PARIS — After months of pressure, the Louvre has a new director.
Christophe Leribault was named to lead the landmark on Wednesday, half a day after the previous director, Laurence des Cars, resigned. The leadership change at the world's most-visited museum comes after the October crown jewels heist and a string of failures that battered confidence in one of the country's most prized institutions.
The rapid handover is meant to restore order at a museum hit by a punishing run of crises: the heist, labor unrest, water leaks, aging infrastructure and a suspected, decade-long $12 million ticket fraud scheme.
It also protects a politically loaded project for President Emmanuel Macron, who has made the Louvre overhaul a signature cultural legacy plan as he eyes the end of his term next year.
The government cast Leribault, a veteran museum director, as the steady hand for a battered institution, with responsibility for both the Louvre's security overhaul and its modernization.
An 18th-century specialist trained at the École du Louvre, Leribault has led France's biggest museums, including the Petit Palais and the Musée d'Orsay.
He most recently ran Versailles, one of France's biggest heritage sites, with heavy visitor traffic and an annual budget of about 170 million euros ($200 million).
His résumé makes him a crisis-era choice: a curator-administrator shaped by France's museum system and used to public scrutiny, large crowds and the mechanics of state cultural power.