Maurizio Cattelan’s $120,000 Banana Was Ejected From Art Basel Miami Beach After Drawing Unsafe Crowds (and Getting Eaten)
Maurizio Cattelan’s banana sculpture at Art Basel Miami Beach
has taken on a life of its own. On Saturday, amid a crush of
fairgoers, a performance artist successfully managed to nab, peel,
and eat the conceptual fruit duct-taped to the wall of the booth of
Perrotin Gallery. The New York-based artist David Datuna said the edible piece of
art, priced between $120,000 to $150,000, tasted good, but he
grumbled that there was too much tape.
The stunt helped bring about a premature end to the banana’s
star turn at the fair. The following day, on Sunday, Perrotin
announced that he had to remove the work, cheekily
titled Comedian, from the booth for the fair’s
final stretch. The banana, one might say, had to split.
“Following recommendations, we removed the installation at 9
a.m. this morning,” the dealer said in a statement. “We would like
to warmly thank all those who participated in this memorable
adventure.” He noted in an Instagram post that the crowds flocking
to see and take selfies with the banana “compromised the safety of
the artwork around us, including that of our neighbors.”
A spokesperson for the fair added that the crowds “posed a
serious health and safety risk, as well as an access issue, so the
work was removed.”
In recent days, the banana has become one of the rare art-world
phenomena to break into mainstream culture: it graced the cover of
the New York Post, garnered parodies online, and even a
copycat installation on the New York subway. For some, it became a
symbol of art-world excess and gullibility; for others, a
delightful lesson in conceptual art.
NYC’s response to Art Basel: pic.twitter.com/biLJB1NJC1
— No Quarter Will Be Given (@chaedria) December 8, 2019
Perrotin, Cattelan’s Paris-based dealer, raced back to the fair
from Miami airport on Saturday afternoon when he heard about the
act of vandalism. With the help of assistant, the gallerist soon
restored the Italian artist’s work to the wall of his booth. (The
gallerist kept a spare banana in reserve in a back room.) Four
Miami Beach police officers stood guard after the incident,
the Miami
Herald reports. And a rope barrier was added to
control the crowds of curious fairgoers as the sculpture’s fame
soared.
Datuna, who claimed to be a “hungry artist,” was led away by
security but not arrested, the Herald reports. A
representative from the gallery told Artnet News that Perrotin
would not be pursuing legal action against him.
The Georgia-born artist staged his self-described “performance”
at 1:45 p.m. on Saturday during the fair’s popular public day, so
many A-list collectors will have missed the commotion. Video of the
Datuna’s nonchalant act of appropriation quickly circulated on
social media, however.
This happened and here’s the video: someone
ripped the Maurizio Cattelan banana off the wall at @ArtBasel and ATE ITpic.twitter.com/JOL41jLoeY
— JiaJia Fei 费嘉菁 (@VAJIAJIA) December 7, 2019
Two editions of the banana swiftly sold to private collectors,
including Sarah Andelman, a founder of the Paris concept store
Colette. (It was her first major art purchase, according to
the New York
Times.) Cattelan and Perrotin then agreed that they
would sell the third edition to a museum. Perrotin told Artnet News
that two institutions had already expressed interest.
The French gallerist was relaxed about the work’s security ahead
of Saturday’s incident, explaining that without the artist’s
certificate of authenticity, the banana is no longer a sculpture,
and so reverts to being a piece of fruit.
a guy at Art Basel pulled the banana worth
$120k off the wall and ATE IT!!!! here’s him being escorted out
pic.twitter.com/w6Z7mHHSGC— jonathan munoz stan account (@isaaacarrasco) December 7, 2019
“Comedian has a COA [certificate of authenticity]
that contains exact instructions for installation and authenticates
that the work is by Maurizio Cattelan,” a representative for the
gallery added after the incident. “Without a COA, a piece of
conceptual artwork is nothing more than its material
representation.”
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In his goodbye Instagram post marking the end of the display,
Perrotin said he never anticipated that the work would become a
sensation. “Comedian, with its simple composition,
ultimately offered a complex reflection of ourselves,” he
wrote.
Additional reporting by Sarah Cascone
The post Maurizio Cattelan’s $120,000 Banana Was Ejected
From Art Basel Miami Beach After Drawing Unsafe Crowds (and Getting
Eaten) appeared first on artnet News.
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