
President François Hollande of France inaugurated the first regional branch of the Louvre on Tuesday, a museum set atop a former coal mining yard in the depressed, postindustrial city of Lens.
The Louvre-Lens, a $195 million project, is scheduled to open its doors to the public on Dec. 12. It will house a rotating collection of 205 works, mostly from the Louvre in Paris.
It is part of a recent push by France's major museums to bring more culture to outlying areas of the country and to âopen the doors of art while helping to revitalize a territory,â Mr. Hollan de said in a speech at the museum on Tuesday.
In 2010 the Pompidou Center â" home to France's National Museum of Modern Arts â" opened its first provincial branch in Metz, another postindustrial city in the north of France.
âLens has been ravaged by all forms of crises,â Henri Loyrette, the director of the Louvre in Paris, said in a speech on Tuesday. âIt's also exactly the type of population we wanted to reach out to.â
The Japanese architectural firm Sanaa designed the new museum, an airy space of more than 300,000 square feet clad in glass and aluminum. Major works that will be on view for the next five years include Leonardo's âVirgin and Child With St. Anneâ (painted around 1508); Eugene Delacroix's 1831 âLiberty Leading the People,â a widely recognized patriotic work in France; and Raphaël's âPortrait of Baldassare Castiglione.â
The Louvre-Lens is expected to attract 700,000 visitors in its first year. The Louvre has also contracted to open a new museum in Abu Dhabi.