Louve Abu Dhabi's dome. Credit: Courtesy Louvre Abu Dhabi/Mohamed Somji
Collaborations with the original Louvre have shaped the first year of the Gulf spin-off, through four major exhibitions. The latest one, "Roads of Arabia: Archaeological Treasures of Saudi Arabia," opened last week and will continue through Feb. 16, 2019. Early next year, "Rembrandt and the Dutch Golden Age" will focus on Dutch masters with loans from one of the most important private collections in the field, New York's Leiden Collection.
Four more international exhibitions have been announced for the museum's next season. "School of Paris," (Sept. 12 to Dec. 7, 2019) depicts the dynamism of Paris in the first half of the 20th Century. "The Thousand faces of Luxury" (Oct. 31 to Feb. 15, 2019) will take visitors on a journey through luxury in the arts and society from Antiquity to the present days. "Chivalry and Furusiyya" (Feb. to May 2020) will immerse visitors in medieval chivalric culture, both in Islamic territories and the Occident, though literature, music and the arts. "Charlie Chaplin. Cinema & Avant-garde" (Apr. to July 2020) focuses on the work of Charlie Chaplin, not as a monograph but as a dialogue with the arts and concepts of that period.
Louvre Abu Dhabi: The man behind the monument
Among the highlights in the museum's collection were masterpieces on loan from 13 French institutions, which include Leonardo da Vinci's "La Belle Ferronniere," one of only 15 known paintings by the artist, a 1887 Van Gogh self-portrait and "The Saint-Lazare Station" by Claude Monet. Some of these loans have been returned at the end of the museum's first year of operation, but 40 more are coming in, including another Van Gogh, "The Ballroom at Arles" from 1888. The total number of loans currently on display is around 300.
The museum currently has some 300 pieces on loan. Credit: GIUSEPPE CACACE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
The Louve Abu Dhabi was designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Jean Nouvel. It sports a total of 7,850 aluminum stars on its signature dome, which is 180 meters (591 feet) in diameter and weighs over 7,700 tons. The building sits on a dry dock made from 503,000 cubic meters of sand and surrounded with pools. The complex includes a marina for private yachts to dock.
Watch the video above to see Becky Anderson's interview with the museum's director Manuel Rabaté.
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