Edited By John Kuroski
Published May 1, 2023
Noh Huyn-soo removed Maurizio Cattelan's piece from the wall at the Leeum Museum of Art in Seoul and then ate it, later saying he did so simply because he "skipped breakfast."
Ahungry museum visitor in South Korea recently chowed down on Maurizio Cattelan’s banana art piece, titled “Comedian,” which has an estimated worth of $120,000.
Noh Huyn-soo, a South Korean art student, visited the Leeum Museum of Art in Seoul and reportedly ate the art piece simply because he skipped breakfast and was hungry. He then taped the banana peel back onto the museum wall.
The museum did not take punitive measures against Noh but instead replaced the banana peel with a fresh banana. Typically, the museum replaces the banana every two to three days anyway.
The museum stated that it does not have plans to claim damages or press charges against the student.
“It happened suddenly, so no special action was taken. The artist was informed of the incident but he didn’t have any reaction to it,” a museum spokesperson told CNN.
This isn’t the first time a hungry onlooker has eaten “Comedian.” In 2019, performance artist David Datuna snatched the banana from the wall at the Perrotin Gallery at Art Basel in Miami and ate the fruit in front of shocked onlookers.
But for the artist, Maurizio Cattelan, the frequent consumption of his work is “no problem.”
Cattelan acknowledges that his work is largely satirical and pokes fun at the absurdities of popular culture. Even for those who have ingested his art, like David Datuna, Cattelan’s art is a product of “genius,” The Guardian reports.
Cattelan’s previous works include “America,” an 18-carat-gold toilet valued at more than $6 million, and “Il Dito,” a middle-finger sculpture that sat opposite Milan’s stock exchange.
In the case of “Comedian,” the Perrotin Gallery told CNN that the banana is “a symbol of global trade, a double entendre, as well as a classic device for humor.” Cattelan uses everyday objects in his art as “vehicles of both delight and critique.”
Noh seemed to find his own meaning in the art piece, telling the Korea Herald that “damaging a work of modern art could also be [interpreted as] artwork.”
“I thought it would be interesting…isn’t it taped there to be eaten?” Noh questioned the Korea Herald.
Observers of the event note that Cattelan’s work, though comedic and often a critique of politics and society, still rakes in millions for the artist.
The first copy of “Comedian” at Miami Art Basel sold for $120,000, and the second sold at the same price. The museum put another copy up for sale at $150,000.
“I have traveled in 67 countries around the world in the last three years, and I see how people live,” David Datuna said to The Guardian. “Millions are dying without food. Then he puts three bananas on the wall for half a million dollars?”
Following “Comedian’s” debut at Miami Art Basel, many expressed disappointment that the piece was sold for thousands of dollars and was even considered art.
With these critiques in mind, perhaps it makes sense why several people would want to take a bite out of the piece which Art Net says draws a “line between the art world and total anarchy.”
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