Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Louvre: The World's Greatest Museum
Episode Date: October 26, 2021Located in the heart of Paris, along the banks of the River Seine, lies the Louvre. It has over 750,000 square feet of gallery space, it has over 615,000 items in its collection, and in a non-pandemic... year, gets over 10 million annual visitors. Yet, it wasn’t always a museum, and the way it acquired its collection wasn’t always above board. Learn more about the Louvre, the world’s greatest museum, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Located in the heart of Paris, along the banks of the Seine River, lies the Louvre.
It has over 750,000 square feet of gallery space, over 615,000 items in its collection,
and in a non-pandemic year, it gets 10 million annual visitors.
Yet, it wasn't always a museum, and the way it acquired its collection was unique.
Learn more about the Louvre, the world's greatest museum, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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Let me start by noting how I'm going to pronounce the name of the museum for the rest of the
episode. In French, the name would be pronounced Muse de Louvre. However, that is not how I'm
going to pronounce it for the rest of this episode. I'll be using the most standard English pronunciation
of the museum, Louvre. The reason for this is that this podcast is in English, and Louvre
isn't how it's commonly pronounced in English. This is the same reason I say Paris instead of
Paris, and France instead of France. I know some people are pedantic about such things, so I'm just
putting this out there at the start. As I mentioned in the introduction, the Louvre is located
right in the heart of Paris in the first arrondissement on the right bank of the seine. The location
of the museum was originally built as a fortification for the city of Paris. In 1190, King Philip
II was on his way to the Holy Land to participate in the Third Crusade. Prior to leaving, he ordered
the construction of a defensive wall around the city of Paris. The Louvre was built where the wall
met the river. It was a square-shaped building with defensive towers and a moat. The primary
reason for the building was to defend against invading English forces from Normandy, and you can
still see some of the original medieval structure in the crypt of the Louvre today. It was a
to royal residence until 1364 when King Charles V moved in. By then there was a new larger
wall surrounding the city, and Charles added and renovated the original 12th century fort.
In 1546, King Francis I demolished the old building and began construction of a new palace
which would be designed in the French Renaissance style. The building, as with all such major projects,
was done piecemeal over time. By 1682, Louis XIV, moved the royal residence to Versailles,
and progress on the Louvre ground to a halt because it was no longer the Royal Palace.
After the Royal Family moved to Versailles, the Louvre was used for office space for government departments.
There were also apartments in the building for artists and craftspeople that were sponsored by the Crown.
The use of the palace as a museum began during the French Revolution.
In May 1791, the National Constituent Assembly declared that the Louvre was, quote,
a place for bringing together monuments of all the sciences and arts, end quote.
Ever since 1791, the primary function of the building has been as a museum.
Over time, as the collection grew and the museum became more organized, the museum took over more and more of the building.
For almost the entire time it was a museum, it was also the headquarters of the Ministry of Finance.
For years, everyone in France had to send their taxes to the Louvre.
In 1981, President Francois Mitterrand instituted his Grand Louvre project.
The finance ministry finally left the building, and the museum was expanded to include,
almost all of the palace, save for the northwestern most part, which is home to a separate
museum, the Museum of Decorative Arts. Part of the plan was the creation of a new entrance in
the Napoleon courtyard with a new signature design. The entrance selected was a glass pyramid
designed by renowned architect I.M. Pei, and it opened in 1988. And yes, there's an inverted
glass pyramid below it, and there's another small stone pyramid below that, just like it appears
in the Da Vinci Code. However, it is not the tomb of the tomb of the world.
Mary Magdalene. The building is certainly historical and interesting, but buildings do not make a
museum. Museums can and do move into new buildings. What makes a museum is its collection, and the
Louvre's collection is enormous. As of the time I am recording this, the Louvre has
$615,797 objects in its collection. 4803,000 of them can be viewed online via the Louvre website,
and approximately 38,000 are on physical display inside of the museum.
The vast majority of the collection was accumulated by French rulers over the centuries.
Almost all European museums have similar histories where it was monarchs or a very rich family
that originally assembled the collection.
For example, the Mona Lisa, the most famous work of art in the Louvre,
has been in the possession of the French state ever since Leonardo da Vinci died.
Da Vinci took the painting with him when he went to France to work for King Francis the
and left it to him in his will. There are 7,500 paintings in the collection, two-thirds of which
are from French artists. Many of the works were purchased outright by French monarchs. Some were
given by artists who were sponsored by the king, and some were taken as treasure or as payment
for a debt. While the Royal Art Collection was put on public display during the French Revolution,
it was Napoleon who embraced the idea of creating the world's greatest museum. In fact,
during his reign, it was renamed Museid Napoleon. During all his own, he was named Museed Napoleon. During all
military campaigns, he collected art which was brought back to the museum. Almost the entire
Egyptian wing was taken during his Egyptian campaign, and cities in northern Italy gave art
pieces as tribute after the Italian campaign. After the restoration of the monarchy, there was again
a burst of collecting. Almost the entire collection of ancient Greek statues was acquired by
Louis X and Charles X, including the Venus de Milo. There was an astonishing increase in the size
of the collection during the reign of Napoleon III, only reigned for 18 years.
He expanded the size of the building, dedicated to the museum, and added 20,000 pieces to the
collection. From the end of the monarchy to the start of the Second World War, the collection
expanded mostly from donations from private collectors. The famed, winged victory of Samothrace
was added during this period. There are also a significant number of items which are found
via French-sponsored archaeological digs around the world. If you remember way back,
I did a previous episode on the Mona Lisa and how it became the most famous painting in the
world. The short answer is that it was stolen in 1911, and the theft made it a new story all over
the world. It was stolen by a manual laborer at the museum who kept it in his apartment for three years.
After it was stolen, there were lines of people just to see the blank spot on the wall where it hung.
In World War II, the contents of the museum were emptied before the Germans occupied Paris.
Over the course of three days in 1939, most of the museum was packed up and moved to the Chateau
Des Chambard, where many of the pieces remained during the war.
Many important works during this period, such as the Mona Lisa, were moved from place to place
throughout France. Technically, the museum was open during the war, but there was almost nothing
inside of it, and it received few visitors. Today, the museum is big business. The French
government pays for operating costs such as salaries, but everything else is covered by the
revenue generated by the museum. The number of daily visitors to the museum is staggering. In 2018,
its biggest year ever, there was an average of 28,000 visitors to the museum every day.
The former museum director of the Louvre has estimated that 85% of the visitors to the museum
go directly to see the Mona Lisa and then leave.
The Mona Lisa room is ridiculously crowded, but the rest in the museum is so big that you can
often have an entire room to yourself. If you took 30 seconds to admire each object on display
at the Louvre, it would take you 100 days to see everything. And that's the time.
100 days without sleeping or without breaks. There is actually a second Louvre that many people
don't know about. It was open in 2017 in Abu Dhabi. The museum is owned and operated by the
Abu Dhabi government, but it has a licensing deal with the Louvre to use the name until 2037.
If you visit the Louvre, I'd recommend giving yourself an entire day. Even with an entire day,
there's still no way that you can see everything. In fact, if you just walked around all day,
you'd still probably miss several of the rooms.
Get there when the museum opens,
and if you want to see the Mona Lisa,
go and get that out of the way immediately.
Pro photographer tip?
In the Mona Lisa room,
don't bother trying to take a photo of the painting.
The more interesting photo
is photographing everyone else
trying to get a photo.
Make a list of what you want to see
and use that as your guide for the day.
You'll see plenty of other things
you had no clue were there
in the process of going to see what you want.
The list of the world's great museums
is pretty short, with names such as the Met, the Hermitage, the Prado, the Grand Egyptian,
the Uffizi, and the Vatican. But the Louvre stands apart from them all in terms of both the size
and quality of its collection. The associate producers of Everything Everywhere Daily are Thor Thompson
and Peter Bennett. Today's review comes from listener Boston Bubb-Z0-001 over at Apple Podcasts.
They write, love this podcast. Great way to learn the tide of history or lesser-known facts.
great host who gives the right amount of information and no filler talk.
The only thing I don't like is the jarring noise that ends an episode.
It always scares the S word out of me.
Why would you end a lovely easy-to-listen story with an eardrum obliterating crashing noises beyond me?
Well, Boston Bubb, thanks for the review.
If you noticed, I took your suggestion to heart.
I can't say I've gotten a lot of people complaining about the sound effect, but you also aren't the first person to suggest it.
So I figured there were probably even more people who didn't
bother to say anything, so I changed it. Don't say I never did anything for you. Remember,
if you leave a review or send me a question, you too can have it read on the show.
