Top 10 most popular museums in the world

Top 10 most popular museums in the world

Museums are a very important tool in preserving history and transferring it from generation to generation; Today, it is one of the places where many works can be stored, examined and exhibited. On the list of the 10 Most Popular Museums in the world, you can get the answer to the question of which museums are the most visitors today.

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Mona Lisa to be visited with virtual reality in Louvre Museum

Mona Lisa to be visited via virtual reality in Louvre Museum

The Louvre Museum and HTC VIVE Arts present Leonardo da Vinci’s famous Mona Lisa to art lovers with a virtual reality experience. The first virtual event in the history of the museum, Mona Lisa: Beyond the Glass, details of the famous oil painting and how the work was restored can be seen closely.

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Louvre Museum employees at strike

Louvre Museum employees at strike

The Louvre Museum in Paris, closed its doors on May 27th, turning thousands of visitors away, as security personnel went on strike. The Sud Culture Solidaires union, which is affiliated with the staff, said that the museum reached a record with a total of 10.2 million visitors last year and was “drowned altında under the influx of visitors. “The number of visitors has increased by more than 20% since 2009, but the Museum has not expanded,” the statement said.

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A subversive message by Virgin of the Rocks

A subversive message by Virgin of the Rocks

Some paintings are as mysterious as they are famous. Gazing at them is like diving into a deep dark sea. You never know what unsuspecting pearl your eyes might prise loose from their secretive lips – what key you might find that can unlock their power. Take Leonardo da Vinci’s the Virgin of the Rocks, in which the infant Jesus finds himself in a shadowy cave on an Alpine playdate with a baby John the Baptist. Or rather, take both versions of the work that Leonardo created between 1483 and 1508: the one that hangs in the Louvre in Paris (thought to be the earlier of the two, completed around 1486) and a subsequent one that resides in the National Gallery in London (begun in 1495 and finished 13 years later).

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