PARIS, FRANCE.- The Louvre Museum presents since Friday, an exhibition on the artists affected by the burial of the pharaohs on the tombs of Thebes. The name of the exhibition is ’The Men of the Tomb’ whose work consisted of digging, drawing, painting and sculpting the eternal abodes of Toutmosis, Amenophis and Ramses, who reigned during the New Empire (1550-1069 B.C.). Their village of Deir el-Medineh was constructed to protect their families, situated in a valley located in the proximity of the Valley of the Kings and Queens, on the left shore of the Nile. The exhibition includes 370 works, 250 of which from the collection of the Louvre and its reserves. The curator, the Egyptologist Andreu Guillemette succeeds in reviving the divine world of the pharaohs, but also the world of the living. The exhibition will travel to Brussels in the fall, and then to Turin (Italy) in the winter. It is an homage to the discoveries made in the years 1920-1930 -by Bruyère Bernard. The show is divided into four sections: live, create, believe and die.