Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - I want to go to the Louvre with a tour group and only have three hours of free time to visit. I hope friends who have been there can give me a specific travel guide, such as reading it first.

I want to go to the Louvre with a tour group and only have three hours of free time to visit. I hope friends who have been there can give me a specific travel guide, such as reading it first.

First get the guide map from information. I opened the door early in the morning and went to the Denon Museum to see the three treasures of the Louvre - the goddess Samocrat, Mona Lisa and Aphrodite (Venus of the Isle of Milo). Because if we hadn’t gone to see it as soon as it opened, more and more people would have gathered in these three places later. After reading this, I passed by these places several times during the visit, and they were always crowded with people.

When shopping, no matter which museum you start from, it is best to hold a pen in one hand and a guide map in the other. The guide map is actually very clear, and the digital signs of each exhibition hall are also very easy to identify. Every time you visit an exhibition room, put a check mark on the guide map so you know which exhibition rooms you have visited. The Louvre has three pavilions, each three stories high, with seventy or eighty exhibition rooms on each floor. It's really easy to get lost. But if you know what you have seen and where you have gone, then the chances of going back and taking the wrong path will be greatly reduced. In addition, another advantage of this is that when you are short of time, you can choose what you are interested in and like to read first. If you like historical antiquities, you can naturally start by visiting those from ancient Greece, Etruria, ancient Rome, and the Pharaonic period of Egypt; if you like sculptures, you can first visit the Marley Atrium and Pige Atrium; and if you like paintings, you can naturally start by visiting Mona. It started with Italian paintings on Lisa's floor, and then almost the entire third floor was filled with paintings.

The three-story Richelieu Hall contains German, Flemish, Dutch, Belgian, Russian, Swiss and Scandinavian paintings from the 18th to 19th centuries, with deep colors. The small Flemish hall of the 17th century is dominated by paintings by Rubons, while the large hall is filled with oversized paintings of historical figures and stories. Among French paintings, Pousin's collection mainly consists of portraits. Among French paintings of the 19th century, Corot painted many landscapes, such as his work "Memories of Mortfontein".

The handicraft exhibition hall mainly focuses on furniture arranged in the room. The Nordic sculptures on the basement floor are very different from those of France and Italy. Its colors and materials are more diverse. There are many framed reliefs and wood carvings.