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ABU DHABI
New York Herald Tribune, May 27, 2009 - Abu Dhabi Gets a Sampler of World Art - By Carol Vogel - The public on Tuesday got its first peek at some of the art that will fill the Louvre Abu Dhabi, the 260,000-square-foot museum designed by the French architect Jean Nouvel and expected to open in the capital city of the United Arab Emirates by 2013.
At a ceremony to commemorate the beginning of construction, President
Nicolas Sarkozy of France and the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, Sheik
Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, officially opened an exhibition at the
Emirates Palace hotel that includes 19 works of art bought over the
last 18 months for the Louvre Abu Dhabi, as well as loans from the
French national museums.
Acquired for what is being billed as the first universal museum in the
Middle East, the works range from a Greek ceramic figure from around
520 B.C. to two 1862 canvases by Edouard Manet.
“By its very nature this museum will cover many cultures and many
civilizations from the ancient to the present time,” the crown prince
said in a telephone interview. “We have historic relations with our
friends in France which are extending to the cultural side.” The
collaboration, he added, will “help educate our people” in the building
and running of such cultural institutions.
Under a two-year-old agreement, Abu Dhabi will pay France $555 million
for the use of the Louvre’s name, as well as for art loans, special
exhibitions and management advice. Securing the Louvre’s involvement
and brand name was a crucial step in the emirates’ plan to build a $27
billion tourist and cultural development on Saadiyat Island, off the
city’s coast. The project’s cultural components also include a
Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, a maritime museum, a performing arts center,
hotels, golf courses, marinas.
With an acquisitions budget of more than $56 million a year, a team of
curators from the French museums have worked full time deciding how to
shape the Louvre Abu Dhabi collection.
“There are specialists in every field who are aware of the market,”
said Laurence des Cars, the curatorial director of the Agence
France-Muséums, a French public organization set up to oversee the
project.
The curators are not out to create a mini-Louvre but rather a new museum melding two cultures and two traditions.
“We want this to be a collection of masterpieces that make sense
together, that have soul and that will form a dialogue with different
civilizations,” Ms. des Cars said. Once the museum opens, the curators
will also organize four special exhibitions a year for the next 15
years that will include loans from French museums and institutions all
over the world.
Among the acquisitions that are part of “Talking Art: Louvre Abu
Dhabi,” on view in the capital through July 2, are a standing
bodhisattva from the second to third century A.D.; a Chinese white
marble head of Buddha from the Northern Qi Dynasty, A.D. 550-577; and a
16th-century polychrome painted copper ewer from Venice. There are also
works on Christian religious themes, including a Bellini “Madonna and
Child” from the 1480s and a 16th-century sculpture of Jesus from
Bavaria or Austria.
Areas like African art have yet to be represented, Ms. des Cars said,
although they will be included later. In the meantime the curators have
borrowed objects like a 19th-century wood Tsonga headrest from Zambia
and a wooden stool from Benin, both on loan from the Musée du Quai
Branly.
Paintings that have been bought for the Louvre Abu Dhabi include a
canvas by Jean-François de Troy, “Esther Fainting Before Ahaseurus,”
from 1730, and the two Manets — “The Bohemian” and “Still Life With Bag
and Garlic” — which were originally part of a larger canvas.
“In 1867, after a critical flop when it was shown in Paris, Manet cut
up the painting,” Ms. des Cars said, and it became three paintings, one
of which, “Boy With Pitcher,” is in the permanent collection of the Art
Institute of Chicago. The other two canvases disappeared and were found
only recently.
“We had an opportunity to buy them from the Wildenstein gallery,” she
said. They are being shown along with an etching by the artist, “Les
Gitanos,” also from 1862, which shows the paintings’ original
composition and is on loan from the Bibilothèque Nationale de France.
The curators also bought two works from the sale of art and objects
belonging to Yves Saint Laurent and his partner, Pierre Bergé, at
Christie’s in Paris in February: an African-style stool from the 1920s
for $640,000 and Mondrian’s “Composition With Blue, Red, Yellow and
Black,” from 1922, for $29.4 million.
Eventually, Ms. des Cars said, “all civilizations and cultures will be
represented” at the new museum. But for now, she added, what is on view
in this exhibition illustrates the curators’ mission.
“There is a big sculpture of Christ facing the head of a Buddha and a
14th-century Koran,” she said. “It’s the perfect symbol of our
universal spirit.”
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