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I have no idea how you can make sense of any of this history, or even make time for it. Most of the history I know involve Americans, especially the wars and battles that happened on American soil. Edit: Great job making videos like these & on your other TH-cam channels... How do you even manage them?
I visited the Louvre in July 1980, spending the entire day there. Nowhere near enough time to even run through it. Was able to see and photograph the lovely Mona Lisa so there's that. Although it was very busy, it was nowhere near the crowds that visit now. While I only had 3 short days to visit Paris, I fell in love with her. Maybe someday I can see her again.
Visiting the Louvre was both breathtaking and overwhelming for me. We spend an entire day there and discovered so many things, yet only scratched the surface. I highly recommend a visit.
I have been to the louvre with my parents years ago, and yes, I have seen The Mona Lisa, and yes, it's pretty small, I still wished that movie and TV productions wouldn't portray the painting enormously larger than it is. No air condishioning in sections since that could damage the artworks, still impressive though. Take care, and all the best.
I agree with you and me and my sister saw the museum many years ago of which I hardly remember and of course saw the rather small painting of Mona Lisa. We were quite surprised how small it was standing alone in a big room! I remember that was hanging for many years in toilet in one of King Francis I but perhaps it is Fairey tale...
I have been fortunate enough to travel to Paris twice (1987 and 2017) and visited The Louvre both times. It is an amazing and facilitating place. This brought back many wonderful memories of my times there. Next time I am in Paris I would definitely go again!!
I was there in September 2008 and I was blown away. I am not really an art person. This gave me a new appreciation. Plus there was much more than just paintings in the place. If I were to ever go back to Paris, I would certainly go again. By the way, the photo of the crowd in front of the Mona Lisa is spot on, even 13 years ago.
I went to Paris in 1974, it was August and not crowded at all. It was amazing over 3 days . A museum trek through Europe is a must for any art history student ✨
I've been to Paris on a sort of culture holiday and I can confirm: You can spend days there! We had two days set aside to go to the Louvre, and we still haven't seen all the stuff we knew we wanted to look at. And that's excluding a lot of boring stuff like coin collections :-P
Heading off to Paris in a few days. As I got older my curiosity and interests got out of hand. I take great pleasure in learning every little detail, from the technical details to the romantic stories and all in between. I'm quite sure I could spend easily spend an hour on just one of the paintings. Needless to say I'm hit by an enormous amount of anxiety lol. There is so much to see, so much to learn, so much to enjoy and relish. What an incredible feat of humanity.
Great video as always. A small addition. This museum is placed in the absolute center of paris, where 1 m^2 is around 14 000E for an apartment. That would be at least 1 billion E just to buy that much surface in paris. Add to that, the fact that those buildings have so much history that they would sell for way more...
I drove by the Louvre, saw the line and kept going. Paris is nice but I prefer Prague, it’s my all time favorite city in Europe. When I lived in Germany we were less than 30 minutes from the Czech border and we would visit often. Please do a video on Lidice. It’s a haunting story.
I've played Civ 4-6 in exess of some 3000 hours and it's like you've producing a video encyclopedia that has just that content. And it is real nice to get the depth for reading is not for everyone. Great topics all around your channels lately, great stuff!
@@christobalcolon6601 you know Simon makes multiple videos, right? It isn't either-or, both ideas can be done. Also, it's a bit more than "small craft transiting New Jersey" lol.
Inside the museums infinity goes up on trial. Voices echo "This is what salvation must be like after a while" But Mona Lisa must have had the highway blues you can tell by the way she smiles
Thank you Simon. I think if I can ever retire I would like to live in Paris for a year. I would visit the Louvre 5 days a week, and I would drink lots of wine. That would be nice.
Simon's expression when he's trying to work out if he's already covered the Pentagon "Did we cover this already? ...... I've made so many videos I lose track" Says the man with about a million TH-cam channels
Glad to see ya do a video on the Louvre that mostly focuses on the actual palace...so many focus on the art (which isn't my interest)...would liked to have seen just a little more slowly showing each of the wings as they were added on (and maybe a why did the King add it) but overall another great video! :)
@6:15 Don't worry, I'm French Canadian and even as a French speaker, we often get blamed for our pronnounciation as it is not like the French's in France ;)
I was lucky to finally be able to visit the museum in November 2017 and even more lucky to visit Notre-Dame before the fire 🔥 I found the below ground ruins to be really interesting
@@simonrancourt7834 Even Myanmar is going Metric. No idea about those other cave-man states; the US and Liberia, though the US is actually officially metric, though that hasn't reliably translated to properly consistent use of SI metric units.
They say that good artists borrow but great artists steal ...anyways, that's how I got banned from the Louvre Still waiting for Megaprojects: Our Labor Camp System
The evacuation of the Louvre was a MegaProject in itself and worth a video. As a museum registrar I am consistently awed that they packed everything up and hid it for five years and didn’t lose a single work. An amazing feat of logistics and record keeping.
Size for size, I think that the Hermitage in St Petersburg would give the Louvre a run for its money. Rumours has it that it would take 5 years to view every object in the Hermitage.
You are partially right : Hermitage is one of the five huge museums in the World and its collection is staggering. But in terms of exhibition area, the Louvre is larger (if I remember, Hermitage is n°2). Another thing to keep in mind is that number of artifacts (though interesting) is not the absolute metric concerning museums : a lot of tiny artifacts quickly make a huge collection. For instance, a coin collection (numismatic museum) can easily have hundreds of thousands items (coins), each one rather interesting and of certain museologic value.
My wife and I had the privilege of being there last summer and it was amazing! She literally had to drag me out of the Near East halls. It’s worth every 17 euros no doubt.
The Louvre is massive and pretty much ruins any other museum you visit afterwards. I remember going to a museum (The Getty in LA) and thinking that it felt really small, like a closet, and then realize the last museum I had visited before it was the Louvre.
I visit many small local museums in the USA. Often these are in towns so small that their original one-room schoolhouse both is the museum, and contains the entire collection. All of them have at least one interesting story to tell, or one interesting artifact. The Louvre would just be overwhelming, I think, though I do appreciate it's role.
I've been to France twice, and twice failed to get into the Louvre. This video was great, I got to learn a little something of the history behind the museum, and I didn't have to stand in line for most of a day and potentially promise a future child for the chance to buy a ticket.
Thank you! I can't concentrate on what he's saying because my ears keep picking up each time he mispronounces The Louvre. I hate being so nit-picky, but I can't help it. My ears won't unhear it, LOL! I love Simon though, no matter if he mispronounces things or not. Also, here in the U.S., the word "homely" means ugly... but I've noticed through many videos that Simon uses it as we would use the word "homey", meaning comfortable & home-like. I wonder if all Brits do this, or is it just a Simonism?
Napoleon III was captured by the Prussians and held captive for several months in 1870-1871, but he lived out the remainder of his life in exile in England, dying in 1873. I wish this channel would ensure it got its facts correct. Napoleon III's fate was easily checked via a simple Wikipedia search.
You know you may have an addiction when you're watching a year old biographics (Cyrus the great) while waiting for Simon's bombardment of my notification feed! Keep up the awesome work Simon and Co. 🍻
Been to the Louvre twice.. saw the crowd around the Mona Lisa both times and decided I’d rather see a whole other gallery in the time it would take to push to the enclosed “box”.
HEY SIMON! How about a future video on Astana's Presidential Park in Kazakhstan? It looks fascinating and I've heard it's opulence clashes with the surrounding population. I'd love to know more about it!
I was 14 in 1981 when my dad took me and my sister to Paris, we flew coach while his multi millionaire friend and his daughter took the Concord. When we got to Paris we could not get in contact with them and did the typical things at the time, before the internet and cell phones, like leaving messages by phone to their hotel's front desk. We finally decided to go out without them and went to the Louvre and low and behold, in a city of 8.6 million my father get's a tap on the shoulder while standing in front of the Mona Lisa.
I have been to the Louvre twice. The first time was in 1997, and I beheld a temple to human creativity. The 12th Century turret had been excavated, and that was where they had the most ancient relics, the 6,000 year old Egyptian antiquities. That was awesome. The second time I went to the Louvre, they had completely screwed over the whole place. The temple to human creativity had become a pinche shopping mall. The area next to the excavated 12th Century tower with its Egyptian antiquities had become a BAD imitation of MONA (The Museum of Neon Art) that began in Downtown Los Angeles. The Egyptian antiquities, I never found those. Not sure I’d ever return to the Louvre, it was too painful to see what they have turned it into…
Okay, the Louvre is great! But my favourite museum in Paris is the Pompidou Centre! It’s lively and beautiful and inviting, and they have a huge range of art. When I visited there was everything from Kandinsky and Picasso, to modern feminist art, art exploring the meaning of life and comfort. It was glorious!
Does Paris have more than just a few museum's? I'm an Australian so one museum per city is pretty standard. I can't wait to see Paris and the rest of Europe one day.
@@brisbaneinsider7139 My favorite museums in Paris: 1. Arts et metiers: f.e. with the original Meter, Kilo and Liter in display (First place: Yes I'm a nerd, but I love it ;) 2. Louvre 3. Musee d'orsay: f.e with the paintings of Monet et Manet 4. Musee du bourget: Lots of plane and space stuff f.e. Concorde 5. Musee carnavalet: History of Paris -> its free entry 6. Centre George Pompidou: Modern Art 7. Musee des invalides: Military stuff and the toomb of Napoleon 8. Jardin des plantes: Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology (lots of stones) & Muséum national d’histoire naturelle (Dinosaurs and creepy orgiginal organs displays) 9. Musee des Plans-Reliefs: This is realy geeky, I love it Paris has somthing over 150 museums and we havent talked about the monuments and sightseeings...
@@c.p.2662 you should visit musée de Cluny, if you're into medieval art : the six "lady and unicorn" tapestries are exposed here as well as some original statues from Notre Dame (the heads of the Kings of Judaea statues).
yep, definitely need a few days to see it all. i only been once and i speed walked thru 1 wing, which i dont think i even saw the whole of, then i was like screw this, im tired.
Interesting video, one small mistake I spoted... at 9:01 the painting shown "La Liberté guidant le peuple" from Eugène Delacroix does not represent the French Revolution of 1789 but the French Revolution of 1830. Annoying all those French Revolutions! Keep-up with the videos, I love the channel!
For you all who wonder how much time it would take to see it properly, a month every day the entirety of the exhibits are 9 miles 14 KM long that is 5 hours steady walking without looking or stopping
Potala Palace in Tibet, The Atlantic Wall, Brazilia Brazil, Disney World, or some other events such as dividing the Ottoman Empire, rebuilding eastern Europe after the fall of the Soviets, the reunification of Germany, Stalin's copy of the B-29.
Simon, do Bagger 293 bucket wheel excavator! It is the largest land vehicle built (think cruise ship on land size!) I know that it is not self powered, but even still it is an amazing peice of machinery!
Why didn't the family visit the Louvre? *They didn't have the Monet to get Degas to make the Van Gogh* I have a Lego set of this...the set really undermines how big the place actually is
This in funny in a second way: They are all not on displayed in the Louvre, but you can find in the Musée d'Orsay. An old train station. Maybe they have enough Monet to take the train :-P
I visited this place in the 80's on my engangement trip with my 1st wife, and couldn't believe the actual art was the real thing (or was it). I was like 2m away from the Mona Lisa and I could have pushed the statue of David off his stand. I still feel these were copies on show 20 odd years ago. ...Strange story...After this visit to France...My 1st wife sold her horse to my 2nd wife when she was 12 (ovibviously I didn't marry her when she was 12) . They used to ride horses together. We met in 2005 You couldn't write this...Me and Kellyanne have now been together 16 years, Funny Story.
Simon, if youve been to Paris 3 times, and not been into the Louvre, you must have had time to go to Versailles. That's an idea for a new video, it's pretty mega
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Please Simon, please do a biographics on Lawrence of Arabia
Edit: ohhh and the colt m1911 .45acp automatic pistol, it'd be a perfect side project
I lived in Chesapeake Virginia, during most of my life. Very familiar with the Intercoastal Waterway. Believe George Washington surveyed it.🤔
You're very smart and mature I really wish I could be like you.
You should do a mega project video on England's ice aircraft carrier plans during ww2
I have no idea how you can make sense of any of this history, or even make time for it. Most of the history I know involve Americans, especially the wars and battles that happened on American soil.
Edit: Great job making videos like these & on your other TH-cam channels... How do you even manage them?
I visited the Louvre in July 1980, spending the entire day there. Nowhere near enough time to even run through it. Was able to see and photograph the lovely Mona Lisa so there's that. Although it was very busy, it was nowhere near the crowds that visit now. While I only had 3 short days to visit Paris, I fell in love with her. Maybe someday I can see her again.
Visiting the Louvre was both breathtaking and overwhelming for me. We spend an entire day there and discovered so many things, yet only scratched the surface. I highly recommend a visit.
I have been to the louvre with my parents years ago, and yes, I have seen The Mona Lisa, and yes, it's pretty small, I still wished that movie and TV productions wouldn't portray the painting enormously larger than it is.
No air condishioning in sections since that could damage the artworks, still impressive though.
Take care, and all the best.
I agree with you and me and my sister saw the museum many years ago of which I hardly remember and of course saw the rather small painting of Mona Lisa. We were quite surprised how small it was standing alone in a big room! I remember that was hanging for many years in toilet in one of King Francis I but perhaps it is Fairey tale...
I've been to the Louvre! It's an awesome museum. Spent 7 hours walking around, man we're my feet hurting the next day.
I have been fortunate enough to travel to Paris twice (1987 and 2017) and visited The Louvre both times. It is an amazing and facilitating place. This brought back many wonderful memories of my times there. Next time I am in Paris I would definitely go again!!
I was there in September 2008 and I was blown away. I am not really an art person. This gave me a new appreciation. Plus there was much more than just paintings in the place. If I were to ever go back to Paris, I would certainly go again. By the way, the photo of the crowd in front of the Mona Lisa is spot on, even 13 years ago.
I went to Paris in 1974, it was August and not crowded at all. It was amazing over 3 days . A museum trek through Europe is a must for any art history student ✨
I use this channel to vicariously see and experience the things that I know I will never be able to.
I've been to Paris on a sort of culture holiday and I can confirm: You can spend days there! We had two days set aside to go to the Louvre, and we still haven't seen all the stuff we knew we wanted to look at. And that's excluding a lot of boring stuff like coin collections :-P
Never realized it was that large. Thanks For your time!
Heading off to Paris in a few days.
As I got older my curiosity and interests got out of hand. I take great pleasure in learning every little detail, from the technical details to the romantic stories and all in between. I'm quite sure I could spend easily spend an hour on just one of the paintings.
Needless to say I'm hit by an enormous amount of anxiety lol. There is so much to see, so much to learn, so much to enjoy and relish.
What an incredible feat of humanity.
Great video as always.
A small addition. This museum is placed in the absolute center of paris, where 1 m^2 is around 14 000E for an apartment.
That would be at least 1 billion E just to buy that much surface in paris. Add to that, the fact that those buildings have so much history that they would sell for way more...
I love all the drawings you guys threw in there. It makes it so much better.
Maybe you can do a video on the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg.
I drove by the Louvre, saw the line and kept going. Paris is nice but I prefer Prague, it’s my all time favorite city in Europe. When I lived in Germany we were less than 30 minutes from the Czech border and we would visit often. Please do a video on Lidice. It’s a haunting story.
Megaproject suggestion: The Hermitage in Russia (plus special mention to the cats)
I think they've made a Geographics on it.
I've played Civ 4-6 in exess of some 3000 hours and it's like you've producing a video encyclopedia that has just that content. And it is real nice to get the depth for reading is not for everyone. Great topics all around your channels lately, great stuff!
I still think the intercoastal waterway along the Eastern seaboard of USA would be a cool one
No. Ancient Rome's Cloaca Maxima would be more interesting than small craft transiting New Jersey.
@@christobalcolon6601 you know Simon makes multiple videos, right? It isn't either-or, both ideas can be done. Also, it's a bit more than "small craft transiting New Jersey" lol.
@@Stormynormy42 I'm exagerating, lol
Yes!
Yes!
Inside the museums
infinity goes up on trial.
Voices echo
"This is what salvation must be like
after a while"
But Mona Lisa must have had the highway blues
you can tell by the way she smiles
But it's like I'm in a painting that's hanging in the Louvre; My throat starts to tickle and my nose itches, but I know that I can't move.
Thank you Simon.
I think if I can ever retire I would like to live in Paris for a year. I would visit the Louvre 5 days a week, and I would drink lots of wine. That would be nice.
just visited it one year ago, it's such an incredible museum
Can we get a Smithsonian campus video?
Simon: Go back to Paris. Go to the Louvre. It’s amazing. I bought Mona Lisa socks 🧦 in the gift shop
How is she gonna wear them? She doesn't have legs.
Badum tiss!
..and that "lower" level is a HUGE bus park!!
Next Megaprojects: Simon's beard!
Not just that but the whole stories and facts of beards like how like many other integral hobbies shaped humanity exclusively to men like you and me
10/10 would watch
Simon's work ethic
It’s getting there
Pretty sure that's a beard Blaze ad.
Simon's expression when he's trying to work out if he's already covered the Pentagon "Did we cover this already? ...... I've made so many videos I lose track"
Says the man with about a million TH-cam channels
so much beauty one cant help but weep
Glad to see ya do a video on the Louvre that mostly focuses on the actual palace...so many focus on the art (which isn't my interest)...would liked to have seen just a little more slowly showing each of the wings as they were added on (and maybe a why did the King add it) but overall another great video! :)
You're not interested in the art? You have the soul of a washerwoman.
Going there and taking my time is on the bucket list
@6:15 Don't worry, I'm French Canadian and even as a French speaker, we often get blamed for our pronnounciation as it is not like the French's in France ;)
I was lucky to finally be able to visit the museum in November 2017 and even more lucky to visit Notre-Dame before the fire 🔥
I found the below ground ruins to be really interesting
Thanks for the Standard measurements!
Metric IS standard around the world except the US, Myanmar and Liberia.
@@simonrancourt7834 thanks again and I love the shows.
@@simonrancourt7834 Even Myanmar is going Metric. No idea about those other cave-man states; the US and Liberia, though the US is actually officially metric, though that hasn't reliably translated to properly consistent use of SI metric units.
Le Louvre. The word, the monument, the history, the heritage. Love to the world it cries out.
The looting of the world...
That's old school non-knowledge. Try figuring out how many loots gives one Storage Wars episode first!
They say that good artists borrow but great artists steal
...anyways, that's how I got banned from the Louvre
Still waiting for Megaprojects: Our Labor Camp System
also time to flex your Ryugyong Hotel
Lol😄
The evacuation of the Louvre was a MegaProject in itself and worth a video. As a museum registrar I am consistently awed that they packed everything up and hid it for five years and didn’t lose a single work.
An amazing feat of logistics and record keeping.
Size for size, I think that the Hermitage in St Petersburg would give the Louvre a run for its money. Rumours has it that it would take 5 years to view every object in the Hermitage.
You are partially right :
Hermitage is one of the five huge museums in the World and its collection is staggering.
But in terms of exhibition area, the Louvre is larger (if I remember, Hermitage is n°2).
Another thing to keep in mind is that number of artifacts (though interesting) is not the absolute metric concerning museums : a lot of tiny artifacts quickly make a huge collection. For instance, a coin collection (numismatic museum) can easily have hundreds of thousands items (coins), each one rather interesting and of certain museologic value.
Now that you covered the Roman Empire not long ago, maybe covering Carthage to ?
My wife and I had the privilege of being there last summer and it was amazing! She literally had to drag me out of the Near East halls.
It’s worth every 17 euros no doubt.
The Louvre is massive and pretty much ruins any other museum you visit afterwards. I remember going to a museum (The Getty in LA) and thinking that it felt really small, like a closet, and then realize the last museum I had visited before it was the Louvre.
It's been cited as one of the greatest art museums on earth for a good reason
@Ghost Ghost Isn't that pretty much most museums? Especially the older they are. A lot of exhibits are often donated or sold to them too.
I visit many small local museums in the USA. Often these are in towns so small that their original one-room schoolhouse both is the museum, and contains the entire collection. All of them have at least one interesting story to tell, or one interesting artifact. The Louvre would just be overwhelming, I think, though I do appreciate it's role.
"The visitor numbers in 2020 were way less." British understatement of the century.
Mega Project suggestions: Benban Solar Park, Aswan High Dam, Bar Lev Line and Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.
Amazing video. I didn't realize how much history is behind it. Thanks
1:55 - Chapter 1 - The louvre today
2:50 - Chapter 2 - The louvre castle
4:00 - Chapter 3 - The renaissance
5:35 - Chapter 4 - The grand design
7:40 - Mid roll ads
8:55 - Chapter 5 - Revolution
10:05 - Chapter 6 - Napoleon
11:10 - Chapter 7 - The paris commune
13:40 - Chapter 8 - Modern times
14:45 - Chapter 9 - Today at the louvre
I went to there.... 15.5 miles walked! And had to go to the "Disregard women, Aquire Currcy" painting.
I've been to France twice, and twice failed to get into the Louvre. This video was great, I got to learn a little something of the history behind the museum, and I didn't have to stand in line for most of a day and potentially promise a future child for the chance to buy a ticket.
For many museums in Paris, you can buy a ticket online and get fast track so you don't have to spend hours in line.
Why is no one talking g about how he pronounces the “R” in Louvre
I was thinking the same... cringe
Thank you! I can't concentrate on what he's saying because my ears keep picking up each time he mispronounces The Louvre. I hate being so nit-picky, but I can't help it. My ears won't unhear it, LOL! I love Simon though, no matter if he mispronounces things or not. Also, here in the U.S., the word "homely" means ugly... but I've noticed through many videos that Simon uses it as we would use the word "homey", meaning comfortable & home-like. I wonder if all Brits do this, or is it just a Simonism?
@@Howiesgirl homely doesn't mean ugly over here, at worst it's plain or average but mostly it's the same as home like
@@Howiesgirl He butchered every single french word, "Louvre" was far from the worst.
Because nobody cares really. The facts are the main reason to watch the videos. I didn't come for elocution lessons.
Napoleon III was captured by the Prussians and held captive for several months in 1870-1871, but he lived out the remainder of his life in exile in England, dying in 1873. I wish this channel would ensure it got its facts correct. Napoleon III's fate was easily checked via a simple Wikipedia search.
You know you may have an addiction when you're watching a year old biographics (Cyrus the great) while waiting for Simon's bombardment of my notification feed! Keep up the awesome work Simon and Co. 🍻
Anyone else get the impression Simon isn’t a fan of the French? And I don’t mean just the language…. 🤔
He is British, though he now lives in Prague, so par for the course
Even Simon gave up on Britain
Couldn't blame him if he wasn't.
tbh the french dont do that much to be likeable...
It's hard to ignore. Makes the video even more entertaining. The Brits and French love to hate each other, usually in a joking way though.
Been to the Louvre twice.. saw the crowd around the Mona Lisa both times and decided I’d rather see a whole other gallery in the time it would take to push to the enclosed “box”.
Also the Louvre opened 2 news museum, one in the north of France and another in Abu Dabi.
Looks like Sam is joining Danny in the basement. The preview video is Confucius lol
HEY SIMON! How about a future video on Astana's Presidential Park in Kazakhstan? It looks fascinating and I've heard it's opulence clashes with the surrounding population. I'd love to know more about it!
I was 14 in 1981 when my dad took me and my sister to Paris, we flew coach while his multi millionaire friend and his daughter took the Concord. When we got to Paris we could not get in contact with them and did the typical things at the time, before the internet and cell phones, like leaving messages by phone to their hotel's front desk. We finally decided to go out without them and went to the Louvre and low and behold, in a city of 8.6 million my father get's a tap on the shoulder while standing in front of the Mona Lisa.
You should do the USS Monitor and USS Constitution.
Jim Morrison’s grave is the most visited tourist attraction in Paris. Simon do a video on the lizard king.
I lived in Barcelona for two years and never went inside Sagrada Familia. Just couldn't be bothered to queue 🤷 Hope that makes you feel better, Simon.
I have been to the Louvre twice. The first time was in 1997, and I beheld a temple to human creativity. The 12th Century turret had been excavated, and that was where they had the most ancient relics, the 6,000 year old Egyptian antiquities. That was awesome. The second time I went to the Louvre, they had completely screwed over the whole place. The temple to human creativity had become a pinche shopping mall. The area next to the excavated 12th Century tower with its Egyptian antiquities had become a BAD imitation of MONA (The Museum of Neon Art) that began in Downtown Los Angeles. The Egyptian antiquities, I never found those. Not sure I’d ever return to the Louvre, it was too painful to see what they have turned it into…
Okay, the Louvre is great! But my favourite museum in Paris is the Pompidou Centre! It’s lively and beautiful and inviting, and they have a huge range of art. When I visited there was everything from Kandinsky and Picasso, to modern feminist art, art exploring the meaning of life and comfort. It was glorious!
Does Paris have more than just a few museum's? I'm an Australian so one museum per city is pretty standard. I can't wait to see Paris and the rest of Europe one day.
Terry Maximum Effort: Thus endeth Western Civilization.
Brisbane Mike: Yes, it has lots.
@@brisbaneinsider7139 My favorite museums in Paris:
1. Arts et metiers: f.e. with the original Meter, Kilo and Liter in display (First place: Yes I'm a nerd, but I love it ;)
2. Louvre
3. Musee d'orsay: f.e with the paintings of Monet et Manet
4. Musee du bourget: Lots of plane and space stuff f.e. Concorde
5. Musee carnavalet: History of Paris -> its free entry
6. Centre George Pompidou: Modern Art
7. Musee des invalides: Military stuff and the toomb of Napoleon
8. Jardin des plantes: Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology (lots of stones) & Muséum national d’histoire naturelle (Dinosaurs and creepy orgiginal organs displays)
9. Musee des Plans-Reliefs: This is realy geeky, I love it
Paris has somthing over 150 museums and we havent talked about the monuments and sightseeings...
@@c.p.2662 you should visit musée de Cluny, if you're into medieval art : the six "lady and unicorn" tapestries are exposed here as well as some original statues from Notre Dame (the heads of the Kings of Judaea statues).
Philadelphia’s City Hall, a super interesting building itself, was inspired by the Louvre.
Louvré your videos Simoné
🥐 Hon hon hon 🥐
yep, definitely need a few days to see it all. i only been once and i speed walked thru 1 wing, which i dont think i even saw the whole of, then i was like screw this, im tired.
This video made me want to watch “Edge of tomorrow.”
Interesting video, one small mistake I spoted... at 9:01 the painting shown "La Liberté guidant le peuple" from Eugène Delacroix does not represent the French Revolution of 1789 but the French Revolution of 1830. Annoying all those French Revolutions!
Keep-up with the videos, I love the channel!
I loved the Louvre! If you tried to see everything, it would take weeks!
Highlight every art category in a separate Megaprojects video. That way you can cover Greek/Roman/Etruscan, then Islamic, etc.
For you all who wonder how much time it would take to see it properly, a month every day
the entirety of the exhibits are 9 miles 14 KM long that is 5 hours steady walking without looking or stopping
Potala Palace in Tibet, The Atlantic Wall, Brazilia Brazil, Disney World, or some other events such as dividing the Ottoman Empire, rebuilding eastern Europe after the fall of the Soviets, the reunification of Germany, Stalin's copy of the B-29.
This place is on my bucket list
Because mispronunciation is kind of his thing, I honestly don’t know if he’s saying “Louvre” incorrectly, or I’ve be saying it wrong my whole life.
It's him. But it ain't nothing on what he does to "Tuileries."
I think hes showing his ass to the french
Been there twice! It’s amazing
One of the places I would like to visit!
I spent 10 hours there as a kid. I was incredibly upset at my family for telling me we just *HAD* to go now.
Please do a video on the Ufzi, it’s a gorgeous museum.
I thought it was a machine gun. Oh, wait.....
I found the architectural history of the Louvre in this video very interesting.
I FEEL LIKE MORE PEOPLE NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE LOUVRE!!!!
This felt like a very educational episode of Business Blaze:) Thanks, fact boi:)
How about a video about that awesome beared🔥🔥
RIP Phillip the writer
Simon, do Bagger 293 bucket wheel excavator! It is the largest land vehicle built (think cruise ship on land size!) I know that it is not self powered, but even still it is an amazing peice of machinery!
Why didn't the family visit the Louvre?
*They didn't have the Monet to get Degas to make the Van Gogh*
I have a Lego set of this...the set really undermines how big the place actually is
This in funny in a second way: They are all not on displayed in the Louvre, but you can find in the Musée d'Orsay. An old train station. Maybe they have enough Monet to take the train :-P
Suggestion: make a video about Portugal!🇵🇹🇵🇹
There is now a Louvre II in the Middle East to show some of the 300,000 pieces of art, not on display in Paris.
You’re French sounds super sarcastic, hilarious
I have an idea for an episode for you - rebuilding Warsaw past WWII
I hope they have a better fire control system than Notre Dame had.
Went to the louvre in 2011. I agree, you absolutely CAN get lost in there
If you go, buy the Paris Museum Pass - it's worth it just to avoid the permanent queue for the Louvre. Beautiful place and not just painted art.
I visited this place in the 80's on my engangement trip with my 1st wife, and couldn't believe the actual art was the real thing (or was it). I was like 2m away from the Mona Lisa and I could have pushed the statue of David off his stand. I still feel these were copies on show 20 odd years ago. ...Strange story...After this visit to France...My 1st wife sold her horse to my 2nd wife when she was 12 (ovibviously I didn't marry her when she was 12) . They used to ride horses together. We met in 2005 You couldn't write this...Me and Kellyanne have now been together 16 years, Funny Story.
Been there, I saw the Mona Lisa, Venus Di Milo, and got lost in Egyptian Antiquities.
Simon, do a video on the Grand Coulee Dam!
Simon, if youve been to Paris 3 times, and not been into the Louvre, you must have had time to go to Versailles. That's an idea for a new video, it's pretty mega
There is only one word to describe that beard: MAJESTIC
Underrated, perhaps Tom's best work of the past 10 years.
Can u plz do a video on the British aircraft carriers Simon?
Ive been to the louvre and it was the most amazing place ive ever been
PLEASE do one on the Palace at Versailles.
The two most underwhelming experiences of my life. 1: Stonehenge 2: The Mona Lisa
The Louvre is huge, the Mona Lisa is tiny. Much smaller than you expected
Trying to look at Mona Lisa is a noob move when you can just go to Italy and look at italian renaissance art
@@777jones agreed! Our chaperones when we went suggested against taking the time to see her “unless we really really REALLY wanted to”
I found it lacking myself much better works that are much less well known!
*Chris Farley Impression*
"Big museum, little painting!"
maybe it was better in my head lmao.
WHAT IS THIS?? A PAINTING FOR ANTS?
You do mean Gallic (erstwhile French), not Gaelic as in Scots background - correct?
As an englishman, I suppose he dislikes both equally.