22 December 2017

Nice book for five million

Rico says, hey, if you got the money...

On 22 December 1980, American oil tycoon Armand Hammer paid $5,126,000 at auction for a notebook containing writings by the legendary artist Leonardo da Vinci.:


The manuscript, written around 1508, was one of some thirty similar books da Vinci produced during his lifetime, on a variety of subjects. It contained 72 loose pages featuring some three hundred notes and detailed drawings, all relating to the common theme of water and how it moved. Experts have said that da Vinci drew on it to paint the background of his masterwork, the Mona Lisa:


The text, written in brown ink and chalk, read from right to left, an example of da Vinci’s favored mirror-writing technique. The painter Giuseppi Ghezzi discovered the notebook in 1690 in a chest of papers belonging to Guglielmo della Porto, a sixteenth-century Milanese sculptor who had studied Leonardo’s work. In 1717, Thomas Coke, the first Earl of Leicester, bought the manuscript and installed it among his impressive collection of art at his family estate in England.
More than two centuries later, the notebook, by now known as the Leicester Codex, showed up on the auction block at Christie’s in London, England when the current Lord Coke was forced to sell it to cover inheritance taxes on the estate and art collection. In the days before the sale, art experts and the press speculated that the notebook would go for seven to twenty million dollars. In fact, the bidding started at $1.4 million and lasted less than two minutes, as Hammer and at least two or three other bidders competed to raise the price a hundred thousand dollars at a time. The five million dollar price tag was the highest ever paid for a manuscript at that time; a copy of the legendary Gutenberg Bible had gone for only two million in 1978. “I’m very happy with the price. I expected to pay more,” Hammer said later. “There is no work of art in the world I wanted more than this.” Lord Coke, on the other hand, was only “reasonably happy” with the sale; he claimed the proceeds would not be sufficient to cover the taxes he owed (Rico says owing that much in taxes meant he had a lot more...)
Hammer, the president of Occidental Petroleum Corporation, renamed his prize the Hammer Codex and added it to his valuable collection of art. When Hammer died in 1990, he left the notebook and other works to the Armand Hammer Museum of Art and Cultural Center at UCLA, the University of California at Los Angeles. Several years later, the museum offered the manuscript for sale, claiming it was forced to take this action to cover legal costs incurred when the niece and sole heir of Hammer’s late wife, Frances, sued the estate, claiming Hammer had cheated Frances out of her rightful share of his fortune. On 11 November 1994, the Hammer Codex was sold to an anonymous bidder (soon identified as Bill Gates, the billionaire founder of Microsoft) at a New York auction for a new record high price of nearly thirty-one million dollars. Gates restored the title of Leicester Codex and has since loaned the manuscript to a number of museums for public display.

Rico says, as ever, it's nice to have money, and all these guys do...

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