
The story
The Louvre began as a fortress. Philip II raised it on the right bank of the Seine around 1190 to guard medieval Paris, and over the following centuries French kings rebuilt it into a royal palace, until Louis XIV moved his court to Versailles in 1682 and left the half-finished halls to the royal collection and the artists lodged inside.
The Revolution turned it into a public museum. On 10 August 1793 the Muséum central des arts opened its doors, showing the confiscated art of the crown and the church to any citizen who wished to walk in. Napoleon filled it with the spoils of his campaigns and briefly renamed it after himself. Much was returned after Waterloo, but the idea held, a national collection arranged for study and free to the public.
Today the Louvre holds more than 35,000 works, from the Venus de Milo to Géricault's Raft of the Medusa. The crowds, though, press toward one small portrait. In August 1911 it vanished: Vincenzo Peruggia, an Italian handyman who had worked in the museum, lifted Leonardo's Mona Lisa off the wall and carried it out under his coat. For two years the frame hung empty while visitors came to stare at the gap, and the painting returned only in 1913, after Peruggia tried to sell it to a dealer in Florence. I. M. Pei's glass pyramid, set in the courtyard in 1989, now marks the entrance.
Collection
310 works
Madonna della VittoriaAndrea Mantegna, 1495
Magdalene with the Smoking FlameGeorges de La Tour, 1642
Man with a GloveTitian, 1520
Paris and HelenJacques-Louis David, 1788
Portrait of a PrincessPisanello, 1437
Saint Michael Vanquishing SatanRaphael, 1504
The 1821 Derby at EpsomThéodore Géricault, 1821
The Apotheosis of HomerJean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, 1827
The Cheat with the Ace of DiamondsGeorges de La Tour, 1635
The ClubfootJusepe de Ribera, 1642
The LockJean-Honoré Fragonard, 1777
The Moneylender and his WifeQuinten Metsys, 1514
Charles I at the HuntAnthony van Dyck, 1635
Entry of the Crusaders in ConstantinopleEugène Delacroix, 1840
Madonna with the Blue DiademRaphael, 1515
PierrotJean-Antoine Watteau, 1718
St. Michael Vanquishing SatanRaphael, 1518
The Crowning with ThornsTitian, 1542
The Toilette of EstherThéodore Chassériau, 1841
Brown OdalisqueFrançois Boucher, 1740
Napoleon on the Battlefield of EylauAntoine-Jean Gros, 1807
Portrait of Louis XIVHyacinthe Rigaud, 1701
The Birth of the VirginBartolomé Esteban Murillo, 1661
Tree of crowsCaspar David Friedrich, 1822
Annunciation TriptychRogier van der Weyden, 1434