The Louvre is a converted palace. Originally built in 1190 as a fort, in the 14th century Charles V turned it into the royal residence, and so it remained for the French kings until 1682. Accommodations were made to show parts of the Royal collection, and selected artists were allowed to live and have their studios there. Finally, in 1793, it became a museum open to the public. In 1989, wanting to keep up with the times, the French government had the world-renowned architect, I. M. Pei created a new entrance in the center of the courtyard in the form of the now-famed glass pyramid.
Catherine the Great introduced art to the Hermitage in St. Petersburg in 1764 to house 225 paintings she purchased from the Berlin merchant, Johann Ernst Gotzkowsky. The Hermitage was opened to the public in 1852 by Emperor Nicholas I, who added a New Hermitage building specifically to house the collection as a museum.
In the U.S., business moguls of the Gilded Age bought what they deemed the best art from Europe for their baronial style mansions. In 1882, Henry Clay Frick built Clayton in Pittsburgh, where his family lived until 1905, when they moved to the New York mansion he constructed with the aim of making his art collection public. They did not give Clayton up since Frick’s business and coke and steel empire was registered in Pittsburgh. In 1970, Frick’s daughter, Helen Clay Frick, moved back and opened Clayton as a museum for her personal collection that included early Renaissance Sienese painting and 18th-century French works of art.
Near the end of last year, the Grand Egyptian Museum was opened near the Giza Pyramids. It has been described as the world’s largest archeological complex dedicated to a single civilization. The inauguration of the monumental building brought heads of state leading delegations from 79 countries to pay homage to the greatness of a culture, not in a palace of former rulers, but in a purpose-built statement of grandiose proportions.





































