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Added on the 31/07/2017 16:01:11 - Copyright : RT Ruptly EN
Paris, June 11 (EFE) -. (Camera: Martí Rodríguez) A replica of the famous painting by Leonardo Da Vinci La Gioconda, which in the 60s was claimed as true by its owner, Raymond Hekking, will be auctioned from on Friday until next Friday at Christie's in Paris with an estimated value of 200,000 euros.FOOTAGE OF THE MONA LISA REPLICA.SOUNDBITES OF PIERRE ETIENNE, ANCIENT ART DIRECTOR OF CHRISTIE’S FRANCE (IN FRENCH).Translation:1. This whole story is not a money story but a matter of conviction. Hekking was truly convinced that his version was the good one. And from there he entered a media game: in 1954 he summoned the regional press in Nice to tell them that he was challenging the Louvre to prove that his work was the original.2. He says that after the 1911 painting was stolen by an Italian thief, the painting that was returned to the Louvre by the police was not the original.3. We think that a collector can buy a replica like this because that way he will have this universal image, which is also from the 17th century. And he is also going to appropriate his history and thus have his own Mona Lisa.
Two environmental activists throw soup at the armoured glass protecting Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" at the Louvre museum in Paris, justifying their action by their desire to promote "the right to healthy and sustainable food." IMAGES
Under a blazing sun, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz meets visitors on the Open day of the Federal Government in Berlin, Germany. From the 19th to the 20th of August 2023, the Federal Chancellery, the Press and Information Office and the Federal Ministries are open to visitors, so they can catch a glimpse behind the scenes and meet ministers and the chancellor in person. IMAGES
Madrid, Sep 27 (EFE) .- (Camera: Manuel Única) The Prado Museum enters Leonardo Da Vinci's workshop with an exhibition that brings together works by his best students. The exhibition brings two of the most famous copies face to face: the enigmatic "Mona Lisa" and the controversial "Salvator Mundi".FOOTAGE OF THE EXHIBITION AT THE PRADO MUSEUM IN MADRID
Dubai, Aug 16 (EFE/EPA).- An interactive Digital installation featuring millions of colorful particles dancing around to three-dimensional space greets visitors to to new artistic hotspot in Dubai.The region's largest and most advanced Digital arts gallery of "Infinity give Lumieres" exhibits art works including Van Gogh's Starry Nights, Thomas Vanz's See and Dreamed Japan by DannyRose Studio. The arts Digital gallery spread over 2,700 square meters, using 130 projectors, 58 speakers, and 3,000 HD digital moving images. (Camera: ADI HAIDER).SHOT LIST: PEOPLE VISIT THE 'THE INFINITY GIVE LUMIERES' DIGITAL ARTS GALLERY AT DUBAI MALL IN DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES.