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New galleries for American painting at the Metropolitan
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A new wing for the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
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Guggenheim gives nod to Helsinki museum
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Prado puts rediscovered Bruegel painting on display
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The Tel Aviv Museum of art celebrates the opening of the...
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Musee d’Orsay still on strike
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The Jewish Museum in Vienna re-opens
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MAS - The youngest museum in Antwerp
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New Thyssen museum set to open in Spain
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Prado and Hermitage to swap works
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Louvre buys Cranach’s “The Three Graces”
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New York museum to open a wing dedicated to the art of...
The two main museums in the Norwegian capital Oslo, the Munch Museum and the National Gallery, closed to visitors on Thursday after security guards went on strike over pay.
The Munch museum, which holds the largest collection of works by Expressionist pioneer Edvard Munch including famed painting "The Scream", said it would be shut on Thursday and Friday.
The national gallery -- which also has a version of "The Scream" by the Norwegian master who died in 1944 -- has been closed since Tuesday.
"This is very sad, primarily for our visitors," Lise Mjoes, director of art collections for the Oslo municipality, told local television.
"To come to Oslo and not see Munch, if it is something that one has been wanting to do for a long time, that would be terribly sad," she added.
Nearly 2,500 security guards are on strike in Norway after pay negotiations failed, also leading to disruption at a dozen provincial airports.-AFP
Published 18.06.2010
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