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Someone donated $400,000 to save an apartment that an artist spent 33 years filling with bizarre works including a lion's head fireplace

  • Ron Gittins meticulously decorated his rented apartment from 1986 till his death in 2019.
  • Friends feared the art-filled apartment would be lost after it was put up for auction.

An anonymous benefactor donated £335,000 (almost $400,000) to help campaigners buy an art-filled apartment featuring everything from an ornate Roman altar to a handmade papier-mâché lion's head.

The apartment's former resident was artist Ron Gittins, who died in 2019. He started renting the property in Birkenhead, close to Liverpool in northwest England, in 1986, and spent the next 33 years painting every inch of the interior and filling it with bizarre artworks.

After his death, friends and family came together to pay Gittins' rent and try to preserve his art-filled home. But they were worried that the apartment, which they call Gittins' "secret world," would be lost forever after it was due to be auctioned earlier this week.

The decided to found Saving Ron's Place to raise funds to buy the apartment — and even gained the support of Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker, who is also a presenter on BBC Radio 6 Music.

Nothing is yet known about the individual who made the donation or why they decided to make it.

Take a look inside Gittins' home.

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