(17 Nov 2024)
FRANCE LOUVRE BEAUTY
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
LENGTH: 5:25
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Louvre Museum, Paris, France – 12 November 2024
1. Various of the Louvre museum halls
2. Visitors walking through hall with paintings
3. Various of visitor using a mobile phone app to listen to the explanation of "Portrait of a young princess of the House Este" by Pisanello, Italy (1425-1450)
4. Close of the portrait
5. Set up shot of exhibition curator Gautier Verbeke speaking to visitors
6. Various of "Princely head", unknown, Iran (1185-1215)
7. Set up shot of Verbeke
8. SOUNDBITE: (French) Gautier Verbeke, exhibition curator
"So, it’s a journey more than an exhibition since it’s a journey that embraces the entirety of the museum’s spaces, so it’s a selection of 108 works that allow us to embrace and talk about the history of beauty."
9. Various of visitors at "The Woman with a Mirror" by Titian, Italy (1515)
10. Pan from exhibition explanation to painting
11. SOUNDBITE: (French) Gautier Verbeke, exhibition curator
"Why when we show up in society, when we want to appear in front of others we seek to transform ourselves, to improve or change ourselves? That’s the first angle. Then, there is the angle of the ideal of beauty, because throughout history, civilizations adopted what we call the canons of beauty, idealizations. We will want to tend towards something that is extraordinary, fabulous. But these canons of beauty change from one civilization to another, from one era to another. They can radically change from one geographic area to another."
12. Various of visitors looking at “Venus and the three Graces” by Sandro Botticelli, Italy (1483- 1487)
13. Set up shot of Delphine Urbach
14. SOUNDBITE: (English) Delphine Urbach, Art, Culture & Heritage Director of L’Oréal Groupe:
"So, we work together because we have strong values in common and the big values around diversity. We want to make diversity more accessible to everybody through art because we see that there is a question in our society with young people about their bodies and we really want to highlight this topic and talk together and create a dialogue between the institution and those civilizations."
15. Hall with sculptures
16. Woman taking picture of "The Sleeping Hermaphrodite"
17. Various of "The Sleeping Hermaphrodite", attributed to Ancient Greek/Roman artists, Italy (100-150)
18. Visitors going up the stairs
19. SOUNDBITE: (English) Delphine Urbach, Art, Culture & Heritage Director of L’Oréal Groupe:
"When you see people from yesteryears, they really adapt their beauty, the fabrication of the body to highlight what they are. And so beauty is really essential to humanity, it’s not superficial at all."
20. Various of "Voltaire Nude" by Jean-Baptiste Pigalle, France (1776)
21. Close-up of banner reading (French) "Of all beauties!" with explanation
22. Sculptures by French artists
23. SOUNDBITE: (French) Gautier Verbeke, Exhibition Curator:
"And then the third axis is the gestures of beauty: how, through cosmetics, through care, we transform ourselves and how does this evolution happen? Because this story about beauty gestures is a story of heritage, it’s a story of legacy. That’s why it was interesting to work together the L’Oréal group and the Louvre Museum because we’re talking about heritage."
24. Various of banner reading "Italian paintings" and photo showing the Mona Lisa
STORYLINE:
LEADIN:
Entitled “Of All Beauties!” the immersive experience is the first collaboration between the Louvre and the L’Oréal Groupe.
STORYLINE:
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