Works from the Center Pompidou will be exhibited in the galleries near the museum during the work, announces Rachida Dati

The asbestos removal and renovation work should lead to the closure of the Center Pompidou from the summer of 2025 to 2030. This decision was criticized by many personalities and was the cause of protests by employees.

France Télévisions – Culture Editorial

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Facade of the Center Pompidou in June 2024. (MAGALI COHEN / HANS LUCAS)

The Minister of Culture, Rachida Dati, announced on Monday that some of the works from the Center Pompidou would be exhibited “in nearby galleries” the time of the work, reminding us that it was necessary.

“There has to be work,” declared the minister on Sud Radio, while artists, politicians and intellectuals call, in a petition published on Saturday, Emmanuel Macron and Rachida Dati not to completely close this establishment: “a serious mistake” according to them.

“The work is extremely important,” supported the Minister, further explaining that she “met the association of traders but also gallery owners who are around the Center”.

“We will have a mobility program for works that are exhibited at the Center Pompidou in nearby galleries,” she said, specifying that she had made this decision “before the dissolution” announced by the Head of State on the evening of the European elections. She recalled that exhibitions would also be held “at the Grand Palais, in part”.

The museum of modern art, also called Beaubourg and inaugurated almost half a century ago, must close in the summer of 2025 until 2030 for major asbestos removal and renovation work, estimated at 260 million euros financed by the State.

Apart from the Grand Palais, the works must also be hosted at the Louvre or in other Parisian museums (Orsay, Orangerie, Jeu de Paume, Guimet, Quai Branly…), at the Center Pompidou in Metz, in Martinique and Guadeloupe, as well as abroad.

These jobs “can and should be carried out in a fragmented manner, without completely closing the entire site”, said, in the petition, Daniel Buren, Julie Gayet, Catherine Millet, Alain Minc, Jacques Toubon and Manuel Valls, among other personalities.


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