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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Louvre-LensLouvre-Lens - Wikipedia

    The Louvre-Lens is an art museum located in Lens, France, approximately 200 kilometers north of Paris. It displays objects from the collections of the Musée du Louvre that are lent to the gallery on a medium- or long-term basis.

  3. www.louvre.fr › the-louvre-lensThe Louvre-Lens

    With over 4 million visitors since it opened, the Louvre-Lens has become the second most popular museum outside Paris – the first being the Musée des Confluences in Lyon, which is set in a more densely populated and touristic area.

  4. It is located near the Hôtel Louvre-Lens. Route 41 links the museum to Lens station, every hour or half hour. Check the map. Check the times. BY BUS, WITH BULLE 1: Get off at the ‘Parc Louvre-Lens’ stop, rue Georges Bernanos. This stop is located at the entrance to the park, 600 metres from the museum by foot.

  5. Discover the museum, the artworks, the Gallery of time, ans the temporary exhibitions to prepare your visit to the Louvre-Lens.

    • The Location
    • The Building
    • The Galleries
    • Quick Tip
    • The Pavilion de Verre
    • Temporary Exhibitions
    • Changing Exhibits
    • The Reserve Collections
    • Practical Information
    • How to Get There

    Lens is not an obvious place to attract sightseers. The mining town was destroyed in World War I, then occupied by the Nazis and hit by Allied bombs in World War II. The mines continued operating after the war and the area now boasts the tallest slag heaps in Europe. But the industry declined dramatically; the last mine closed in 1986 and the town ...

    The new Louvre-Lens is housed in a series of five low, spectacular glass and polished aluminum buildings that join each other at different angles. The park that is slowly being constructed around it is reflected in the glass and the roofs are also in glass which brings in light and gives you a view of the outdoors. An international competition was ...

    The Museum is divided into different sections. Start in the Galerie du Temps, the main gallery where 205 major works of art are displayed in 3,000 square meters, with no dividing partitions. There's a 'Wow' moment as you walk in and see the gleaming space filled with priceless, unique artworks. It shows, according to the museum, that 'long and visi...

    You should take the multimedia guide that explains, in good detail, some of the exhibits. You need to pay attention at the beginning when the assistant explains how it works as it takes a bit of getting used to. Once you're in the relevant section, you key the number into the pad to get a long, interesting explanation of the context and the work. Y...

    From the Galerie du Temps, you walk through into a second, smaller room, the Pavilion de Verre, where the audio accompaniment is not commentary, but music. There are benches to sit on and views out to the surrounding countryside. Here there are two different exhibitions: A History of Time, around how we perceive time, and a temporary exhibition. Th...

    If you plan a visit, then leave time for the temporary exhibitions, all of which are major. Most of the works come from the Louvre, but there are also significant works from other major galleries and museums in France.

    In the main galleries, 20% of the exhibits will change each year, with the whole exhibition being remounted with new exhibitions every five years. The major and international temporary exhibitions will change twice a year.

    Downstairs there are the cloakrooms (free lockers and free cloakroom), but more importantly, this is where the reserve collections are held. Groups have access, but individual visitors can also see what is happening.

    Louvre-Lens Lens Nord–Pas-de-Calais Museum website (in English) There is a good bookshop, a cafe and a restaurant in the grounds. Opening times Wednesday to Monday 10am-6pm (last entry 5.15 pm) September to June, the first Friday of each month 10am-10pm Closed: Tuesdays, Jan 1, May 1, Dec 25. Entry free to the main museum Exhibition entry: 10 euros...

    By train Lens train station is in the center of town. There are direct connections from Paris Gare du Nord and more local destinations like Lille, Arras, Bethune, and Douai. A free shuttle service runs regularly from the station to the Louvre-Lens museum. The pedestrian walkway takes you about 20 minutes. By car Lens is very near several motorways,...

    • Mary Anne Evans
  6. Oct 1, 2024 · The Louvre-Lens is an art museum located in the northern French city of Lens. Opened in 2012, it serves as a branch of the renowned Paris Louvre. The museum showcases a wide range of artworks from all departments of the Paris Louvre, spanning from the 3rd millennium BC to 1850.

  7. The Louvre-Lens was built on a 20-hectare site that was occupied by the 9 and 9 bis mine shafts. This coal mining site was recolonised by nature after it was closed down in 1960.

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