Santa Fe New Mexican

Battle of wills keeps Leonardo masterpiec­e under wraps

French secretly confirm painting is authentic

- By David D. Kirkpatric­k and Elaine Sciolino

French curators had worked for a decade to prepare a major exhibition marking the 500th anniversar­y of the death of Leonardo da Vinci. When it opened, though, the most talked-about painting they had planned to show — Salvator Mundi, the most expensive work ever sold at auction — was nowhere to be seen.

Plucked from shabby obscurity at a New Orleans estate sale, the painting had been sold in 2017 as a rediscover­ed “lost” Leonardo and fetched more than $450 million from an anonymous bidder who kept it hidden from view. The chance to see it at the Louvre museum’s anniversar­y show two years later had created a sensation in the internatio­nal art world, and its absence whipped up a storm of new questions.

Had the Louvre concluded that the painting was not actually the work of Leonardo, as a vocal handful of scholars had insisted? Had the buyer — reported to be Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, although he had never acknowledg­ed it — declined to include it in the show for fear of public scrutiny? The tantalizin­g notion that the brash Saudi prince might have gambled a fortune on a fraud had already inspired a cottage industry of

Salvator Mundi on books, documentar­ies, art world gossip columns and even a proposed Broadway musical. None of that was true.

In fact, the crown prince had secretly shipped Salvator Mundi to the Louvre more than a year earlier, in 2018, according to several French officials and a confidenti­al French report on its authentici­ty that was obtained by the New York Times. The report also states that the painting belongs to the Saudi Culture Ministry — something the Saudis have never acknowledg­ed.

A team of French scientists subjected the unframed canvas to a weekslong forensic examinatio­n with some of the most advanced technology available to the art world, and in their undisclose­d report they had pronounced, with more authority than any previous assessment, that the painting appeared to be the work of Leonardo’s own hand.

Yet the Saudis had withheld it nonetheles­s, for entirely different reasons: a disagreeme­nt over a Saudi demand that their painting of Jesus should hang next to Mona Lisa, several French officials said last week, speaking on condition of anonymity because the talks were confidenti­al.

Far from a dispute about art scholarshi­p, the withdrawal of the painting appears instead to have turned on questions of power and ego.

Some art world skeptics say they suspect the Saudis were never serious about including the painting in the French show and had wanted to keep the work under wraps to increase the commercial potential of installing it later at a planned tourism site in the kingdom. Current and former French officials, though, say that the Saudis were eager for their newly acquired trophy to hang at the Louvre, as long as it was placed beside the world’s most famous painting.

Dismissing those demands as irrational and unworkable, the French, in turn, refused to make public their own positive assessment of its authentici­ty unless the Saudis let Salvator Mundi hang on the walls of the Louvre, which the French government oversees.

And the resulting diplomatic standoff between the French and the Saudis has kept the painting out of sight as the cloud of intrigue around it continues to swell.

“Frankly, I think all that taradiddle would have evaporated,” said Luke Syson, director of the Fitzwillia­m Museum in Cambridge, England, and a curator who oversaw a 2011 Leonardo exhibition at the National Gallery in London that included Salvator Mundi.

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 ?? KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? An employee poses with Leonardo da Vinci’s display in 2017 at Christie’s auction rooms in London.
KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO An employee poses with Leonardo da Vinci’s display in 2017 at Christie’s auction rooms in London.

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