About POP!

POP! is INQUIRER.net’s premier pop culture channel, delivering the latest news in the realm of pop culture, internet culture, social issues, and everything fun, weird, and wired. It is also home to POP! Sessions and POP! Hangout,
OG online entertainment programs in the
Philippines (streaming since 2015).

As the go-to destination for all things ‘in the now’, POP! features and curates the best relevant content for its young audience. It is also a strong advocate of fairness and truth in storytelling.

POP! is operated by INQUIRER.net’s award-winning native advertising team, BrandRoom.

Contact Us

Email us at [email protected]

Address

MRP Building, Mola Corner Pasong Tirad Streets, Brgy La Paz, Makati City

Girl in a jacket

Louvre opens bookings for blockbuster Leonardo show in October

The Louvre museum in Paris will open bookings on Tuesday, June 18, for a blockbuster exhibition in October of most of Leonardo da Vinci’s paintings to mark the quincentennial of the Renaissance master’s death.

Tickets to the show opening on Oct. 24 will not be available at the box office, but only on the museum’s website and in major stores.

Louvre
KENZO TRIBOUILLARD / AFP

“Because of the expected crowds, the exhibition will be accessible only by time slot as a way of ensuring the most comfortable visit,” the museum said in a statement on Monday.

“This applies to all visitors, including those with free access to the museum,” it said.

The Louvre possesses da Vinci’s most famous painting, the Mona Lisa, along with four others, as well as 22 drawings.

The Mona Lisa was among three of da Vinci’s favorite paintings, the others being the Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, and Saint John the Baptist, which he brought with him to France where he died 500 years ago on May 2.

The show will include nearly 120 more works — paintings, drawings, manuscripts, sculptures and other items — loaned by some of the most prestigious European and American institutions such as Britain’s Royal Collection, the British Museum, London’s National Gallery, the Pinacoteca at the Vatican, New York’s Metropolitan Museum and the Institut de France.

Negotiations for loans from Italy are still underway after hitting a snag, with the right-wing government in Rome balking at lending many of Italy’s da Vinci pieces — including the iconic Vitruvian Man drawing — to the Louvre under an agreement reached with the previous government.

The two sides have yet to agree on a definitive list.

The French side has agreed to lend paintings by Raphael to Rome next year for that Renaissance master’s quincentennial. RGA/NVG

RELATED STORIES: 

Hit Paris Tutankhamun show gets extended run

The Louvre is presenting VR ‘Mona Lisa’ for Leonardo da Vinci exhibition

Related Stories

Popping on POP!