-
Air France expands US schedule with direct Paris-Las Vegas route
Airline now offers 19 US destinations
-
2025 small business VAT reform definitively cancelled after Senate vote
New 2026 proposals remain on table but likely to be struck out as MP debates get underway
-
Small drop in percentage of French visa applications being declined
Roughly one in every six visa requests refused in 2024
Da Vinci’s French chateau and its digital exhibit is a Time must-see
Château du Clos Lucé in the Loire Valley opened new galleries after lockdown with works including The Last Supper being blown up and projected onto the walls
Leonardo da Vinci’s former home in the Loire Valley has been listed among Time Magazine’s 100 Greatest Places of 2021.
Time made special reference to a new exhibit presented in new galleries that opened at the Château du Clos Lucé in Amboise (Indre-et-Loire) in June and features 17 digital art works.
Among them are pieces from museums and galleries all over the world, which visitors can now appreciate in more detail, projected onto the walls for an immersive experience.
Francis I of France paid for Tuscan-born Da Vinci to live at Clos Lucé after making him 'Premier Painter and Engineer and Architect to the King' in 1516.
This arrangement allowed the king to keep his favourite artist close by, with the royal residence Château d’Amboise connected to Château du Clos Lucé by an underground passage.
Da Vinci spent the last three years of his life at Clos Lucé, where he worked on various projects for the king and hosted visitors, including fellow artists.
As well as being able to visit some of the rooms where Da Vinci lived and worked, the Clos Lucé attraction also offers visitors an opportunity to explore the grounds of the chateau.
The Leonardo da Vinci Park is designed like an open-air museum and features life-sized models of Da Vinci inventions.
Other places in France that made the American magazine’s annual list of 100 places in the world to visit were Cannes with its new Underwater Edo-Museum, as well as the Bourse de Commerce - Pinault Collection, which opened in Paris in May.
Related articles
Instrument played by Leonardo da Vinci returns to his French chateau
