A significantly broken late copy of the Salvator Mundi by Leonardo da Vinci has achieved €1m (with charges) at public sale towards an estimate of €10,000 to €15,000. Offered in a web based Outdated Masters sale organised by Christie’s Paris on 28 November, it represents a unprecedented value for a piece by an unknown artist.
The portray, measuring 63.2cm by 51cm and executed on poplar panel is described as “Italian faculty, [around] 1600, after Leonardo da Vinci“, within the public sale home’s catalogue notes. If this date is right, this can be very unlikely this work comes from the workshop of the artist, who died in France a century earlier.
In accordance with Pierre Etienne, Christie’s worldwide director of Outdated Masters and nineteenth century, no forensic examination on the work’s pigments has been carried out; somewhat a situation report was commissioned by the public sale home. Signed by an unbiased restorer, Bernard Depretz, it signifies that there are “quite a few small losses“, seen within the catalogue on-line, “on the crimson garment of Christ, on the beard, above the top, on the background and on the globe“. An ultraviolet examination exhibits a number of traces of restoration, however, based on the report, “because the necessary components of the portray haven’t been altered, the portray will be thought-about to be in an excellent state of conservation.“ The panel can be mentioned to belong to a household in southern France, however comes with none document of an extended historic provenance.
In his 2019 catalogue for his Leonardo present on the Louvre, Vincent Delieuvin, the curator for Italian portray, listed 22 identified (and more-or -less devoted) copies of Leonardo’s Salvator Mundi—together with this one. This model belongs to a “household” of three compositions. Of those, the one thought-about to be of the very best high quality, has vanished since an public sale sale in 1962. It might have been painted in Leonardo’s workshop, and was listed within the former collections of Richard Worsley and Victoria Alexandrina Hare and her husband Charles Anderson-Pelham, the Earl and Countess Yarborough, based on {a photograph} seen by The Artwork Newspaper. These three copies is perhaps impressed by an intermediate composition, as they present the blessing proper arm ready and with a sleeve cuff much like a preparatory drawing of a material, belonging to the royal assortment in Windsor, which had been corrected later by the artist.
The extraordinary value paid for this copy exhibits the ability of attraction of the Salvator Mundi from the Cook dinner assortment, now the property of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, after having been purchased in 2017 at Christie’s for $450m by Prince Mohammad bin Salman. The portray has not been seen since, contributing to an aura of thriller and fuelling rumours about its destiny. “Every little thing about da Vinci triggers the wildest passions,“ Pierre Etienne says, recalling the €2.9m achieved by a Seventeenth-century copy of the Mona Lisa by Christie’s in a web based sale in 2021. It belonged to a collector and vendor, Raymond Hekking, who had purchased it for the equal of €5 in southern France, and remained satisfied, till his dying in 1977, that it was the true factor.