Duct-taped banana sells for more than $6 million at auction
Category: News & Politics
Via: drakkonis • 2 weeks ago • 12 commentsBy: Maurizio Cattelan (NBC News)
If I were so stupid as to do something like this I don't think I could ever look anyone in the eye again. Except that if I were that stupid I would probably be completely clueless as to how I had so humiliated myself. I suppose though, considering the pretentiousness rampant in the art world, some would have a positive image of this guy.
I guess people can be amazing in negative ways as well.
Nov. 21, 2024, 12:46 AM UTCBy Rebecca Cohen
A banana duct-taped to a white wall — or an acclaimed piece of art, depending how you look at it — sold at a Sotheby's auction for $6.24 million Wednesday.
Maurizio Cattelan's "Comedian" is simply a banana stuck to the wall with a strip of silver duct tape exactly 160 centimeters from the floor.
The artwork debuted at Art Basel Miami Beach in December 2019 and was initially estimated to sell for $1.5 million, according to Sotheby's.
Art Basel quickly had to take the banana off the wall because of the crowds it drew, as it was prompting concern for the other featured artworks, art critic Nancy Durrant said in a Sotheby's video about the piece of art.
It was the first art fair Cattelan was included in for 15 years, and it was the "announcement as a new original work by Maurizio Cattelan that captured the world's attention immediately," said David Galperin, Sotheby's head of contemporary art for the Americas.
At one point, someone even took the banana off the wall and ate it.
A journalist takes a picture of Italian visual artist Maurizio Cattelan's duct-taped Banana entitled "Comedian," displayed during a media preview at Sotheby's in New York, on Nov. 8, 2024Kena Betancur / AFP - Getty Images file
Sotheby's said the work "belongs to the rare league of artworks that need no introduction," as it "quickly erupted into a viral global sensation that drew record crowds, social media inundation, landed the cover of The New York Post, and divided viewers and critics alike."
"Comedian" has been "passionately debated, rhapsodically venerated, and hotly contested," according to Sotheby's, as it made international headlines, "becoming the most talked-about artwork of the century."
The debut of "Comedian" caused commotion and true pandemonium, according to experts featured in the Sotheby's video about the artwork.
It also made "a lot of people very angry," Durrant said.
The response to the banana blew up online, as news outlets debated "whether this is art, whether it is a prank, whether it is a symbol of the excess of the art market," Lucius Elliot, head of contemporary marquee sales at Sotheby's, said in the video.
He added: "In truth, it is, of course, all of those things."
Cattelan's sense of humor and use of comedy in his work — which set him apart as an artist, Durrant said — are clear in "Comedian."
Experts agreed that the artwork is meant to be funny, but they said it also pokes at some holes in the art world, like the concept that modern art can be absurd.
For example, Cattelan "is presenting a work that mocks the very notion of art having this degree of value," Elliot said, adding that while it is just a banana and duct tape, "it's value is in its conceptual heft."
"The important thing to know about Maurizio is that his jokes are serious and his serious work is funny," Dodie Kazanjian, an editor for Vogue, said in the video, adding, "There's something very deep in what Maurizio does, so the veneer of it might look like a banana, but there's something else always at the core of what he's saying."
According to Sotheby's, Cattelan "single-handedly prompted the world to reconsider how we define art, and the value we seek in it."
Emmanuel Perrotin, founder of Perrotin, the gallery where "Comedian" was first shown, said he called a client the day before the banana's debut offering the client a chance to buy the artwork at an undisclosed price. The client turned him down, but three days later, Perrotin got a message from someone offering to buy "Comedian" for seven times the price he initially offered his client.
"Imagine the change of perception created by the way it was received by the audience," Perrotin said.
As Galperin put it, "There is no better forum to adjudicate the value of art and a single object than the platform of auction."
Rebecca Cohen
Rebecca Cohen is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital.
Astoundingly irresponsible. I bet so many struggling people and families appreciated this story, if they saw it.
Tape a banana to your wall. Feel like a millionaire!
If the story is true about what it sold for then I have to say that I think the Darwin award should be expanded to people who actually survive their absolute stupidity. I recall reading about the person who yanked it off the wall and ate it, if it's the same banana. Couldn't he be sued for 6.24 million dollars?
Buzz the Darwin award already includes people who survive their stupidity. The only qualifying requirement is that they no longer be able to reproduce afterwards
Oh, okay.
The purchaser has been described as a Chinese Cryptocurrancy billionaire...
Maybe he was hungry.
Does it come with the building it is taped to? I don’t get it.
which one is the real 6 million dollar banana
It sounds like it would be rather easy to counterfeit. Most households probably have a banana and some duct tape.
Art is in the eye of the beholder
Not the issue. For me, anyway. The issue is that this person spent 6.2 million dollars on a meme. All he did was buy a fungible item and the right to call it "Comedy" from the "artist", something anyone can do for free. Any one of us can tape a banana to a wall and call it comedy for free. It is as if the point was to try to waste (an understatement) a large amount of money in the most obscene way possible. I guess that sums it up for me. It's simply obscene in the worst way possible. There are so many causes out there where real people could be helped and this is what this guy does.
I'm with you and certainly wouldn't waste my money in such a way but his money his choice