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René Huyghe
René Huyghe (3 May 1906, Arras – 5 February 1997, Paris) was a French writer on the history, psychology and philosophy of art. He was also a curator at the Louvre's department of paintings (from 1930), a professor at the Collège de France and from 1960 a member of the Académie française. He was the father of the writer François-Bernard Huyghe. ==Biography== René Huyghe studied philosophy and aesthetics at the Sorbonne and the école du Louvre. Made a curator of the Louvre's department of paintings in 1930, he rose to chief curator and professor of the école du Louvre in 1936, aged only 30. He founded and edited the reviews ''L’Amour de l’Art'' and ''Quadrige''. He was one of the first figures in France to make films on art, such as his ''Rubens'' (winner of a prize at the Venice Biennale), and founded the International Federation of Films on Art. During the Second World War he organised the evacuation of the Louvre's paintings into the unoccupied zone and took charge of their protection until the Liberation of France. In 1950 he was elected to the Collège de France, occupying the chair of psychology of the plastic arts. In 1966 he won the Erasmus Prize at The Hague. In 1974 he was made director of the Musée Jacquemart-André - it was at this time he first met the Japanese philosopher Daisaku Ikeda. He was president of UNESCO's international committee of experts for saving Venice and served on the Conseil artistique des Musées de France.
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