Published: 09:45, August 5, 2020 | Updated: 20:50, June 5, 2023
Fine art and face masks: London's Victoria & Albert Museum reopens
By Reuters

Museum employees wearing a face mask or covering due to the COVID-19 pandemic, pose in the Paul and Jill Ruddock gallery, during a photocall at the Victoria and Albert (V&A) museum in London on August 4, 2020, as the museum prepares to re-open to the public on August 6, after having had to close due to the COVID-19 pandemic. (DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS / AFP)

LONDON - Five thousand years of art and design history will be joined by some more modern items when London’s Victoria and Albert (V&A) museum reopens on Thursday - hand sanitiser dispensers and protective screens.

The 160-year-old museum, named after Queen Victoria and her husband Prince Albert, has been modified to meet the demands of social distancing regulations designed to prevent the spread of a COVID-19 

Mask-wearing visitors will be allowed to tour exhibits on two of the museum’s floors, strolling through 250 years of European Renaissance art, a dazzling Islamic Middle East gallery, and five centuries of fashion from around the world.

Tickets are free but visitors will be allowed in on a booking-only basis after months of coronavirus-enforced closure, marking another step in Britain’s tentative economic and cultural reopening.

“We want people to enjoy themselves again after all these months of looking at screens - to go and see an artefact for yourself, to stand in front of an object, that’s what’s so important,” said museum director Tristram Hunt.

“The V&A has been closed for 138 days, the longest period of closure in its history.”

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The 160-year-old museum, named after Queen Victoria and her husband Prince Albert, has been modified to meet the demands of social distancing regulations designed to prevent the spread of a COVID-19 pandemic that has killed more than 46,000 people in Britain alone.

Hand sanitiser dispensers have been dotted around the sprawling, mosaic-floored building. The gift shop and cafe have been equipped with protective screens.

A museum technician cleans the 'V&A Rotunda Chandelier' by US artist Dale Chihuly, a 27-foot glass chandelier made up of 1,300 exquisite blue and green glass elements, during a photocall at the Victoria and Albert (V&A) museum in London on August 4, 2020. (DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS / AFP)

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Further sections of the V&A’s seven miles of galleries will reopen in phases later in the month.

“What we’ve all discovered is that it’s relatively easy to close, but it’s a lot more difficult to reopen,” Hunt said.

“We’ve got the pubs open, we’ve got the football playing, that’s great. But museums, galleries, schools, places where people can nurture their souls is really important.”