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12 mars 2008

Restauration des Period Rooms à la Wallace Collection de Londres et au Met à New York

C'est ce que j'adore dans les musées anglo-saxons. Je déplore que les musées français ne fassent plus de periods rooms. Celles du Musée des Arts déco sont ridicules, comparées à celles du Met! Reste le Musée Carnavalet à Paris qui manque malheureusement de moyens...

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With money flowing into many museum coffers and competition for visitors increasing, institutions that house the treasures of avid millionaire collectors are updating their look. This includes the Wallace Collection in London, which refurbished its Oval Drawing Room, left, and seven other major rooms. (Photo: Courtesy of Trustees of The Wallace Collection, London)

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The Wallace Collection's Large Drawing Room, with boulle furnishings set off by lush wall coverings. The museum's revitalization emphasizes the intimacy of the house and its astonishing range of paintings, armor, porcelain and French furniture collected by five generations of Wallaces. (Photo: Courtesy of Trustees of The Wallace Collection, London)

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An interior from the Hôtel de Varengeville in Paris, circa 1740, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. (Photo: Michael Nagle for The New York Times)

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The Metropolitan Museum of Art has redone its Wrightsman Galleries for French Decorative Arts to evoke how the elite -- royal and almost royal -- lived. (Photo: Michael Nagle for The New York Times)

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The Wrightsman Galleries' Sèvres porcelain. "Of the four greatest collections of Sèvres in the world, the Metropolitan and the Wallace have two of them," said Robert S. Pirie, a lawyer and collector of French porcelain. (Photo: Michael Nagle for The New York Times)

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The Wrightsman Galleries' carved and gilded wood bed by Georges Jacob, known as a "lit à la duchesse." There is not much bed covering remaining from the 18th century, but researchers found drawings and descriptions of such beds and recreated the silk covering that would have been used during the summer. (Photo: Michael Nagle for The New York Times)

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The Metropolitan enlisted more than 20 conservators to carry out its refurbishment project. Among the challenges: cleaning 17 chandeliers and 59 wall sconces and installing lighting that could imitate different times of the day. (Photo: Michael Nagle for The New York Times)

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The Wrightsman Galleries at the Met. (Photo: Michael Nagle for The New York Times)

Lie l'article "Re-Enter the Gilded Age" de Geraldine Fabrikant http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/12/arts/artsspecial/12rooms.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

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The refurbished rooms look so beautiful. The lavish furniture and the lighting is awesome. I would love to visit the galleries and view the rooms for real.
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