Alzheimer's research. A $117 bet on a raffle ticket just turned into a million-dollar Picasso. Ari Hodara, a 58-year-old Parisian art lover, won Pablo Picasso's "Head of a Woman" - a 1941 portrait of Picasso's long-time partner Dora Maar - after buying a single raffle ticket over the weekend. He found out about the charity draw by chance during a meal at a restaurant.
How It Worked
The online raffle, organized by the Alzheimer Research Foundation, sold all 120,000 tickets at 100 euros (about $117) each. The draw took place at Christie's auction house in Paris, raising 12 million euros - roughly $14 million - for Alzheimer's research. The foundation says it has become France's largest private funder of Alzheimer's-related medical research since it was founded in 2004.
Worth Noting
Hodara described himself as an "art amateur fond of Picasso" and learned about his win when organizers called after the draw. The painting was valued at roughly $1 million - making this one of the best returns on a raffle ticket in history.
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