On Nov. 15, Leonardo DaVinci’s "Salvator Mundi" sold for $450 million at Christie's, more than doubling the previous record for a bid at an art auction sale just two years earlier. (It even shattered the $300 million high-water mark for a private art sale.) “These auctions for the world's most desirable trophy art … are either a celebration of art appreciation or an alternative to big game hunting for city-dwelling billionaires,” is how noted art journalist Kathryn Tully once put it. Not long ago, gasps could be heard at auction houses when a piece went for $100 million. 

Here’s a list of some of the most notable art auction sales in history, many of them record-holders in their day: 

Dora Maar With Cat
Pablo Picasso, 1941
$95.2 million
(Adjusted for inflation: $117 million)

“A man appearing to be in his mid-40's, wearing a blue blazer and a cream-colored shirt, persistently waved paddle No. 1340 from far back in Sotheby's salesroom last night to spend $95.2 million on a Picasso portrait of his mistress Dora Maar.” That’s how the New York Times reported the second-highest price ever paid at the time for a work of art at auction in 2006.