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Abu Dhabi Louvre, Museum, Preview, Event, Building, Picture, Architect, Design
Abu Dhabi Louvre Museum : Preview Information
Architecture in UAE by Ateliers Jean Nouvel
ABU DHABI OFFERS
A PREVIEW EXPERIENCE OF
THE LOUVRE ABU DHABI, THE FIRST
UNIVERSAL MUSEUM TO BE BUILT IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Talking Art Louvre Abu Dhabi Features the Museums First Acquisitions
Distinguished French Museum Leaders Initiate the Preview with
Two Sessions of Public Panel Discussions, 26 and 27 May
ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES, 26 MAY 2009— On the occasion of a
state visit by Nicolas Sarkozy, President of the French Republic,
His Highness General Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince
of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces
and President Sarkozy today inaugurated a preview experience of the
Louvre Abu Dhabi, the first universal museum in the Middle East. The
event took place as part of a celebration to mark the commencement
of construction of the museum. The preview, titled Talking Art: Louvre
Abu Dhabi, will reveal for the first time the concept of the Louvre
Abu Dhabi, with works from the Louvre and other French national museums
being shown with the first acquisitions for the Louvre’s Abu Dhabi
developing collection.
Louvre Abu Dhabi

images © Ateliers Jean Nouvel
Presented in Gallery One of Emirates Palace through 2 July, the 90-minute
preview features a brief film screening illustrating the Louvre Abu
Dhabi design by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Jean Nouvel; an illustrated
talk about the concept of the Louvre Abu Dhabi; and a guided tour
of a group of artworks specially chosen to show the curatorial vision
for the museum. When it opens in 2012/13, the Louvre Abu Dhabi will
showcase the interrelationships among artistic achievements from different
cultures around the world, from the most immemorial to the very latest,
across borders of technique and geography and will establish a distinctive
dialogue among fine arts, decorative arts, and archaeological artefacts,
in exhibitions that are unique to this museum and its setting.
“Talking Art: Louvre Abu Dhabi is a beautifully crafted example of
what a visitor will experience in the Louvre Abu Dhabi. It gives the
public an opportunity to open the doors of the Louvre Abu Dhabi before
its physical completion on Saadiyat Island,” stated His Excellency
Sheikh Sultan bin Tahnoon Al Nahyan, Chairman of Abu Dhabi Authority
for Culture & Heritage and of Tourism Development & Investment Company.
“We welcome the highly distinguished French scholars and cultural
leaders who have joined us for the inauguration of this programme,
to offer the public an exceptional series of discussions.”
"The Louvre Abu Dhabi project is unique, in that it does not attempt
to duplicate the Louvre but to create an entirely new museum," stated
Henri Loyrette, Director, Louvre Museum. "This new institution will
take the very essence of the Louvre--an essence that resides above
all in the skills and knowledge that led to its foundation and continued
development--and combine it with the tradition of openness that characterises
the United Arab Emirates, thus giving a new dimension to the aspirations
of a universal museum.
"This effort involves more than just the Louvre Museum," Mr. Loyrette
continued, "because all of the major French museums have been involved
in creating Agence France-Muséums. This is a wonderful opportunity
to link all of the French national collections, allowing specific
projects to be undertaken thanks to French loans, while also assisting
in the development of Louvre Abu Dhabi collection."
On view are the first works acquired for the Louvre’s Abu Dhabi developing
collection, ranging in date from the 6th century BC to the early 20th
century, and in place of origin from China to France. Accompanying
them are works on loan from French national collections (Bibliothèque
Nationale de France, Musée Guimet, Musée du Louvre, Centre Pompidou
– Musée national d’art moderne, Musée d’Orsay, Musée du Quai Branly).
Together these works illuminate the artistic and cultural interrelationships
that are at the heart of the Louvre Abu Dhabi.
The film of Jean Nouvel’s architectural vision for the Louvre Abu
Dhabi depicts a museum city, where a variety of Arab architectural
forms combine to create a showcase for the artistic expressions of
different civilisations and cultures. Relating to the film, a large-format
photograph by Thomas Struth (1989, Paris, Centre Pompidou – Musée
national d’art moderne) offers a glimpse of the galleries of the Louvre,
combining the perspectives of the visitor and the artistphotographer.
Talking Art: Louvre Abu Dhabi will include two Mamluk works, a section
of a Holy Qur’an from Egypt or Syria (second quarter of the 14th century)
and a Mosque lamp (1347-1361, Paris, Musée du Louvre), which evoke
the symbolism of light as the illumination of the mind and the understanding
of the divine. Influences across cultures are seen in two Buddhist
sculptures, one from the Gandhara region (2nd-3rd century) showing
Mediterranean stylistic traits in an Indian subject, and one from
the north of China (550-577 AD) showing the translation of an Indian
tradition into China.
Pierre Legrain, the favourite decorator of the celebrated fashion
designer and art patron Jacques Doucet, created the Curule Stool (c.
1920-25) in homage to the first exhibitions of African art in France,
presented from the end of the 1910s onwards. The stool recalls two
works of the Musée du Quai Branly: an elegant Tsonga headrest (2nd
half of the 19th century), which entered the French national collections
after the 1890s, and an Abomey stool with a curule seat (late 19th
century), made of kapok wood, which entered the French national collections
in 1931.
Two paintings by Edouard Manet, The Bohemian and Still Life with Bag
and Garlic (1861-62), which were cut from their original canvas by
Manet himself and had long been separated, have now been reunited
at the Louvre Abu Dhabi. They are seen with the engraving Les Gitanos
(1862, Paris, Biblithèque nationale de France, department des estampes
et de la photographie), which shows the artist’s original composition.
Paul Cézanne’s highly abstract Rocks Near the Caves Above Château
Noir (1904, Paris, Musée d’Orsay) is one of the artist’s late works
that had a deep impact on the avant-garde of the early 20th century.
Its visual synthesis of forms and colours, blended to capture the
essence of a landscape, was one of the paths that Piet Mondrian meditated
upon to create his pure abstraction, whose quintessence can be found
in his Composition with Blue, Red, Yellow and Black (1922).
Two sessions of this preview experience are available to the public
each day, at 11:00 am and 6:30 pm, with pre-registration required.
An exhibition presenting a thorough overview of the Louvre Abu Dhabi
will be organised at a later date.
To help inaugurate Talking Art: Louvre Abu Dhabi, a high-level delegation
of distinguished French scholars and cultural leaders are presenting
a two-day series of public panel discussions that will explore issues
that are central to the Louvre Abu Dhabi. The panels will be held
at 6:30 pm on 26 and 27 May in the Ballroom at Emirates Palace.
The first of these public discussions, “Museums and Universalism”
on 26 May, will be opened with a message by Christine Albanel, Minister
of Culture and Communications of France. The programme will address
such topics as contemporary art in a global age, the building of a
universal collection, and the appreciation of artistic expression
across barriers of time and geography. Henri Loyrette, director, Musée
du Louvre, and Laurence des Cars, curatorial director of Agence France-Muséums,
will introduce the panel. Dominique de Font-Réaulx, curator at the
Musée du Louvre, will moderate the talk. Participants scheduled in
this session are: Sylvie Aubenas, curator in charge of the Department
of Prints and Photographs of the Bibliothèque nationale de France;
Didier Ottinger, deputy director of the Musée national d’art moderne–Centre
Pompidou; Jean-Luc Martinez, curator in charge of the Department of
Greek and Roman Antiquities, Musée du Louvre; Jean-François Jarrige,
member of the Institut de France and honorary director of the Musée
national des arts asiatiques; Béatrice André-Salvini, curator in charge
of the Department of Oriental Antiquities, Musée du Louvre; Yves Le
Fur, director of collections of the Musée du Quai Branly; Sophie Makariou,
curator in charge of the Department of Islamic Art, Musée du Louvre.
On 27 May a programme entitled “The Louvre Abu Dhabi: A New Way of
Showing Art” addresses the innovative curatorial vision being developed
for the new museum. The complete curatorial team of Agence France-Muséums
will participate in this session, including: Laurence des Cars; Emmanuel
Coquery, deputy curatorial director and curator in charge of paintings
and sculptures (16th-18th centuries); Jean-François Charnier, curator
in charge of archeology; Olivier Gabet, curator in charge of decorative
arts and design; Vincent Lefebvre, curator in charge of Asian arts;
and Manon Six, curator in charge of medieval art and Islamic art.
A third session of these public discussions, held at 3 pm on 27 May,
is devoted to training schoolteachers to assist them in making Talking
Art: Louvre Abu Dhabi more meaningful to young people ages 11 and
higher. Leading the training will be Dominique de Font-Réaulx; Magali
Simon, education manager, Musée du Louvre; Manon Six, curator, Agence
France- Muséums; and François Quéré, public programming officer, Agence
France-Muséums. A series of free art workshops for young people (ages
11-18) will subsequently be offered on Mondays from 1 June through
6 July, by pre-registration.
Louvre Museum Abu Dhabi - Information
from 5 Jan 2009
Abu Dhabi Louvre Museum
- Information from 26 May 2009
Louvre Abu Dhabi

Architect: Ateliers Jean Nouvel
Image courtesy of Gaston Bergeret
Saadiyat Island Cultural District
The Saadiyat Island Cultural District in Abu Dhabi is planned to be
the world's largest single concentration of premier cultural institutions.
Unprecedented in scale and scope, these facilities will include the
Sheikh Zayed National Museum, designed by Lord Norman Foster; the
Guggenheim Abu Dhabi Museum, designed by Frank Gehry; the Louvre Abu
Dhabi, designed by Jean Nouvel; a performing arts center, designed
by Zaha Hadid; and a maritime museum, designed by Tadao Ando.
Agence France-Museums
Agence France-Museums associates in its capital twelve cultural French
public institutions: the Musée du Louvre, the Centre Pompidou,
the Musée d'Orsay, the Bibliothèque Nationale de France,
the Musée du Quai-Branly, the Réunion des Musées
Nationaux, the Château de Versailles, the Musée Guimet,
the Musée Rodin, the Ecole du Louvre, the Château de
Chambord, the Etablissement Public de Maitrise d'Ouvrage des Travaux
Culturels. Agence France-Museums is responsible for the project of
the universal museum of the Louvre Abu Dhabi.
Feedback on Abu Dhabi Architecture welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
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