The Getty Art Center, with its limestone walls, was filled with various precious artworks.
Being one of the wealthiest and most upscale art institutions in the world, the artworks displayed here mostly came from renowned artists across the globe.
There was no trash here, provided that one had eyes to appreciate it.
Link was a boxer, his taste in art mirroring that of the average person; to him, the abstract expressionist pieces around him held almost no beauty.
Some of these paintings and artworks were just random splashes of paint on paper with a few straight lines, some were a chaotic mix of sand, pebbles, nails, and broken glass mixed into the paint on a fiberboard.
Yet such paintings would fetch tens of millions, even hundreds of millions of US dollars at auctions.
Among them, Jackson Pollock's "Number 5, 1948," had sold for 144 million US dollars in 2006, making it the most expensive painting in the world.
"What do you think after seeing these artworks?"