Once languishing in a garage in London, “Vecchio Sultano” has emerged as one of the most compelling rediscoveries of 2025. This 1966 mixed-media illustration by Salvador Dalí—once valued at a mere $200—has been authenticated and appraised at up to $40,000. Its trajectory from obscurity to headline auction at Cheffins in Cambridge is more than just a feel-good art world story; it’s a vivid testament to the market’s vulnerability, the power of provenance, and the enduring mystique of Dalí.
Part of Dalí’s unfinished “Arabian Nights” series, “Vecchio Sultano” was not only authenticated by Nicolas Descharnes—the world’s preeminent expert on Dalí—but traced back to a lost Sotheby’s listing. This stunning recovery illustrates how the art market’s inefficiencies can conceal hidden gems, and how scholarly diligence can bring them back to light.




