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The Savonnerie carpets, a gargantuan undertaking commissioned by Louis XIV in the late 1660s for the floor of the Grande Galerie (a.k.a. the Grand Gallery) in the Louvre Palace, was an ambitious project that involved creating 92 hand-knotted wool carpets, each approximately 9 meters (about 30 feet) wide. It was designed to cover the entire length of the gallery, 440 meters long, making it one of the largest such undertakings in history. Though the project took about twenty years (roughly 1668-1688) to complete, the carpets were never installed in the Louvre as intended. Louis had shifted his focus and court to Versailles in 1682, abandoning major renovations at the Louvre, so the pieces were put in storage, later dispersed as diplomatic gifts, sold during the French Revolution, or repurposed elsewhere. Only about 41 survived, with 33 remaining fully intact today.
This special exhibition titled "The Rediscovered Treasure of the Sun King" ("Le Trésor retrouvé du Roi-Soleil"), brings together about 30 of these historic carpets on public display for the first time in over 350 years making it a limited, perhaps once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see them reunited. - BPJ
Grand Palais
3 avenue du Général Eisenhower 75008
Ends Sunday February 8, 2026
Below: from above


