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Spa Life International
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Heritage
Long Live Lascaux

A dramatic new museum celebrating some of the world’s most famous prehistoric cave art has opened at the Lascaux Cave complex in France. Kim Megson visited the new attraction

By Kim Megson | Published in Attractions Management 2017 issue 2


At the Lascaux Caves in the Dordogne region of France, the new International Cave Art Centre has opened, which includes Lascaux IV, a 1:1 replica of an original Lascaux cave.

The €66m ($70.3m, £56.2m) International Centre for Cave Art is located in the town of Montignac-sur-Vézère, at the foot of the hill where the Lascaux caves – adorned with the highest concentration of Paleolithic cave art in Europe – were discovered in 1940.

Within the new centre, designed by Norwegian architects Snøhetta and scenographers Casson Mann, is a replica of the caves called Lascaux IV.

Developed with the assistance of advanced 3D laser-scanning and casting technologies to a tolerance of 1mm, the replication was created by the Périgord Facsimile Workshop (AFSP). The levels of humidity and light, the sounds and smells, and the 16°C temperature of the UNESCO-protected original were also replicated.

Over two years, 25 artists hand-painted 900 metres (2,900 feet) of resin rock reproductions, using the same pigments that the prehistoric painters used 20,000 years ago to recreate 1,900 paintings.

Visitor journey
Visitors to the centre ascend from the lobby to the building’s rooftop, where there is a panoramic view of the surrounding valley. In groups of no more than 30, they then descend a gentle slope, as if retracing the steps of the four young boys who discovered the original caves several decades before, and enter the facsimile.

After journeying through the caves, visitors emerge into the Cave Garden and then enter four linked exhibition rooms. There is also a 3D theatre, which explains the environmental and cultural context that paved the way for the creation of the cave art, and the techniques and equipment used by the original painters.

“There’s a massive amount of knowledge about Lascaux, but also many different interpretations about how it came to be – and no real answers,” says Casson Mann founder Roger Mann. “Our goal then was to provide context to these questions, to move people and to give them room to explore the permutations of what they have just seen inside the facsimile.

“Despite the centre being built around a replica, the visitor experience is designed to be one of magic and authenticity.”

Contemporary design
Snøhetta’s museum building, conceived with local firm SRA Architectes, is a low-rising glass and concrete structure designed as “a horizontal fault that accentuates the line between the surrounding valley and Lascaux hill.”

“The building feels like neither landscape or architecture,” says Snøhetta founder Craig Dykers. “It occupies space and likewise you occupy it. You walk on the roof, it feels like it’s yours and you own your experience. It is very connected to the earth we stand on, and it mediates between the municipal context of the nearby town, the agrarian landscape of the immediate surroundings and the palaeolithic cave within.”

He added that by framing the experience of the cave replica in contemporary design, the approach counters the trap of artifice. The visitor understands they are in the presence of a reproduction, without distracting from its impact.

Honest reproduction
The International Centre for Cave Art complements Lascaux II – a replica cave that opened in 1983 near the original – and prevents that attraction from becoming too busy or overcrowded.

There is also Lascaux III, an 800sqm (8,600sq ft) mobile cave replica, also made by AFSP, that travels around the world.

“The public has a right to figure out what the whole cave looks like,” says Yves Coppens, president of the Scientific Advisory Board in charge of conserving Lascaux Cave. “Creating the replica was a matter of honesty. Lascaux Cave is a whole entity which can only be grasped if visitors have a reproduction of the whole cave before their eyes.”

Coppens compares it to the idea of creating a reproduction Sistine Chapel: it would be no use if it was in fragments.

He says: “It’s important that visitors know that for approximately 50,000 years humans have had the desire to express themselves in graphic form. They’ve had an idea to convey, a surface on which to do it, and a tool. It existed and does still exist, and it’s a good thing that we can give a wide overview of this.”

Read more from this issue of magazine

View contents of 2017 issue 2