In classical music there is an organization that is lending very valuable instruments (six figure such as for some stradivarius) to musicians in their 20's or so.
But some instrument have historic value. I have no problem that the 1983 LP is ending displayed on a wall to the public.
The 59 LP has no real historic value but financial value and well imho it would be better in the hand of a real musician than in a private collection.
The 59 is the only guitar that realistically can end up in a musician's hands. Kirk Hammett's and Joe Bonamassa's of this world can buy it, but the question is are they willing to pay the huuuuge Knopfler tax just to get an instrument that is already incredibly overly priced? I don't think so. So I bet that the 1959 LP will get to a collector too. Let alone MK-1 and other gems out of the bunch. After ALL MK signature Gibsons (150+75+50) went this way I can't see why it will change this time round.
The 1959 is so expensive simply because they made too few of them. With all due respect, I can't accept a high price on an item only because there were few of them made, it's an artificially created demand to solve the problem that should've not existed in the first place. I mean they made only 643 Les Pauls in 1959 in a whole year. They probably produce the same number of guitars in a day now.
I for one will never understand all this guitars and gear hype, to me it IS a slab of wood with strings, and collecting guitars to me is as pointless as collecting hammers or screwdrivers, or musician's pants. You just don't do it. So as much as Mark dreams about MK-1 having another song in it, truthfully, I think it already sang all the songs that were in store for this guitar. Now, it will go to the pile of overpriced collector's items.