Lebanon's gracious Sursock Museum is set to reopen on Friday, more than two years after a catastrophic explosion at Beirut port devastated the architectural gem and its modern and contemporary art collection.
One of history's biggest non-nuclear explosions, the blast on August 4, 2020 destroyed much of Beirut port and surrounding areas, killing more than 215 people and injuring over 6,500.
The explosion wreaked havoc on the Sursock Museum, located less than one kilometer from the port, shattering its delicate arched windows and damaging its walls, wooden panelling and 50 of its artworks.
"Seventy percent of the Sursock Museum was wrecked," museum director Karina El Helou told AFP.
"It's the first time we have seen such damage to artworks" at the museum, she added.
Authorities said the huge blast was caused by a fire in a portside warehouse where a large stockpile of ammonium nitrate fertilizer had been haphazardly stored for years.
Workers were putting the finishing touches to installations when AFP toured the rehabilitated museum, a cultural beacon in a country whose treasures are often poorly protected and showcased.
Friday's reopening is "a symbol of hope, of a return to cultural life in Lebanon," Helou said.
She expressed hope that "this opening will be a gift for the whole city."
"As a museum, we missed the visitors," she added.
- Still 'in shock' -
Built as a mansion in 1912, the building opened its doors as a museum nearly 50 years later, as instructed in the will of its owner, Nicolas Sursock, who wanted his grand home converted after his death.
The building's majestic white facade has now been returned to its pre-blast glory, colored light spilling inside once again through its tall stained-glass windows.
One of the collection's gems, a 1939 portrait of Nicolas Sursock by renowned Dutch-French artist Kees van Dongen, was among the works damaged in the blast.
The portrait was carefully restored by Paris' Pompidou Centre, and is back in pride of place for the reopening.
The history of Lebanon and its art scene -- including during the 1975-1990 civil war -- is in the spotlight in the retrospective organized for the reopening.
"The artists are citizens who went through all the difficult times of the war... and nonetheless produced high quality work," Helou said.
Just one painting on show -- by artist Paul Guiragossian -- was only partially restored and bears testament to the disaster, Helou said.
On the first floor, the museum's library and archive officer, Rowina Bou-Harb, said she was still "in shock" more than two years after the explosion.
The day after the disaster, "our only concern was to save the artworks," she recalled.
The restoration of the private institution cost almost $2.5 million.
It was largely funded by Italy through LiBeirut, an initiative of the United Nations' cultural body UNESCO, as well as by France and ALIPH, the International Alliance for the Protection of Heritage in Conflict Areas.
"The Sursock Museum is a gem of Lebanese architecture and cultural life," UNESCO director general Audrey Azoulay said in a statement announcing the completion of the rehabilitation work.
It is "a powerful symbol of pride and resilience for the Beirut community," she added.
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