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One portrait, "Shooting Marilyn (Sage Blue)," sold for $195 million at Christie's in New York, becoming the most expensive work of art in the United States and the second most expensive portrait of a play in the world

author:He Ming 520

One-width portrait

"Shooting Marilyn (Sage Blue)"

Sold at Christie's in New York for $195 million

Become the most expensive work of art in the United States

It is also the second highest price in the world

Why is the portrait of a play so popular?

The first high-priced work "The Savior"

It was painted by Leonardo da Vinci

Although not as good as "Mona Lisa" and "The Last Supper"

But it can be said that the world recognizes and interprets his lifelong achievements

Marilyn Monroe was lost in power

In the political arena of the United States for more than two hundred years

Such phenomena are not many but not many

The moment she was gazed at by Kennedy

It is doomed to fate involuntarily

Although women are too beautiful, it is also the original sin

If only she could give up fame and fortune to commit herself to oneself

Nor will they die early

It's a pity that the drama can't clean up in its bones

To wander among men is to play with fire and self-immolation

The terrible thing is the two brothers

(The picture comes from the net, if there is infringement contact to delete)

One portrait, "Shooting Marilyn (Sage Blue)," sold for $195 million at Christie's in New York, becoming the most expensive work of art in the United States and the second most expensive portrait of a play in the world
One portrait, "Shooting Marilyn (Sage Blue)," sold for $195 million at Christie's in New York, becoming the most expensive work of art in the United States and the second most expensive portrait of a play in the world
One portrait, "Shooting Marilyn (Sage Blue)," sold for $195 million at Christie's in New York, becoming the most expensive work of art in the United States and the second most expensive portrait of a play in the world
One portrait, "Shooting Marilyn (Sage Blue)," sold for $195 million at Christie's in New York, becoming the most expensive work of art in the United States and the second most expensive portrait of a play in the world

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