By Communicating the Arts
Published June 22, 2021
Louvre Museum in the French capital, Paris, has got its first female director for the first time since its opening in 1793.
Laurence des Cars, current head of the Musée d’Orsay and Musée de l’Orangerie in Paris, has been appointed by President Emmanuel Macron as the future leader of the world’s greatest museum and is expected to take office on September 1, 2021.
RELATED: Birds and Conservation Fascinate Youth
Laurence des Cars’ focus for the future of the Louvre is threefold :
- increase access to young adults and teenagers, a segment of population whose opportunities and well-being have been particularly hit by the Covid crisis
- strengthen the process of restituting Nazi-looted art. As the Director of the Musée d’Orsay, des Cars initiated and spurred the restitution of the only Klimt painting owned by a French museum (Orsay) to the heirs of the former owner Nora Stiasny, and
- present exhibitions that resonate with and address current societal events.
RELATED: Movie Distribution and Co-Production Market Comes to Eastern Africa
Under the leadership of Laurence des Cars who is a curator of heritage and art historian, the Musée d’Orsay has seen the number of visitors increase every year, reaching 3.7 million visitors in 2019, year of the acclaimed exhibition Posing Modernity : the Black Model from Manet and Matisse to Today.
RELATED: Nairobi Celebrates Art, Film, Heritage and Self Expression
Trying to appeal and serve younger and more diverse audiences was already a big focus for des Cars at Orsay : her last and latest capital project for the Parisian institution (titled Orsay Wide Open and made possible by a 20 million euros donation) is a new building comprising, among other things, a 650-square metre educational centre dedicated to young people that is set to open in 2024.