Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen’s $1 billion art collection, containing more than 150 masterpieces, is heading to auction — take a look at some of the best paintings

More than 150 pieces of art owned by late Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen are going up for auction in November.
The pieces, spanning 500 years of art history, could raise $1 billion for philanthropic efforts.
The artworks come from the likes of van Gogh, O’Keeffe, Monet, Seurat, and more. Take a look at some highlights from Allen’s collection below.

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A massive art collection from late Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen is hitting the auction block on November 9-10, and it could fetch a combined $1 billion.Paul Allen
Christie’s will be handling the auction of the more than 150 artworks, collectively called “Visionary: The Paul G. Allen Collection,” which span more than 500 years of art history. Proceeds from the sale will be “dedicated to philanthropy, pursuant to Mr. Allen’s wishes,” according to a press release.Agents at a Christie’s auction
Allen, who was 65 years old and the 27th-richest person in the world at the time of his death in 2018, once said of his love for art: “You have to be doing it because you just love the works…and you know that all these works are going to outlast you. You’re only a temporary custodian of them.”
The pieces in the Visionary collection range in price estimates from $1.5 million to upwards of $120 million and come from artists like Vincent van Gogh, Georgia O’Keeffe, Claude Monet, Georges Seurat, and more. Here’s a closer look at some of the highlights from Allen’s collection:
Vincent van Gogh, “Verger avec cyprès” – Estimate of more than $100 million
Claude Monet, “Waterloo Bridge soleil voilé” – Estimate of more than $60 million
Édouard Manet, “Le Grand Canal à Venise” – Estimate of more than $50 million
Paul Gauguin, “Maternité II” – Estimate of more than $90 million
Paul Cézanne, “La Montagne Sainte-Victoire” – Estimate of more than $120 million
Joseph Mallord William Turner, “Depositing of John Bellini’s Three Pictures in La Chiesa Redentore, Venice” – Estimate of more than $30 million
Paul Signac, “Concarneau calme du matin (Opus no. 219, larghetto)” – Estimate of more than $28 million
Lucian Freud, “Large Interior, W11 (after Watteau)” – Estimate of more than $75 million
Louise Bourgeois, “Black Flames” – $1.5 million to $2.5 million
Georgia O’Keeffe, “White Rose with Larkspur No. 1” – $6 million to $8 million
Agnes Martin, “Untitled” – $4 million to $6 million
Georges Seurat, “Les Poseuses, Ensemble (Petite version)” – Estimate of more than $100 million
René Magritte, “La voix du sang” – $12 million to $18 million
Jasper Johns, “Map” – $5 million to $7 million
Jasper Johns, “Small False Start” – Estimate of more than $50 million
Francis Bacon, “Three Studies for Self-Portrait” – Estimate of more than $25 million
Gustav Klimt, “Birch Forest” – Estimate of more than $90 million
Jan Brueghel The Younger, “The Five Senses, Taste” (set of five panels) – $4 million to $6 million
Jan Brueghel The Younger, “The Five Senses, Touch” (set of five panels) – $4 million to $6 million
Jan Brueghel The Younger, “The Five Senses, Hearing” (set of five panels) – $4 million to $6 million
Jan Brueghel The Younger, “The Five Senses, Sight” (set of five panels) – $4 million to $6 million
Jan Brueghel The Younger, “The Five Senses, Smell” (set of five panels) – $4 million to $6 million
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