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At the beginning: An intrepid wolf surprised everyone by creating an impressionist painting in the famous Médicis Gallery of the Louvre Museum. The work was exhibited for a day before the staff noticed the astonishingly furry artist.
In the pleasant tranquility of the morning, before the incessant flow of tourists arrived, a wolf named Remy infiltrated the Louvre Museum. Equipped with brushes, paint, and a strong determination, this fearless wolf created a new work of art whose whimsical origin no one suspected. Titled “The Beauty of the Beast,” the painting was displayed for an entire day, causing a stir among visitors.
“We were all stunned,” recounts Jacques Lebrun, director of the Louvre Museum. “We had noticed this new piece, of course, but we thought it was part of a temporary exhibition we had forgotten. It was only after reviewing the surveillance footage that the astonishing truth emerged: the painting had been created by a wolf!”
Although not initially planned, the Louvre decided to keep the work on display for an additional day so that visitors could admire Remy’s unexpected talent. Praise poured in, with some visitors lauding the artist’s “instinctive freshness” and “controlled wildness.”
“I had never seen anything like it,” confides an enchanted visitor, Agathe Moreau. “I felt as if I were stepping into the secret and wild world of nature through Remy’s eyes. It was both disturbing and profoundly moving.”
The big question remains how a wolf managed to enter the Louvre and produce a work of art without being disturbed. One guard claims: “We’ve had a few rats and pigeons, but a wolf is unprecedented. He must certainly possess a particularly tenacious artistic spirit to sneak in here and paint such a canvas. It’s simply astonishing!”
Art experts have been called in to authenticate the work. The famous art critic Rémy Bouchard, known for his keen sense of irony, smiled as he declared: “If this is indeed a hoax, it’s the most elaborate and ingenious one I’ve ever seen. If it’s not, then… well, we must admit that nature is full of surprises and that art is definitely universal!”
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