those featuring loans from the Louvre's holdings, while funds construction, operations, and acquisitions adhering to international ethical standards for . The partnership emphasizes cultural exchange, with the UAE gaining access to French museological know-how to build its own curatorial capacity, though critics have noted the financial model's reliance on wealth and potential risks to artifact in a Gulf context. As of , the for the Louvre name was extended by 10 years to 2047 during a visit by French President , securing continued collaboration amid the museum's growing attendance of over 1.2 million visitors annually by 2023. Beyond , the Louvre engages in targeted international collaborations, such as loan exhibitions and joint programs, but lacks other permanent extensions abroad as of . Examples include a 2025 exhibition of Louvre artifacts at 's History Museum of Armenia titled "Sacred Dialogues," organized in partnership to highlight shared , and ongoing loans for shows like "Mamluks: Legacy of an Empire" at co-curated with the Louvre. These initiatives support the museum's global outreach without establishing additional branches, reflecting a selective approach prioritizing high-profile, reciprocal exchanges over widespread .

Controversies and Criticisms

Historical Looting and Acquisition Ethics

The Louvre's collection expanded significantly during the through the confiscation of artworks from royal, aristocratic, and properties, a process justified by revolutionary authorities as the of national patrimony for public access. Between 1789 and 1793, commissions seized thousands of pieces, including paintings from the Louvre's own royal collections and items from suppressed monasteries, with the Muséum Central des Arts opening on August 10, 1793, to display these holdings as property of the French Republic. This appropriation, while enabling the museum's founding, displaced artifacts from their original religious or private contexts, raising ethical questions about ownership rights amid revolutionary upheaval, though proponents argued it preserved works from potential aristocratic dispersal or destruction. Napoleon's military campaigns further augmented the collection through systematic removals treated as spoils of war, particularly during the Italian Campaign starting in 1796, where forces under his command extracted artworks under the guise of "contributions" to French museums. The Treaty of Tolentino, imposed on the Papal States on February 19, 1797, after French victories, compelled the transfer of over 100 paintings and sculptures from the Vatican and other Italian sites, including masterpieces like the Laocoön group and Raphael's Transfiguration, shipped to Paris for Louvre display. Similar extractions occurred in the Low Countries and Egypt, where the 1798–1801 expedition yielded obelisks, statues, and Rosetta Stone fragments—though the latter went to Britain—via scientific surveys accompanying conquest, with French forces retaining items not divided by the 1802 Capitulation of Alexandria. These acquisitions, totaling hundreds of major works, were codified in coerced treaties like Leoben (April 1797), reflecting a policy of cultural enrichment through conquest rather than outright purchase. Ethically, these methods embodied of the era, where victorious powers routinely claimed enemy art as reparations—a norm tracing to antiquity—but deviated from emerging Enlightenment ideals of cultural preservation, prompting Allied demands for restitution after Napoleon's 1815 defeat at Waterloo. The and subsequent treaties mandated the return of most Italian and other looted items, with over 2,000 crates repatriated by , establishing a that war spoils should revert to origins, though retained select pieces deemed foundational to the Louvre's "universal" mission. Critics, including contemporary observers like Dominique Vivant Denon (Napoleon's Louvre director), defended retention by claiming superior French stewardship and public edification, yet this rationale masked coercive extraction, as treaties were signed under duress and ignored local sovereignty. Modern scholarship, often influenced by postcolonial frameworks in academic circles, labels these acts as imperial plunder, advocating ; however, causal analysis reveals that without Napoleonic centralization, many works might have remained in private hands or suffered neglect, while empirical retention data shows the Louvre's climate control and conservation have arguably enhanced longevity compared to fragmented original sites. Ongoing debates highlight tensions between historical legalism and contemporary moralism, with and periodically pressing claims—such as Egypt's suspension of Louvre collaborations over disputed sarcophagi—yet French law, via statutes of limitations and the 2002 Fillon Law, prioritizes inalienability of public collections unless proven illicit post-1997. Pro-restitution arguments, prevalent in Western media and NGOs, emphasize cultural disconnection and , but overlook that pre-modern "looting" was bidirectional (e.g., Roman appropriations from ) and that universal museums like the Louvre facilitate global study, with visitor data showing millions annually accessing artifacts otherwise inaccessible. France's resistance, rooted in first-come , aligns with precedents where returned items faced risks, as seen in post-1815 Italian dispersals, underscoring that ethical must weigh preservation efficacy over origin .

Nazi-Era Confiscations and Restitutions

During the Nazi occupation of from 1940 to 1944, German forces and collaborators confiscated approximately 100,000 artworks and objects, primarily from Jewish collectors and dealers, through systematic looting operations such as those conducted by the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg. The Louvre's core collection avoided direct confiscation due to its evacuation to deposits in advance of the German advance, orchestrated by director starting in August 1939, which dispersed over 4,000 crates across rural sites like Louvigny and . However, looted items recovered postwar entered the custody of French national museums, including the Louvre, under the (MNR) label for unclaimed property. Following liberation in 1944, the Commission de Récupération Artistique (CRA), established that November, repatriated over 61,000 objects by 1949, restituting more than 45,000 to prewar owners or heirs through verification and claims processes. Of the remainder, about 13,000 were auctioned, leaving roughly 2,143 as MNR items retained by the state due to unidentified claimants or incomplete documentation. The Louvre holds 1,752 such MNR works, comprising 807 paintings among broader holdings of 296 looted paintings either displayed or stored, with the rest loaned to other institutions. These include pieces like 17th-century still lifes looted in 1944 from Mathilde Javal's residence, where family members faced —five perishing at Auschwitz—before the works entered Louvre custody in the 1950s. Restitution from Louvre holdings has proceeded incrementally, with over 50 paintings returned since 1951, though broader French museum restitutions total only about 100 items since the 1950s, hampered by provenance gaps, deceased heirs, and initial postwar policies prioritizing state retention over aggressive claims adjudication. In December 2017, the Louvre opened two dedicated rooms exhibiting 31 MNR paintings to facilitate public identification of owners, followed by intensified research; in 2019, art historian Emmanuelle Polack, hired as a provenance specialist, identified 10 works from Jewish collector Armand Dorville's holdings, auctioned under duress in 1942, prompting a formal claim by his heirs. Recent cases include the 2024 restitution of Still-Life With Ham by Floris van Schooten (c. 1630s) and Food, Fruit and Glass on a Table by Peter Binoit (c. 1620s) to Javal's 48 heirs, who subsequently donated them back for display in a Nazi-looted art exhibition. France's approach has faced criticism for inconsistencies, including delayed provenance scrutiny until the 1996 Mattéoli Commission exposed retained looted assets, leading to the 1999 Commission for the Compensation of Victims of Spoliation (CIVS). A 2023 law streamlines restitutions by waiving certain statutes of limitations and enabling direct state transfers without parliamentary approval, aiming to resolve lingering MNR cases amid ongoing cataloging efforts like the Louvre's 2021 project covering 485,000 objects. Despite these advances, challenges persist in tracing forced sales misrepresented as voluntary, underscoring causal links between wartime coercion and postwar custodial delays.

Modern Operational Failures and Security Breaches

On October 19, 2025, a gang of four thieves executed a brazen daylight heist at the Louvre's Apollo Gallery, stealing historic Napoleonic-era jewels estimated at €88 million in value, including items from Empress Eugénie's collection but excluding her diamond-and-emerald crown. The perpetrators used a truck-mounted basket lift to scale the building's exterior, smashed display cases with power tools, and escaped within seven minutes, exploiting vulnerabilities such as a localized alarm system disabled for maintenance, one-third of the gallery lacking functional CCTV coverage, and a key camera pointed away from the primary access balcony. Louvre director acknowledged the incident as a "terrible " of protocols, leading to her , while Justice Minister stated that "we have failed," prompting tightened measures and an intensified manhunt involving approximately 100 investigators. The museum remained closed on October 20, 2025, for forensic examination, highlighting systemic gaps in an institution not originally designed with modern as a priority. Operational strains have compounded challenges through persistent and understaffing. On June 16, 2025, a staff strike over workplace exhaustion and visitor halted operations for hours, stranding thousands outside amid unmoving entry lines, as unions protested conditions exacerbated by nearly three times the facility's original capacity—up to 30,000 daily visitors despite director-imposed caps that workers deemed inadequately enforced. Similar spontaneous walkouts occurred in 2019 due to , reflecting broader issues where high tourist volumes—fueled by post-pandemic recovery—overwhelm , divert staff from vigilant monitoring, and elevate risks of petty and . These disruptions underscore causal links between underinvestment in personnel and physical expansions, as the Louvre's 17th-century core struggles with contemporary demands, potentially enabling breaches like the October heist by straining response capabilities.

Cultural Imperialism and Repatriation Demands

Critics of the Louvre have labeled its acquisition of non-European artifacts as cultural imperialism, arguing that the museum's vast holdings of Egyptian, Greek, and Near Eastern antiquities—numbering over 30,000 Egyptian pieces alone—stem from colonial-era expeditions and unequal power dynamics that deprived origin nations of their heritage. These claims often frame 19th-century practices, such as Napoleon's 1798 Egyptian campaign which yielded artifacts like the Dendera Zodiac, as looting rather than contemporaneous scholarly or military acquisitions, disregarding that many items were legally exported or purchased under then-prevailing international norms. Proponents of this view, including Egyptian archaeologist Zahi Hawass, assert that such holdings perpetuate a Eurocentric narrative of universal patrimony while origin countries suffer from incomplete cultural narratives, though Hawass's advocacy has been critiqued for prioritizing nationalist repatriation over collaborative archaeology. Repatriation demands targeting the Louvre have primarily emanated from , focusing on items alleged to be stolen or . In 2009, Egypt's severed cooperation with the Louvre after the museum refused to return four reliefs from the 18th Dynasty of Tetaki, acquired by the Louvre in the 1980s despite Egyptian claims of and smuggling; Egypt viewed this as in illicit , while the Louvre maintained in verification. The , a Ptolemaic-era depicting constellations and removed from the Temple in 1821 by French engineer Jean-Baptiste Lelorrain, has been a recurrent target; Hawass launched a 2022 petition for its permanent return to , citing its cultural significance, but French authorities have resisted, emphasizing the artifact's role in global and its better preservation in controlled museum conditions amid Egypt's history of site during political instability. Recent Egyptian efforts (2020-2025) have recovered thousands of smuggled items from U.S. institutions but yielded no major Louvre concessions, highlighting where disputes favor retaining "universal" treasures. Greece has issued sporadic calls for repatriation of Hellenistic sculptures like the Aphrodite of Milos (), discovered in 1820 on the island of and acquired by shortly thereafter through purchase from local finders. In 2016-2017, Milos officials formally requested its return, proposing a dedicated museum and arguing the statue's disconnection from its origin diminishes local identity, though the Greek government prioritized British Museum Parthenon marbles over Louvre pursuits. The Louvre has rebuffed these, citing the statue's legal transfer during Ottoman rule and its enhanced accessibility—drawing millions of annual visitors—versus potential risks in 's economic constraints on conservation. Other demands include Italy's 2023 push for seven allegedly looted Etruscan artifacts, underscoring broader Mediterranean claims but limited Louvre yields. From a causal realist perspective, repatriation advocacy often overlooks empirical preservation outcomes: origin nations like have repatriated items subsequently damaged or lost to theft, as in the 2011 Cairo Museum looting of artifacts, whereas Louvre holdings benefit from advanced climate control and security, with artifacts loaned back for exhibitions—e.g., Egyptian pieces temporarily returned for display. Demands amplified by media and academics, institutions prone to ideological biases favoring narratives over pragmatic heritage stewardship, rarely address how fragmented collections in under-resourced museums might reduce global scholarly access and public appreciation, potentially causal in cultural disconnection rather than reconnection. The Louvre upholds a "universal museum" doctrine, arguing shared humanity transcends national borders, a stance substantiated by its role in conserving artifacts through wars and revolutions that ravaged source regions.

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