Louvre-Lens meditation - Oil on canvas panel (6" x 8") by Benoit Philippe
Monday, 29 April 2013
Louvre-Lens meditation
While I visited Louvre-Lens museum, I took some photographs of the other visitors admiring the works on display. I am going to make a series and this is the first painting.
Thursday, 25 April 2013
Paintings in the Louvre-Lens museum
In my previous post, I presented the Louvre-Lens museum and some of the works on display. In this second post, I will concentrate on the paintings.
This portrait first entered the Louvre collection as a work by Carpaccio. It was later attributed to Costa, Solario and Boltraffio, until the artist’s signature was revealed by an X-ray scan of the painting.
Corot painted this work during his second stay in Italy, in 1834. There is a companion painting in the Louvre collection called Volterra, le municipe.
This painting was in fact the central part of a triptych.
The sitter was canon of Toledo Cathedral and a friend of El Greco.
The Punished Son is the pendant to another painting called The Father’s Curse, which also belongs to the collection of the Louvre. It is based on the Biblical story of the prodigal son.
It is interesting to compare this painting with other Georges de La Tour’s earlier works on the same subject that are in the County Museum of Art in Los Angeles, the Washington National Gallery of Art and the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
This painting was is the collection of Louis XIV (acquired from the duke of Richelieu in 1665)
The painting bears a sentence in Latin SAGITTAE. TUAE.INFIXAE. SUNT. MICHI coming from Psalm 37 (For thy arrows are fastened in me).
Practical information
Musée du Louvre-Lens
99 Rue Paul Bert, 62300 Lens, France
Website of Louvre-Lens museum: http://www.louvrelens.fr/
Access to the main gallery is free
Temporary exhibition: charge applies
Portrait of a woman (Oil on panel) by Giovanni Francesco Caroto
This portrait first entered the Louvre collection as a work by Carpaccio. It was later attributed to Costa, Solario and Boltraffio, until the artist’s signature was revealed by an X-ray scan of the painting.
Volterra (Tuscany, Italy) – the Citadel (Oil on canvas) by Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot
Corot painted this work during his second stay in Italy, in 1834. There is a companion painting in the Louvre collection called Volterra, le municipe.
The Holy Trinity with God the Father supporting Christ (Oil on wood panel) by Colijn de Coter
This painting was in fact the central part of a triptych.
Antonio de Covarrubias y Leiva (1514-1602) – Jurist and Scholar by El Greco
The sitter was canon of Toledo Cathedral and a friend of El Greco.
Melancholy (Oil on canvas, circa 1618-16230 by Domenico Fetti
Mariana Waldstein, Ninth Marchioness of Santa Cruz (Oil on canvas, circa 1797-1800) by Goya
Mariana Waldstein (detail of the background)
The Punished Son (Oil on canvas) by Jean-Baptiste Greuze.
The Punished Son is the pendant to another painting called The Father’s Curse, which also belongs to the collection of the Louvre. It is based on the Biblical story of the prodigal son.
Liberty Leading the People (28 July 1830) (Oil on canvas) by Eugène Delacroix
Magdalene with the Smoking Flame (Oil on canvas) by Georges de la Tour
It is interesting to compare this painting with other Georges de La Tour’s earlier works on the same subject that are in the County Museum of Art in Los Angeles, the Washington National Gallery of Art and the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
Landscape with Paris and Oenone, also called The Ford (Oil on canvas) by Claude Lorrain
This painting was is the collection of Louis XIV (acquired from the duke of Richelieu in 1665)
Anton Fugger, banker and humanist by Hans Maler
Baldassare Castiglione, writer and diplomat – oil on canvas by Raphael
Francis George Hare as a child, known as Master Hare (Oil on canvas) by Sir Joshua Reynolds
Ixion, King of the Lapiths, Deceived by Juno (Oil on canvas) by Rubens
Fanciful figure (Oil on canvas) by Jean-Honoré Fragonard
Saint Sebastian (Oil on Wood board) by Perugino
The painting bears a sentence in Latin SAGITTAE. TUAE.INFIXAE. SUNT. MICHI coming from Psalm 37 (For thy arrows are fastened in me).
The Nest, also known as The Shepherd’s Gift (Oil on canvas) by François Boucher
Saint Matthew and the Angel (Oil on canvas) by Rembrandt
Practical information
Musée du Louvre-Lens
99 Rue Paul Bert, 62300 Lens, France
Website of Louvre-Lens museum: http://www.louvrelens.fr/
Access to the main gallery is free
Temporary exhibition: charge applies
Wednesday, 17 April 2013
Louvre-Lens museum
I recently visited Louvre-Lens, a museum affiliated to the Louvre in Paris. It opened in December 2012 in Lens (North of France). Here are my impressions from this first visit.
A lot of work is still going outside on landscaping the site around the museum. Once the grass and planting will be done, the surrounding garden will complement the building.
The architect used organic forms for some of the paths, in contrast with the pure lines of the steal and glass building.
The building is modern and luminous inside. The semi-permanent collection is displayed in the Time Gallery (Galerie du Temps) which is a 120 metres long gallery, for a surface of 3,000 square metres, with a white ceiling and anodised aluminium walls. The whole gallery is luminous and spacious. A few free standing walls, where some of the works are hung, break the space without closing it too much.
Because the gallery is wide and the works are spaced out, I did not get the feeling that the place was overcrowded, even if a few hundred visitors were in the gallery at the time.
A timeline is inscribed on the right side wall of the gallery and the artworks are set-up in chronological order, from 3,500 BC to modern time, grouped in three main periods: antiquities (70 works), Middle-Age (90 works) and modern times (90 works). It is interesting to see works from the same period from Greece and Persia. At the Louvre in Paris, these objects would be in different sections.
Louvre-Lens does not own the exhibited collection, but rather displays some of the masterpieces picked from the collection of nearly 35,000 objects owned by the Louvre in Paris.
The plan, for the moment, is to have the semi-permanent exhibition in place for 5 years, with a partial renewal of 20% of the works every year. This is a good way to keep the exhibit fresh and keep visitors returning to the museum.
Another interesting feature of the museum: you can see the storage area on the ground floor.
Some works on display
In the next post, I will go through some of the paintings on display.
What I liked at the Louvre-Lens:
What I did not like that much:
Practical information
Musée du Louvre-Lens
99 Rue Paul Bert, 62300 Lens, France
Website of Louvre-Lens museum
Access to the main gallery is free
Temporary exhibition: charge applies
A lot of work is still going outside on landscaping the site around the museum. Once the grass and planting will be done, the surrounding garden will complement the building.
The architect used organic forms for some of the paths, in contrast with the pure lines of the steal and glass building.
The building is modern and luminous inside. The semi-permanent collection is displayed in the Time Gallery (Galerie du Temps) which is a 120 metres long gallery, for a surface of 3,000 square metres, with a white ceiling and anodised aluminium walls. The whole gallery is luminous and spacious. A few free standing walls, where some of the works are hung, break the space without closing it too much.
Because the gallery is wide and the works are spaced out, I did not get the feeling that the place was overcrowded, even if a few hundred visitors were in the gallery at the time.
A timeline is inscribed on the right side wall of the gallery and the artworks are set-up in chronological order, from 3,500 BC to modern time, grouped in three main periods: antiquities (70 works), Middle-Age (90 works) and modern times (90 works). It is interesting to see works from the same period from Greece and Persia. At the Louvre in Paris, these objects would be in different sections.
Louvre-Lens does not own the exhibited collection, but rather displays some of the masterpieces picked from the collection of nearly 35,000 objects owned by the Louvre in Paris.
The plan, for the moment, is to have the semi-permanent exhibition in place for 5 years, with a partial renewal of 20% of the works every year. This is a good way to keep the exhibit fresh and keep visitors returning to the museum.
Another interesting feature of the museum: you can see the storage area on the ground floor.
Some works on display
Vase in the shape of a humpbacked bull – Lustrous red ware. Region of Marlik (currently in Iran), 1400 – 1100 BC
Woman wearing a woollen garment (kaunakes) – Green chlorite, limestone – Oxus civilisation, Central Asia (currently Afghanistan) – 2300-1700 BC.
Fragment of the decoration of the palace of Persian king Darius I: archer from the royal guard – Glazed siliceous bricks – Suse (actual Iran), around 500 BC
Fragment of mural: women beside a fawn. Fresco. Pompeii, Italy, around 30 – 50 AC
Marble column decorated with pamper from the ancient church of Notre-Dame-de-la-Daurade – Toulouse, France, around 500 AC.
Triptych: Scenes from the Life of the Virgin – Elephant ivory, traces of polychromy – Paris, France, around 1315-1335.
Panel of wall covering with a floral decoration from the mausoleum of the Ottoman sultan Selim II – Istanbul, Turkey, around 1577.
Panel of wall covering with a floral decoration (Detail)
Panel of wall covering with a floral decoration (Detail)
Window screen (jali) with geometric design. India, around 1605-1627
In the next post, I will go through some of the paintings on display.
What I liked at the Louvre-Lens:
- The building is spacious and well designed. I look forward to see it with the gardens completed.
- I like the idea of getting some of the collections outside of Paris. The North region has already some strong art museums (like the Musée Matisse or the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Lille), but this creates a new cultural pole.
- The limited selection of objects on display (relatively to the Louvre in Paris) is actually a good thing. I would just have missed some of the pieces on exhibit, in particular the older objects because they would be lost within hundreds of other objects. At Louvre-Lens, you can savour each work.
- This museum makes a great family day out. It’s just the right size so that children won’t be bored to death by the end of it.
- It's free (for the main gallery)
What I did not like that much:
- Not much to complain about. However, as part of an exhibition on the subject of time, the museum was displaying two composite portraits by Acimboldo. Unfortunately, they were displayed in a glass cabinet and the glass was taking the reflected light from outside. I had to watch them from the side to avoid the glare and was not able to enjoy them.
- The website is still partly under construction. I am sure it will get better over time.
Practical information
Musée du Louvre-Lens
99 Rue Paul Bert, 62300 Lens, France
Website of Louvre-Lens museum
Access to the main gallery is free
Temporary exhibition: charge applies
Thursday, 11 April 2013
Dover to Calais sketches
A few sketches done in ink and watercolour, while on our way to France.
Passenger bus
Reading
Concentrated