When the National Gallery in London offers a thirty-minute virtual visit for 8 books in its retrospective on the Caravaggio painter Artemisia Gentileschi, even privileged in a small group of Internet users guided by a curator, it is expensive.
The Louvre, for its part, maintains its public service mission by increasing the number of free digital proposals.
Its two major exhibitions, not visible until December 16, are enhanced by content to be listened to live or delayed, classical music concerts and art history lectures given from an auditorium without an audience.
The Life and Wonders created by German painter and printmaker Albrecht Altdorfer (circa 1480-1538) - except the original works - and everything from the evolution of Italian sculpture, from Donatello to Michelangelo, remain available.
Read also:
How the curators of the Louvre are preparing future exhibitions
All you need is a screen, a keyboard and type on Instagram #LouvreChez VOUS or “Louvre” on YouTube to watch the museum's web channel (63.8
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