Angelina Jolie-owned painting by Winston Churchill auctions for $11.6 million
LONDON — A Moroccan landscape painted by Winston Churchill and owned by Angelina Jolie sold at auction Monday for nearly $11.6 million, smashing the record for a work by Britain’s World War II leader.
“Tower of the Koutoubia Mosque†sold at Christie’s in London for 8,285,000 pounds, or about $11,590,175. The painting had been estimated at about $2 million to $3.5 million, and the previous record price for a Churchill painting was around $2.5 million.
The image of the 12th century mosque in Marrakech at sunset, with the Atlas Mountains in the background, is a piece of both political and Hollywood history.
The only painting that Britain’s wartime prime minister completed during the 1939-45 conflict, it was completed after the January 1943 Casablanca Conference, where Churchill and U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt planned the defeat of Nazi Germany.
The two leaders visited Marrakech after the conference so that Churchill could show Roosevelt the city’s beauty. Churchill gave the painting to Roosevelt as a memento of the trip.
The painting was sold by Roosevelt’s son after the president’s death in 1945 and had several owners before Jolie and Brad Pitt bought it in 2011.
It was late summer 1939.
The couple separated in 2016 and have spent years enmeshed in divorce proceedings, amid speculation about the division of their extensive art collection. They were declared divorced in 2019 after their lawyers asked for a bifurcated judgment, meaning that two married people can be declared single while other issues, including finances and child custody, remain.
The painting was sold by the Jolie Family Collection. The buyer wasn’t immediately identified.
Churchill painted more than 500 works. Painting was “essential†to Churchill, his great-grandson Duncan Sandys said in a 2016 Times interview. “It’s where he went to restore himself. He’d be consumed by painting. It would refresh his mind. It gave him the ability to step back from any situation, have a change of scenery, then go back and look at the problem from a different perspective.â€
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