Oprah purchased “Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer II” in 2006, setting an auction record at the time for the artist.

It was a controversial painting with an intriguing back story. It had been looted during WWII, and the family of the original collectors sued the Austrian government to get it back.

They won the trial, and the story inspired the film “Woman in Gold”.

She lent out the painting to several museums when she owned it, including a five year stint at the MoMA.

So what was Oprah’s profit after flipping it in 2017 to an anonymous Chinese collector?

A mind-boggling $62 million dollars.

When you see those types of gains, it makes you wonder why everyone doesn’t get involved in the art market.

Granted, most of us don’t have $88 million dollars to get started investing in these types of pieces.

Thankfully, those gates have come crumbling down thanks to one startup.

They’re taking advantage of a recently passed law that lets anyone get involved in these types of deals at a fraction of the normal purchase price.

It’s a genius solution to a problem none of us even realized we were experiencing.

And why art? Contemporary art prices have outperformed the S&P by 174% between 1995 and 2020.

That might be why Ivy League endowments have allocated 10x more into alternatives like art since 2000.

If you want to get involved with this exciting asset class before any of your friends, you can join over 285,000 members who have already taken the plunge right here.

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