Rare painting by da Vinci sells for $450M at auction

Bidding representatives stand under a video image of Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi after it sold for $450 million at auction Wednesday evening at Christie’s in New York.
Bidding representatives stand under a video image of Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi after it sold for $450 million at auction Wednesday evening at Christie’s in New York.

NEW YORK -- A painting of Christ by the Renaissance master Leonardo da Vinci sold for $450 million at auction Wednesday, obliterating previous records for artworks sold at auction or privately.

The painting, called Salvator Mundi, Italian for "Savior of the World," is one of fewer than 20 paintings by Leonardo known to exist and the only one in private hands. It was sold by Christie's auction house, which didn't immediately identify the buyer.

The highest price ever paid for a work of art at auction had been $179.4 million, for Picasso's Women of Algiers (Version O) in May 2015, also at Christie's in New York. The highest known sale price for any artwork had been $300 million, for Willem de Kooning's Interchange, sold privately in September 2015 by the David Geffen Foundation to hedge-fund manager Kenneth Griffin.

A backer of the Salvator Mundi auction had guaranteed a bid of at least $100 million, the opening bid of the auction, which ran for 19 minutes. The price hit $300 million about halfway through the bidding.

People in the auction house gallery applauded and cheered when the bidding reached $300 million and when the hammer came down on the final bid, $400 million.

The record sale price of $450 million includes the buyer's premium, a fee paid by the winner to the auction house.

The 26-inch-tall Leonardo painting dates from about 1500 and shows Christ dressed in Renaissance-style robes, his right hand raised in blessing as his left hand holds a crystal sphere.

Once owned by King Charles I of England, the painting disappeared from view until 1900, when it resurfaced and was acquired by a British collector. At that time it was attributed to a Leonardo disciple, rather than to the master himself.

The painting was sold again in 1958 and then acquired in 2005, badly damaged and partly painted-over, by a consortium of art dealers who paid less than $10,000. The art dealers restored the painting and documented its authenticity as a work by Leonardo.

The painting was sold Wednesday by Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev, who bought it in 2013 for $127.5 million in a private sale that became the subject of a continuing lawsuit.

A Section on 11/16/2017

Upcoming Events