Situated in the very heart of Paris, the Musée du Louvre and its eight hundred windows - providing the ideal frames - afford some of the finest views of the French capital: the river and its bridges, the Tuileries Gardens, the Eiffel Tower, and even Montmartre.
With the passing seasons and hours of the day - as well as night - photographer Lois Lammerhuber has caught the invisible aspects of this prestigious art gallery. These images invite the reader to rediscover a supposedly well-known site through off-kilter, poetic, and often eccentric perspectives, through surprising oppositions in which the works of the museum - and the museum itself - are enterily revisited.
The boundaries of the real become blurred, giving rise to a different view: that of the unexpected.