The 10 Most Valuable Art Collections In Hollywood


#10. Leonardo DiCaprio Estimated Value: $10 million DiCaprio’s collection includes works from Jean-Michel Basquiat and Takashi Murakami. #9. Michael Ovitz Estimated Value: #12 million The former agent and founder of CAA owns works by Pablo Picasso, Jasper Johns, and Mark Rothko. He sits on the board of MoMA and built a villa in the Benedict Canyon area of Los Angeles to house his collection. #8. Jacob Bloom Estimated Value: $14 million The Hollywood attorney and his wife have an art collection with works by Jeff Koons, Matthew Barney, John Baldessari, and Chinese artist Ai Weiwei. #7. Brad Pitt Estimated Value: $25 million In 2009, Pitt reportedly paid $1 million for a painting of a racetrack by the German artist Neo Rauch. #6. Steve Tisch Estimated Value: $50 million The film producer, trustee of LACMA and chairman of the NFL’s New York Giants has an extensive art collection. He donated “The Clock” by Christian Marclay to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. #5. Jack Nicholson Estimated Value: $150 million Nicholson has been collecting art since the early days of his career. His collection includes works by Picasso, Magritte, Modigliani, Matisse, and Botero. #4. Steven Spielberg Estimated Value: $240 million The iconic director has a large art collection focused on the Impressionists as well as Norman Rockwell and Edward Hopper. #2. (tie) Arnon Milchan Estimated Value: $600 million The Revenant producer has an art collection with works from Picasso, Francis Bacon, and Vincent Van Gogh. #2. (tie) George Lucas Estimated Value: $600 million The legendary Star Wars filmmaker’s art collection includes works by Norman Rockwell. At one point he planned to open a museum in Chicago called the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. Those plans were abandoned in 2016. #1. David Geffen Estimated Value: $2.3 billion Geffen’s enormous art collections is worth about a fourth of his $8 billion net worth, even after selling Jackson Pollack’s “Number 5” and Willem de Kooning’s “Woman III” for $277 combined in 2006.