“By no means purchase good photos,” says Zsa-Zsa Korda, the protagonist of Wes Anderson‘s new movie, The Phoenician Scheme, now taking part in in theaters in New York and Los Angeles. “Purchase masterpieces.” It’s good recommendation to any aspiring artwork collector. However with what cash? Korda has much less phrases of knowledge to supply on that entrance.
That’s as a result of Korda, performed by Benicio del Toro, has discovered himself in a pickle: he’s making an attempt to execute a shady plan—the titular Phoenician Scheme—to open a waterway someplace within the neighborhood of the Mediterranean, however he doesn’t have the funds wanted to take action. (There’s additionally the truth that assassins and worldwide governments preserve coming after this jet-setting excessive curler: he’s survived being shot out of the air six instances when the movie begins and finds his aircraft downed once more by its ending.) He spends a lot of the film making an attempt to wrangle his enterprise associates into filling the monetary hole, enlisting his estranged daughter, a nun named Liesl (Mia Threapleton), as his collaborator.
And but, it will not be so onerous for Korda to make some fast money—if he simply bought just a few of the work in his Sixteenth-century palazzo, dwelling to 9 sons and an artwork assortment organized so haphazardly that a lot of the photos aren’t even hung from the partitions. The home was itself modeled on the house of artwork collector Calouste Gulbenkian, a British Armenian businessman who purchased 1000’s of artworks and was accused of making an attempt to dodge paying taxes in England previous to his dying in 1955.
There’s a wonderful Floris Gerritsz. van Schooten nonetheless life from the seventeenth century that includes a fatty roast on a platter (for breakfast!), and a 1942 René Magritte during which a home plant seems to have birds for its leaves. There’s additionally an 1889 Pierre-Auguste Renoir portrait of the artist’s nephew, lengthy golden locks and all. Liesl sleeps beneath it, barely conscious of this Impressionist portray’s presence.
That Korda has amassed such a group—and that he appears to care so little for it, by no means mentioning it as soon as—means that the artwork he has purchased is a momentary distraction from his seedy enterprise and his fractured familial relationships. It capabilities for him like window dressing, a mere backdrop for the nefarious dealings going down. His perspective obliquely remembers how Russian oligarchs treated their prized Picassos and Rothkos earlier than the conflict in Ukraine hindered their skill to proceed gathering.
Anderson is a director recognized for imagining ornate, symmetrical units that themselves really feel like artwork installations—therefore why he was introduced on to design a café for the Fondazione Prada, a museum in Milan that has constructed a long-term relationship with him. The artworks in The Phoenician Scheme resemble props, and it will be comprehensible to think about them as fakes, particularly as a result of Anderson knowingly fabricated some art history for a previous work, his 2021 movie The French Dispatch. However right here’s the catch: a few of them are actual.
Nonetheless from The Phoenician Scheme, 2025.
Courtesy TPS Productions/Focus Options ©2025 All Rights Reserved
The Renoir is genuine, and was even as soon as owned by the actress Greta Garbo, whose property bought it at Sotheby’s in 1990 for $7 million. In line with a credit score line from Getty Photographs, which has photos of the Renoir in its library, the work comes from the holdings of the mega-collecting Nahmad household.
“You possibly can inform the distinction,” Anderson wrote of the portray in his manufacturing notes, “and it has an aura to it.” His characters, it appears, can not, since they principally ignore it. The Magritte, too, is actual, and so is the van Schooten. The Magritte previously belonged to Heiner Pietzsch, who appeared on the ARTnews High 200 Collectors listing prior to his death in 2021; it now resides within the assortment of the Berlin State Museums. The van Schooten is owned by the Hamburger Kunsthalle, a German museum.
Different works, together with a portray by Peter Paul Rubens, are replicas, nonetheless. That it turns into robust for viewers to tell apart which works are genuine is partially the purpose: Korda can’t inform the distinction between a superb paintings and a foul one, a bona fide masterpiece and a knockoff, whilst he wolfs down books about patrons of the Excessive Renaissance and connoisseurship throughout his tumultuous adventures by air. He doesn’t know the value of a really invaluable factor, simply as he doesn’t know the value of Liesl, whom he’s making an attempt to designate as inheritor to his property within the occasion of his premature passing.
Pierre-August Renoir, Enfant assis en gown bleue (Portrait d’Edmond Renoir fils), 1889.
Getty Photographs/Assortment Nahmad, Monaco
Then there’s Korda’s haphazard show of his photos, with some leaned towards partitions quite than delicately hung. “Wes had the thought that his assortment isn’t a completed factor on show, however quite in flux,” Adam Stockhausen, the movie’s manufacturing designer, told Elle Decor. “Zsa-Zsa has a fantastic assortment of work, sculpture, and ornamental objects however they’re at all times coming and going.” They’re merely props in Korda’s personal universe.
The Phoenician Scheme is, partially, a parody of collectors who purchase artwork with that type of mindset. Right here’s Korda as soon as extra: “By no means purchase good photos. Purchase masterpieces.” Anderson may slap on an addendum: Purchase nice works, however cherish them correctly.