I would say that after the Eiffel Tower, this museum is second on a tourist list of the “must sees” when visiting Paris. You can’t visit Paris and without taking the classic picture outside this museum. This museum is one of the largest museums I have ever visited; without a doubt you can’t finish seeing all its artwork in one day. I could say that you need around an entire week to be able to go through the whole museum. Apart form being gigantic, it is recognized for the triangular shape it has from the outside to the inside. This museum possesses many important and well known pieces of art from Michelangelo’s slaves to the Venus de milo, and not to forget the famous Leonardo Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, only to name a few. When walking in the museum, you are going to encounter many art collections from all over the world. There are Greek, Etruscan, Roman Antiques, Italian Renaissance, and Eastern Antiquities to Islamic Arts collections and many more. When walking in the museum, I noticed many repetitions of goddesses in the Roman and Greek section. These ancient mythologies have piqued curiosity of many different cultures and times, because these goddesses were the idols of the people in the past. They worshipped them and looked at them as their role models. It is important for us to know the stories of Ancient Mythology so we can understand and appreciate this type of art in a more knowledgeable way. Stories from ancient mythology and the current religious traditions are very similar. Nowadays, people have their own religion beliefs and traditions, but every religion has a god they look up to in the same way ancient mythologies used to look up at their goddesses. The Classical artwork could be distinguished from the pieces of early writing in the Mesopotamia wing. The Mesopotamia wing section is cuneiform in heavy stone. While the Classical wing area is spotless and defined. While roaming one of the biggest museums in the world, I couldn’t help but notice that the area most visited by tourists was Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa painting. Tourist form all over the world would try to push them to the front of the circle to take a perfect picture of this famous painting. Making myself think: why do thousands of tourists travel all the way here to take a picture with this painting, while ignoring the rest of the pieces exhibited?