Ebook80 pages
Cruising Through the Louvre
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
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About this ebook
An artist’s unique take on the museum experience: peoplewatching
Author and artist David Prudhomme meanders through the Louvre, feeling as if in the panels of a giant comic while he himself is creating his own is this graphic novel. In this institution, all manner of people from all over the world rub elbows quietly. So Prudhomme decides to cruise through the museum, not to look at the world famous art, but to observe the people and their interaction with it. As he wanders, he discovers a group of students somehow stuck together just as in the shipwreck on the Raft of the Medusa; a man standing behind the Seated Scribe, as if attempting to read over his shoulder; and in the hall of antiquities, a woman placing her head in a lion’s mouth. This work presents readers a strange, silent, and casual choreography, danced in the midst of one of the most prestigious museums in the world.
Author and artist David Prudhomme meanders through the Louvre, feeling as if in the panels of a giant comic while he himself is creating his own is this graphic novel. In this institution, all manner of people from all over the world rub elbows quietly. So Prudhomme decides to cruise through the museum, not to look at the world famous art, but to observe the people and their interaction with it. As he wanders, he discovers a group of students somehow stuck together just as in the shipwreck on the Raft of the Medusa; a man standing behind the Seated Scribe, as if attempting to read over his shoulder; and in the hall of antiquities, a woman placing her head in a lion’s mouth. This work presents readers a strange, silent, and casual choreography, danced in the midst of one of the most prestigious museums in the world.
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Reviews for Cruising Through the Louvre
Rating: 3.4565217391304346 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
23 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5There are plenty of worse ways to spend 20 minutes. Do one of those worse things instead.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The author goes people watching at the Louvre, drawing parallels between the museum guests and the figures captured in paintings and sculptures throughout the building. It sort of brought the art to life to see how universal the expressions and poses are. The concept is stretched a bit thin though as the pages turn, and the author acts the ass talking frequently on his mobile phone as he tours the museum, but I still enjoyed it fairly well until the nonsensical ending with a flying decapitated head.Unrelated to my rating: It's hard anymore to look at a museum display of Egyptian artifacts and think of anything except provenance and repatriation.
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Cruising Through the Louvre - David Prudhomme
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