It’s the middle of October 2017, roughly two weeks after a gunman killed 58 people at a concert on the Las Vegas Strip. Since she began her “Piece of Me” concert residency at the Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino five years ago, Spears has called Vegas home.

Shaken by the tragedy, she took some time off from her show but returned to the stage 10 days later — she and her dancers wearing black “Vegas Strong” baseball caps that they threw into the crowd. She also invited the first responders from that fateful night to attend her concert and gave them a shout-out during the show.

When completed, Spears will also donate one of the paintings she’s working on to a charity event called Vegas Cares. The funds raised at the Nov. 2017 benefit will be used to build a memorial for the victims of the shootings.

Technically, Britney Spears’ painting isn’t very good. It lacks skill, inspiration, and effort.

But that’s not the point.

What matters is that the money is going for a good cause and that it came from Spears — considered the Queen of Pop by many. She created it, she touched it, she breathed on it and perhaps even got a speck of sweat or spit on it.

To fans, the work is priceless.

“I would literally do anything to own this painting,” one #TeamBritney member wrote on Twitter.

To make it even more valuable, it’s also highly likely Spears worked on the art-piece while topless. It’s an activity she has publicly admitted to and is apparently fond of doing.

“I have an art room, and I just paint on the walls and do all this kind of crazy stuff,” she told an Australian morning radio show in 2016. “I was just in there with my top off, just like painting and doing all this artsy-fartsy stuff.”

Unfortunately, the singer was out of town and couldn’t make it when the finished product was auctioned off at the Vegas Cares event. Had she been there, she probably could have helped drive the bids higher when they got stuck at $9,500 for her painting.

But she wasn’t there, so one of the auction organizers took it upon himself to keep things moving, and he made a bid.