Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum drew thousands of visitors eager to see Rembrandt van
Rijn's "The Night Watch" and other Dutch treasures after Queen Beatrix reopened
the national museum on Saturday following its decade-long renovation.
There were cheers, fanfares and fireworks
as the 75-year-old Queen, making one of her last official appearances before her
abdication, turned a golden key and officially opened the renovated building
before a crowd estimated by the museum at 10,000.
Inside, the galleries were packed as visitors had to follow a set route through the museum, and many of the most famous works were cordoned off, though still visible, to protect them from the crush.
Rembrandt's huge masterpiece, showing
Amsterdam's civic guard setting off on a march, is the only painting in the
collection to have been restored to its original place.
"I find it marvelous. Despite its size,
it's still an intimate museum, which is remarkable. All the attention is focused
on the art," said Jan-Willem Vosmeer, 45, who lives in Amsterdam.
"The big hall where "The Night Watch"
hangs is impressive, not least because of all the other paintings which are on
display there," said Vosmeer.
Rembrandt's huge painting is approached
along a Gallery of Honour hung with works such as Johannes Vermeer's "Woman
Reading a Letter" and "The Merry Drinker" by Frans Hals.
Many of the prize pieces in the collection
of 8,000 works have been re-displayed in a broader context, with related
paintings, furniture, silver and ceramics arranged in close proximity to each
other as part of the museum's new layout.
The renovation of the museum, which is a
showcase for the Netherlands' art, its rich history as a naval power and
society of merchants, has received rave reviews in the Dutch and international
media in recent weeks.
The museum said more than 75,000 tickets
have been sold online already, and as many as 30,000 visitors were expected on
Saturday when the museum reopened. General Director Wim Pijbes has said his
ambition is for all Dutch children to see "The Night Watch".
The overhaul took far longer than expected
and overshot original estimates, costing 375 million euro ($491 million) as the
architects had to make special provisions to incorporate an existing bicycle
path in the museum's design and ensure that the spaces below sea-level were in
no danger of flooding.
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