Week28 Lesson 2 Article PDF
Week28 Lesson 2 Article PDF
Week28 Lesson 2 Article PDF
Image 1. This undated photo, provided by Sotheby's, depicts the spray-painted canvas "Girl with Balloon" by Banksy. A work by the elusive
street artist self-destructed in front of startled auction-goers Oct. 5, 2018, moments after being sold for $1.4 million. In an Instagram post the
next day, Banksy claimed the dramatic artistic payoff had been years in the making. Photo by: Sotheby's/via AP
In an Instagram post the next day, Banksy claimed the dramatic artistic moment had been years in
the making.
Then, as an alarm sounded, the painting ran through a shredder embedded in the frame. It left
half the canvas hanging from the bottom in strips.
A picture on Banksy's official Instagram page showed the moment — and the shocked reaction of
those in the room — along with the words "Going, going, gone..."
A video was later posted on the Instagram page, stating: "A few years ago I secretly built a
shredder into a painting in case it was ever put up for auction." The video showed images of a
shredder being implanted into a picture frame along with footage of the auction stunt.
Sotheby's is an auction house in London where expensive paintings are often put up for bidding.
The company had mentioned before this sale that the work's fancy gold-colored frame was an
important element of the artwork "chosen by Banksy himself." The auction company appeared as
shocked as anyone else.
"It appears we just got Banksy-ed," said Alex Branczik, head of modern European art at the
auction house.
Sotheby's said it was "in discussion about next steps" with the buyer of the work, whose identity
was not revealed. Some art experts say the work could be worth even more in its shredded state.
"We have not experienced this situation in the past, where a painting spontaneously shredded,
upon achieving a record for the artist," Branczik said. "We are busily figuring out what this means
in an auction context."
Switzerland-based artist Pierre Koukjian was at the auction. He said the buyer was "very lucky" to
own a now-historic piece. He called Banksy's prank "a turning point in the history of
contemporary and conceptual art."
Koukjian, who has met Banksy, said he is sure he caught a glimpse of the artist in the sales room
during the confusion of the moment.
"What he did is really shocking, in a good way," Koukjian said. "I think it will be historic and
people will talk for a long time about it."
Brooks would not say whether the artist had been at the auction. She said Sotheby's had been "100
percent" unaware of the planned stunt.
Banksy is not the first artist to destroy his own work. In the years after World War II, German-
born artist Gustav Metzger pioneered "auto-destructive art." He created paintings using acid that
ate away the fabric beneath.
One happened in 2005 at the British Museum, the famous history museum. There, he hung what
looked like a cave drawing of an ancient human holding a spear while pushing a shopping cart.
The piece remained for several days before being discovered. The next year he smuggled a life-
sized figure of a U.S. military prisoner into Disneyland. In 2015 he erected a full-scale theme park
— "Dismaland" — by the British seaside.
"Girl With Balloon" shows a small child reaching up toward a heart-shaped red balloon. It was
originally spray-painted on a wall in east London and has been endlessly reproduced, becoming
one of Banksy's best-known images.