Who knew the Louvre commissions comic books?
The Louvre, working with NBM, a New York-based graphic novel publisher, publishes stories about the museum by different artists: they are already on their fourth volume, Museum Vaults: Excerpts from the Journal of an Expert by French artist Marc-Antoine Mathieu.
From Publisher’s Weekly as quoted on Amazon:
Mathieu’s [story] follows an expert hired to catalogue a vast, half-ruined museum; he encounters inhabitants living in the lower reaches who have no understanding of the location or its contents. A Kafkaesque catalogue of paradoxes ensues: paintings kept in the dark so the light will not damage the colors that no one will ever see; statues restored then broken then defaced to keep their states “authentic”; a frame maker who considers his contribution the true definition of painting. As years go by, the expert becomes old and unkempt as further and further levels of absurdist cataloguing are discovered. Eventually, he discovers the deepest layers and the secret behind the Mona Lisa, even as he passes his journal on to another “expert” for a continuation of these meaningless attempts to quantify art without perceiving its beauty. The story is rendered in grim, gray tones, which make the endless rounds of the museum workers look all the more fruitless. Like the expert, readers will be glad for the rays of real light and art at the end of this dark satire.
Read an excerpt at New York Magazine: but beware. The excerpt may be a spoiler that possibly gives away the secret behind the Mona Lisa. Hopefully there’s another secret to the Mona Lisa and the one in the excerpt is just part of a larger plot.
The NBM site also has further excerpts.