Why Hugh Grant Once Spent $3.5 Million On An Andy Warhol Painting

Posted by Jenniffer Sheldon on Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Hugh Grant may also be forgetful every so often.

He's admitted he had no idea what happened in his film Love Actually, and he can not truly be mindful making the decision to shop for one in all Andy Warhol's famous art work.

Tons of celebrities have bought ridiculously expensive things for their own private assortment. But Grant is part of the group of celebrities who use their wealth to invest in art, like Angelina Jolie. Thankfully, he is not part of the group of celebrities like Nicholas Cage, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Johnny Depp, who all collect some bizarre things.

The story of how he bought a $3 million Andy Warhol painting is, alternatively, interesting.

He Made The Decision On A Whim

Only celebrities and the wealthy could make the verdict to shop for an Andy Warhol painting on a whim, and that's the reason exactly what Grant did.

When Grant bought Andy Warhol's painting of the icon, Elizabeth Taylor, folks have been shocked to hear Grant used to be investing in art, and that he was once in a position to secure any such famous painting.

But Grant isn't slightly an art connoisseur. Buying the painting had not anything to do with a love of artwork or be fascinating in becoming an artwork collector.

Grant confessed that he was drunk on the night he bought the painting in 2001. According to The Daily Mail, Grant used to be on a two-day consuming spree when he advised his assistant to go out and put a bid in for the piece of artwork at Sotheby's public sale in New York.

"And to my horror, she did, and even worse, got it," Grant said.

Related: Did Hugh Grant Like His Character In ‘The Undoing’?

"It all began with drink. I'd been having a drunken dinner with my father the night before, and I said, 'We ought to go see my brother Jamie. You know, the Concorde's amazing.' And he said, 'I hear it is.' So I bought him a Concorde ticket and we went. We had lunch, drank a lot of beer.

"And I used to be excited about some stuff within the Sotheby's public sale and I saw the Liz Taylor."

At the time, Grant was already a household name from starring in some of the '90s best rom-coms, like Notting Hill and Four Weddings and a Funeral. The year he purchased the piece he was starring in Bridget Jones's Diary. 

He Sold It Six Years Later

If Grant's $3 million purchase of the piece was unexpected, his sale of it is even more unexpected.

Warhol had painted a total of 13 pictures of the famous actress in the sixties. In 2005, the highest price ever paid for any of the other copies was only about $12 million, by jeweler Laurence Graff. But Grant was able to sell his for a whopping $21 million.

"I fairly be apologetic about promoting it now, although it made me wealthy," Grant said.

"Money and art is a comic story, no longer a tragic one," The Guardian wrote at the time. "It's a comic story that such inane sums have been paid. It's a farce, not a conspiracy. Good previous Hugh Grant for telling it adore it used to be."

Other publications like The Telegraph thought the final price of the piece was disappointing.

Related: A Look Inside Hugh Grant's Relationship With Elizabeth Hurley

Apparently, the print of Liz turned Grant into an art collector in the end. According to Amy Cappellazzo, who ran Christie's auction which helped sell the piece, Grant was going to use his earnings on more art.

"The vendor of the Liz is profiting from the power of today’s marketplace and turning his attention to work through more youthful artists," she said.

In 2011 another portrait of Liz was sold for what The Hollywood Reporter projected to be $30 million.

The money from the sale of the print no doubt had a hefty effect on Grant's net worth. This year his net worth has reached $150 million. According to Celebrity Net Worth, Grant's salary is about $10 million, making him one of the highest-paid actors in Hollywood.

Related: Here's Why Hugh Grant Is Not As Charming To The Ladies In Real Life

So that would mean the actor received double his salary in the sale of his Warhol print. In other words, Grant basically cashed out, selling it at the perfect time.

Ironically, Grant's father wasn't impressed by the Concorde's flight to New York. "Halfway across the Atlantic, he is pronouncing, 'Well, it is all really nice, but frankly I prefer Air Kuwait'- his standard manner of having to New York," Grant concluded.

The flight to procure the print might not have been worth it for Grant's father, but Liz turned out to be a great investment, albeit a drunken one, for Grant. We wish we could randomly bid on a famous piece of art, win it, and eventually maybe sell it, but we can't all be Hugh Grant.

Next: Matthew McConaughey Sets Up Mom With Hugh Grant’s Dad... How 'Bout Birthday Girl Betty White?

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