Angelina Jolie Sells Churchill's Morocco Painting

A 1952 portrait of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Photo: Archives Snark/Photo12 Via AFP
A 1952 portrait of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Photo: Archives Snark/Photo12 Via AFP
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Angelina Jolie Sells Churchill's Morocco Painting

A 1952 portrait of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Photo: Archives Snark/Photo12 Via AFP
A 1952 portrait of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Photo: Archives Snark/Photo12 Via AFP

During an auction organized by Christie's house, Winston Churchill's most famous painting sold for 7 million sterling pounds (8.1 million euros) in London.

The price fetched by the painting, which depicts the minaret of the Koutoubia Mosque in Marrakesh, smashed the pre-sale expectations of 1.7 to 2.8 million euros. The former British prime minister (1874-1965) painted the oil work in 1943, during a visit to Morocco where he attended the Anfa conference held by the allies in Casablanca.

The painting sold by Hollywood star Angelina Jolie "is commonly regarded as the most important painting by Sir Winston Churchill, with its story interwoven into the history of the twentieth century," said art historian Barry Phipps in the Christies catalog.

Churchill gifted his masterpiece to President Franklin Roosevelt but one of the latter's sons sold it in the 1950s. The painting was sold many times until it settled in the house of Angelina Jolie and her husband Brad Pitt in 2011 before their divorce.

The conservative British leader started painting in his forties, but his fondness of the Red City and its lights dates to the 1930s, when Morocco was under the French and Spanish protection. He visited it six times within 23 years to escape London and its political storms.

A photograph taken by a journalist at the time showed Churchill and Roosevelt watching the sunset that inspired the British prime minister in his painting.

During the same auction, two other paintings by Churchill were sold. One of them features a scene from Marrakesh sold for 1.55 million sterling pounds (1.8 million euro) (its pre-sale expected price was 300,000-500,000 sterling pound), and the other depicts the St. Paul's Cathedral in London sold for 880,000 sterling pound (its pre-sale expected price was 200,000-300,000 sterling pounds).



Intuitive Machines' Athena Lander Closing in on Lunar Touchdown Site

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Launch Complex-39A carrying the Nova-C lunar lander Athena as part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload initiative from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, US, February 26, 2025. REUTERS/Steve Nesius/File Photo
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Launch Complex-39A carrying the Nova-C lunar lander Athena as part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload initiative from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, US, February 26, 2025. REUTERS/Steve Nesius/File Photo
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Intuitive Machines' Athena Lander Closing in on Lunar Touchdown Site

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Launch Complex-39A carrying the Nova-C lunar lander Athena as part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload initiative from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, US, February 26, 2025. REUTERS/Steve Nesius/File Photo
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Launch Complex-39A carrying the Nova-C lunar lander Athena as part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload initiative from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, US, February 26, 2025. REUTERS/Steve Nesius/File Photo

Intuitive Machines sent final commands to its uncrewed Athena spacecraft on Thursday as it closed in on a landing spot near the moon's south pole, the company's second attempt to score a clean touchdown after making a lopsided landing last year.

After launching atop a SpaceX rocket on Feb. 26 from Florida, the six-legged Athena lander has flown a winding path to the moon some 238,000 miles (383,000 km) away from Earth, where it will attempt to land closer to the lunar south pole than any other spacecraft.

The landing is scheduled for 12:32 pm ET (1732 GMT). It will target Mons Mouton, a flat-topped mountain some 100 miles (160 km) from the lunar south pole, Reuters reported.

Five nations have made successful soft landings in the past - the then-Soviet Union, the US, China, India and, last year, Japan. The US and China are both rushing to put their astronauts on the moon later this decade, each courting allies and giving their private sectors a key role in spacecraft development.

India's first uncrewed moon landing, Chandrayaan-3 in 2023, touched down near the lunar south pole. The region is eyed by major space powers for its potential for resource extraction once humans return to the surface - subsurface water ice could theoretically be converted into rocket fuel.

The Houston-based company's first moon landing attempt almost exactly a year ago, using its Odysseus lander, marked the most successful touchdown attempt at the time by a private company.

But its hard touchdown - due to a faulty laser altimeter used to judge its distance from the ground - broke a lander leg and caused the craft to topple over, dooming many of its onboard experiments.

Austin-based Firefly Aerospace this month celebrated a clean touchdown of its Blue Ghost lander, making the most successful soft landing by a private company to date.

Intuitive Machines, Firefly, Astrobotic Technology and a handful of other companies are building lunar spacecraft under NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services program, an effort to seed development of low-budget spacecraft that can scour the moon's surface before the US sends astronauts there around 2027.