You are currently viewing Bid for the Louvre: Auction of one-off experiences and renowned pieces raises €2.3 million

Bid for the Louvre: Auction of one-off experiences and renowned pieces raises €2.3 million

Can you put a price on a one-of-a kind nighttime tour of the Musee du Louvre, as you explore the famed museum by torchlight?

According to a recent auction, yes, you can – and it’s €38,000 ($46,500).

In a collaboration between auction house Christie’s, Paris’s Louvre and the Hotel Drouot, a number of one-off experiences and artworks went under the hammer last week.

The Bid for the Louvre sale, which was hosted online between December 1 and December 15, raised an impressive €2,365,000, when all lots were tallied.

Experiences included a chance to attend the annual inspection of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, alongside Jean-Luc Martinez, president-director of the Louvre, which went for €80,000.

A private concert in the museum’s Salle des Caryatides, which once served as a reception room to the kings of France, raised €42,000, while the chance to have your name on a newly planted tree and a restored bench in the Garden of the Tuileries went for €24,000.

A private tour of the Louvre with Martinez raised €38,000, while an opportunity to walk through the rooftops of the Louvre Palace in the company of French photographer and street artist JR sold for €42,000.

All the experiences are valid for two years, until December 2022.

When it came to the pieces that bidders could take home with them, Peinture, a work by French painter Pierre Soulages, was the biggest sale of the entire auction, selling for €1.4 million.

A bespoke Vacheron Constantin watch, which will be inspired by its new owner’s favourite work of art from the museum, raised €280,000, and La Rose du Louvre by French artist Jean-Michel Othoniel sold for €90,000.

 

There were 23 lots sold in total, with registered bidders from 24 countries, Christie’s revealed.

“This is a testimony that the desire for the Louvre is now more than ever alive, that our patrons remain faithful to the call for solidarity and education, for a museum open to all, especially youth and families,” said Martinez, as the results of the auction were announced.

Proceeds from the auction will go towards the Louvre, namely its Studio, a space dedicated to artistic and cultural education. The venue, which is set to open in 2021, aims to make the museum accessible to everyone, including students and people of determination.

www.thenationalnews.com