People who come to Paris can't help but fall in love with the place, so let's continue with the love affair and explore the city once more! Share a cultural experience with host Susan Enriquez as she visits The Louvre, the world-renowned museum that is home to more than 350,000 valuable works of art including Leonardo Da Vinci's “The Monalisa”. And just like Da Vinci's famous subject, Susan will also pose for an artist she met at The Louvre so she too can be immortalized as a piece of art! Our irrepressible host will take the ultimate trip from Paris, France to Brussels, Belgium, setting her sights on the beautiful landscape while enjoying a luxurious train ride. Aside from taking in a bit of culture and traveling first class, Susan will also let her inner child come out at EuroDisney, the magical place that never fails to enchant adults and children alike.
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It’s an unlikely outcome, but the Renaissance master is one of several names suggested by art experts keen to pre-empt today’s announcement by the NGV of a major discovery among its 16th-century paintings. But The Australian believes the work in question is Portrait of a Youth, painted in about 1520 and purchased by the gallery in 1965 through European art contacts. Its circa 1520 provenance suggests it could be Francois I of France, a young Henry VIII, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (later Charles I of Spain), or one of the Medici, D’Este or Borgia families. For the past two years, staff conservator Carl Villis has been researching Portrait of a Youth in Italy and in the gallery’s conservation laboratory. One year after the NGV was embarrassed by the de-attribution of its late 19th-century work Head of a Man from Vincent Van Gogh to an unknown Dutch painter, the gallery may have a new masterpiece.
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The sale is unlikely, however, to include Ceroli’s massive and intricate sphere, entitled Squilibrio (Imbalance), which stands at Fiumicino airport outside Rome and is intended as a homage to Leonardo Da Vinci, the Renaissance genius who foresaw manned flight. Officials at Alitalia, which began flying in 1947, said the collection had its beginnings during happier times in the 1950s, when the airline bought modern art works to decorate its boardrooms, VIP lounges and even its fleet of DC8 aircraft. The policy was intended to show the world the best of Italy on the country’s flag carrier, officials said. Last week he announced that, despite protests by Alitalia trade unions, he had agreed to sell the airline to a group of Italian investors, CAI, in a deal worth more than €1 billion (£840 million). He said the handover would take place on December 1 but ENAC, the Italian aviation authority, said yesterday that the relaunch would be delayed till mid-December as “loose ends” were tied up, including final talks with the unions and the sale of some assets.
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