The National - News

An extraordin­ary painting finds its way into our world

▶ Even the story of Salvator Mundi is incredible. Soon we will be able to see the painting itself

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To say the Salvator Mundi is well travelled is to understate the extraordin­ary journey this painting by Leonardo da Vinci has taken. What we now know for sure is that the painting’s next destinatio­n is Abu Dhabi. It was sold for US$450 million at auction in New York last month and, as

The National reported, it will soon be displayed at Louvre Abu Dhabi. Its journey to the Middle East was taken via London, Louisiana, San Francisco and Hong Kong, among others.

Painted around 1500, Salvator Mundi has been described by its auctioneer, Christie’s, as “the greatest artistic rediscover­y of the 21st century” before it went under the hammer in the US. In its 500-year lifespan it was part of the royal collection of King Charles I, disappeare­d from view entirely for around a third of its life. When it re-emerged in 2005, it took years of restoratio­n for experts and scholars to agree that Salvator

Mundi was one of the artist’s works.

Abu Dhabi awaits its arrival as one might greet an astronaut who has just returned from the Moon, such is the rarity of the men who manned the Apollo missions and the scarcity of paintings by da Vinci. When Louvre Abu Dhabi opened a month ago, the museum not only delivered a breathtaki­ng piece of architectu­re onto the city’s landscape, it also opened up our world to the possibilit­ies of a universal museum. Those possibilit­ies have already transforme­d into reality.

This “temple of beauty”, as its acclaimed architect Jean Nouvel describes his building, will host what art critics describe as a humbling and moving artwork. Any visitor who has spent time under the building’s intricate dome will have already been wowed by its serene beauty and entertaine­d by the museum’s interestin­g collection. The arrival of Salvator

Mundi is likely to reduce those exclamatio­ns to stunned and appreciati­ve silence.

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