Not too long ago, Beyoncé and Jay-Z were plagued by tales of marital infidelity, and <em>Becky with the Good Hair</em> and the world worried if this pop-star union would survive. Now, not only has the <a href="https://www.thenational.ae/arts-culture/music/what-we-learnt-from-jay-z-beyonc%C3%A9-album-1.741034">relationship survived</a>, but it has strengthened, if their latest video is anything to go by. Released under their family name – Carter – to prove the two superstars are now inseparable, the title of the album is <em>Everything Is Love</em>. For the first single, <em>Apesh*t</em>, the pair filmed the video in none other than the Musee du Louvre in Paris, which aside from being almost impossible to gain access to – unless your surname is Carter, evidently – is also home to some of the most famous artworks in the world. The result is a video that is loaded with art, symbolism, and lots and lots of very expensive clothes. The pair stand in front of the world most famous painting: the <em>Mona Lisa</em> by Leonardo da Vinci. Beyonce matches her girlie pink suit by Peter Pilotto with Messika diamonds (diamonds are a girl's best friend), while Jay-Z opts for a more masculine shade of blue. Starring straight into camera, it is impossible not to draw comparisons between the duo and the inscrutable lady behind them. Beyonce dons opulent Versace to re-enact Marie-Guillemine Benoist's painting <em>Portrait of a Negress</em> (painted in 1800), which was the first time a woman of colour was depicted for her own sake, rather than a slave or as a thing of curiosity. An important benchmark in European thinking, and part of the glacial move away from slavery, it is no coincidence this painting was chosen. Jay-Z, meanwhile, wears all black, apart from the gleaming gold chain around his neck. Jacques Louis-David's painting <em>The Coronation of the Emperor Napoleon I and the Crowning of the Empress Josephine in Notre Dame Cathedral</em> (1807) is the background for Beyonce surrounded by her dancers. Wearing Burberry, Beyonce is in the centre, and fully in charge, as is Napoleon in the painting behind her. It is telling that Beyonce aligns herself with the emperor, and not his wife. The pair dress in all white to stand below the <em>The Winged Victory of Samothrace</em>, a masterpiece in Parian marble. In a sculptural gown by couture house Stephane Rolland, and rippling Alexis Mabille cape, Beyonce looks like Nike herself. In the crypts of the museum sits the Great Sphinx of Tanis, which is one of the largest outside Egypt and discovered in 1825. Here, Beyonce wears a custom-made, tan leather bodysuit, hat and coat by MCM x Misa Hylton, and knee-high boots from Y/Project, the label headed by Glenn Martens. Click below to watch the music video: ________________________ <strong>Read more:</strong> __________________________