‘Nearly empty’ Picasso museum open in Paris

September 20, 2014 06:45 pm | Updated 06:45 pm IST - PARIS

This Sept. 19, 2014 photo shows an empty room during the press day at the Picasso museum in Paris.

This Sept. 19, 2014 photo shows an empty room during the press day at the Picasso museum in Paris.

Paris’ Picasso museum is reopening for two days this weekend after five years of closure over a renovation fraught with setbacks, accusations and sackings. But if the public expects art they’ll be disappointed- it’s practically empty.

“I will first of all calm your ardor and your enthusiasm ... but you’re going to see nothing. It’s a great disappointment. It’s an empty museum,” Laurent Le Bon, the museum’s president, said during Friday’s preview reception.

The 37 rooms of Musee Picasso, located inside the Marais district’s grand 17-century Hotel de Sale, are being temporarily opened in honour of France’s annual heritage weekend.

The museum, which is under the stewardship of the French government, won’t officially open until Oct. 25 and until then the art is collecting dust in storage.

It will house a € 52-million (about $72 million) renovation, which organizers hope will end the museum’s seemingly endless problems.

This weekend, visitors are being encouraged to use their imagination about how the museum will look.

“In lots of rooms there is nothing to see. It’s a little like a blank page, where we can use our imagination. It’s a moment when we can still dream,” insisted Mr. Le Bon.

When it officially opens, 400 works from the prolific founder of Cubism will be on display. Until then, this weekend’s visitors will mostly be viewing bare white walls, white ceilings, decorative white stucco reliefs, white staircases, and empty display cabinets.

For some, the reception at the preview was tepid.

“It’s great to see the restoration. It’s beautiful. But where’s all the art?” asked Pierre Vercueil, 23.

Organizers said it is important symbolically for the museum to open on national heritage day, even if the space is not yet ready, adding that the official opening in October will feature actual Picassos on the walls.

For Picasso-lovers interested in more than sparkling interiors this weekend, there will be six large-format works made by the Spanish-born artist peppered around the 3,700 square meter space including the impressive canvass “Three Women at the Fountain” from 1921.

These tableaux were selected carefully from the vast collection of some 5,000 works and nearly 300 paintings.

The renovation is aimed at helping to double the possible number of visitors but the bad press may not have helped.

Claude Picasso, the painter’s son, denounced the long delays in reopening the museum, one of the city’s premier art attractions.

Speaking to Le Figaro in May, Mr. Claude Picasso said former Culture Minister Aurelie Filippetti had told him that troubles getting security guards in place, as required under French regulations, were behind the delay. Mr. Picasso said he couldn’t understand that, and that he had the impression that France “doesn’t care” about him or his father.

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