A chunk of conceptual artwork consisting of a banana duct-taped to a wall bought for $6.2 million at an public sale in New York on Wednesday.
“Comedian,” by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan, was a phenomenon when it debuted in 2019 at Artwork Basel Miami Seaside, as festivalgoers tried to make out whether or not the one yellow piece of fruit affixed to a white wall with silver duct tape was a joke or cheeky commentary on questionable requirements amongst artwork collectors. At one level one other artist took the banana off the wall and ate it.
The piece attracted a lot consideration that it needed to be withdrawn from view, however three editions bought for between $120,000 and $150,000, based on the gallery dealing with gross sales on the time.
5 years later, somebody has now paid greater than 40 instances that increased worth level on the Sotheby’s public sale. Or, extra precisely, they’ve bought a certificates of authenticity that provides them the authority to duct-tape a banana to a wall and name it “Comedian.”
Bidding began at $800,000 and inside minutes shot as much as $2 million, then $3 million, then $4 million, because the auctioneer joked, “It’s slipping through the auction room.” The ultimate hammer worth introduced within the room was $5.2 million, which did not embody the about $1 million in public sale home charges, paid by the client.
Sotheby’s calls Cattelan “among Contemporary Art’s most brilliant provocateurs.”
“He has persistently disrupted the art world’s status quo in meaningful, irreverent, and often controversial ways,” the public sale home stated in an outline of “Comedian.”
The sale got here a day after a portray by the Belgian surrealist René Magritte bought for $121.2 million, a file for the artist, at a separate public sale.
“The Empire of Light,” an eerie nighttime streetscape beneath a pale blue daytime sky, bought Tuesday as a part of Christie’s sale of the gathering of inside designer Mica Ertegun, who died final 12 months at age 97.
The sale lifts Magritte into the ranks of artists whose works have gone for greater than $100 million at public sale. Magritte is the sixteenth member of the membership, which additionally contains Leonardo da Vinci, Pablo Picasso and Andy Warhol, based on the market analyst agency Artprice.
“The Empire of Light,” executed in 1954, was one in every of 17 variations of the identical scene that Magritte painted in oil. Marc Porter, chairman of Christie’s Americas, known as the sale “a historic moment in our saleroom.”
The $121.2 million worth included the public sale home’s charges. The customer was a phone bidder whose identification was not disclosed.