The absence of any confirmed public exhibition plans for the Salvator Mundi through the end of 2026 underpins the market's lean toward "No." The Leonardo-attributed masterpiece has remained out of public view since its 2017 Christie's sale, held in storage in Geneva on behalf of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman with no scheduled displays or loans announced. Long-term plans tie the work to an unbuilt Riyadh museum intended as a cultural anchor akin to the Mona Lisa at the Louvre, yet construction timelines for that venue and related Saudi cultural projects show no acceleration toward a 2026 debut. Recent art-fair activity has instead spotlighted a separate workshop version, leaving the original's status unchanged and underscoring the high barriers to a timely unveiling.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedWill the Salvator Mundi be publicly exhibited by December 31?
For the purposes of this market, "publicly accessible" is defined as a location to which members of the general public can purchase tickets or otherwise gain admission to view the listed artwork.
Private viewings, VIP previews, displays at auction house pre-sale exhibitions, displays at art fairs, displays of photographs or reproductions of the work, or displays of digital or NFT versions of the work will NOT be sufficient to qualify for a "Yes" resolution.
This market will resolve according to official press releases from exhibiting institutions, or credible reporting from The Art Newspaper, Artnet News, or The New York Times.
Market Opened: May 26, 2026, 7:33 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...For the purposes of this market, "publicly accessible" is defined as a location to which members of the general public can purchase tickets or otherwise gain admission to view the listed artwork.
Private viewings, VIP previews, displays at auction house pre-sale exhibitions, displays at art fairs, displays of photographs or reproductions of the work, or displays of digital or NFT versions of the work will NOT be sufficient to qualify for a "Yes" resolution.
This market will resolve according to official press releases from exhibiting institutions, or credible reporting from The Art Newspaper, Artnet News, or The New York Times.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The absence of any confirmed public exhibition plans for the Salvator Mundi through the end of 2026 underpins the market's lean toward "No." The Leonardo-attributed masterpiece has remained out of public view since its 2017 Christie's sale, held in storage in Geneva on behalf of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman with no scheduled displays or loans announced. Long-term plans tie the work to an unbuilt Riyadh museum intended as a cultural anchor akin to the Mona Lisa at the Louvre, yet construction timelines for that venue and related Saudi cultural projects show no acceleration toward a 2026 debut. Recent art-fair activity has instead spotlighted a separate workshop version, leaving the original's status unchanged and underscoring the high barriers to a timely unveiling.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated


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