logo
Someone has eaten artist Maurizio Cattelan's $9.55 million banana

Someone has eaten artist Maurizio Cattelan's $9.55 million banana

9 News22-07-2025
Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan's artwork featuring a fresh banana taped to a wall has been eaten by a visitor to a museum in France.
The piece, titled Comedian, was eaten by a gallerygoer at the Centre-Pompidou Metz in eastern France on July 12, according to a statement from the museum, published on Monday.
"The security team acted quickly and calmly, according to internal procedures," the gallery said in the statement.
"The artwork was reinstalled a few minutes later", it said, adding that the banana is "only a perishable element" that is replaced on a regular basis according to Cattelan's instructions.
Centre-Pompidou Metz said the artist was disappointed that the visitor had considered the fruit itself to be the artwork, instead of eating the skin and the tape that held it in place as well.
The gallery has not filed a police report.
Comedian is intended to demonstrate the "absurdity of financial speculation and the fragility of knowledge systems that underpin the art market", it said.
This is not the first time the artwork has been eaten.
In 2019, when Cattelan unveiled Comedian at the Art Basel Miami art fair in Florida, performance artist David Datuna grabbed the banana from the wall, before peeling and eating it in front of hundreds of stunned fair attendees.
This became one of the art world's biggest viral moments and the work sold — with replacement banana — for $US120,000 ($184,000) at the fair.
Then, in 2023, an art student took the banana from a wall at the Leeum Museum of Art in Seoul, South Korea, and ate it.
And in November 2024, Justin Sun, a Chinese collector and founder of a cryptocurrency platform, .
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Your Week: Music, art workshops, markets and more all happening this week in Perth
Your Week: Music, art workshops, markets and more all happening this week in Perth

West Australian

time6 hours ago

  • West Australian

Your Week: Music, art workshops, markets and more all happening this week in Perth

Saturday 2 August, 3.30pm Case Frames, corner James and Beach Street, Fremantle Join DesignFreo for a creative afternoon with artist and framer Lance Delary-Simpson at his Fremantle warehouse studio. Lance will share his approach to framing, discussing how to choose art and how the right frame can transform a piece. He will share how he works with sustainable timber, colour and texture, and give practical tips on hanging art. Case Frames will offer a 15 per cent DesignFreo discount on any framing dropped off on the day. Tickets $10 to $15 plus booking fee from Humantix Saturday August 2, 8pm, Mojos Bar, North Fremantle Two celebrated indie-folk artists join forces for a national tour. Didirri and Rowena Wise have teamed up to create the new single No Cure For Love which blends each of their distinctive sounds. Expect an intimate evening of music featuring highlights from their solo albums, collaborative works, and brand-new material. Tickets $39.51 from Moshtix Sunday August 3, 11am to 3pm, Victoria Park Celebrate local creativity at this quarterly event showcasing WA's best slow-crafted wares. Browse a curated selection of ceramics, preserves, candles and homewares, all made locally. Enjoy free tastings of locally-made vodka, gin, and limoncello, take part in hands-on workshops and explore an art exhibition featuring emerging WA talent. Free Sunday August 3, 1pm to 4.30pm, PICA, Northbridge PICA is hosting two interactive workshops led by Hatched artists Grace Yong and Elsa Mona. In Ink and Movement, explore Chinese calligraphy with giant brushes and bold, full-body gestures. Then, connect with nature in Sounds and Surroundings, a playful sensory session where participants create a group soundscape using natural materials and simple looping tools. Suitable for children aged 7+, and must be accompanied by an adult. Free, but bookings essential at Thursday, August 7, Intuition Wine & Kitchen, Subiaco Join boutique wine distributor Propellis for a one-off tasting dinner. Enjoy a five-course seasonal menu from Intuition Wine & Kitchen expertly paired with eight wines, each introduced by Romain from Propellis, who brings personal insight from the vineyards themselves. With only 20 seats available, this intimate experience is perfect for wine lovers who want to dive deeper into the journey from vineyard to table. Tickets $260 from Friday August 8, 7.30pm, Astor Theatre After a 14-year hiatus, Little Birdy return to the stage to celebrate 21 years of their iconic debut album, BigBigLove. Fronted by Katy Steele and joined by original members Simon Leach and Scott O'Donoghue, the band will perform the album in full, including hits like Relapse and Beautiful To Me. BigBigLove is a defining album in the canon of Aussie indie rock, and is being released on vinyl for the first time, including a bonus 7-inch with unreleased tracks. Tickets $69 from Ticketek

Jamie Lee Curtis has been a 'mother figure' to Freakier Friday co-star Lindsay Lohan throughout her life
Jamie Lee Curtis has been a 'mother figure' to Freakier Friday co-star Lindsay Lohan throughout her life

Perth Now

time9 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Jamie Lee Curtis has been a 'mother figure' to Freakier Friday co-star Lindsay Lohan throughout her life

Jamie Lee Curtis has been a "mother figure" to Lindsay Lohan all her life. The two actresses starred together in 2003 comedy film Freaky Friday, the plot of which sees Lindsay's character Anna Coleman swap bodies with her mother Tess Coleman, played by Curtis, 66, The pair have reprised their roles for Disney sequel Freakier Friday, but for more than two decades Lindsay says they have maintained a "true friendship" which is a rare thing in Hollywood. Speaking to Italian publication IO Donna, Lindsay said of Jamie: "We are great friends. She's always been a mother figure, even off-set. "We laugh a lot together. She called me when I was pregnant, and from there we started talking about the sequel. "Ours is a true friendship, which is rare sometimes in Hollywood." Lindsay has a two-year-old son Luai with her husband, financier Bader Shammas and she admits motherhood has had a major impact on her life and helped her play Anna as an adult woman with her own family in Freakier Friday. She said: "Motherhood opened up a new world for me, full of emotions and responsibilities. It allowed me to portray Anna Coleman in a deeper and more empathetic light: she's a woman trying to do everything to the best of her ability, like millions of other women, torn between home and work." However, Lohan, 39, did not bring Luai on set because she thinks it's important to keep work and family life separate. She shared: "I try to keep family and work separate. The biggest challenge for a mother is managing time. I try to be there as much as possible: in the morning before filming, and in the evening when I get back. When I'm not working, I'm simply a mother. My son, for now, stays out of the spotlight." Despite the tribulations she went through as she transitioned from being a child actress to an adult, such as spells in rehab and legal issues, Lohan would not try and stop him from following in her acting footsteps. She said: "He'll do what he wants, and I'll always support him. In the meantime... he needs to finish his plate of vegetables."

Ambitious plan to save the Italian Forum breaks ‘golden rule' of theatre
Ambitious plan to save the Italian Forum breaks ‘golden rule' of theatre

Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Ambitious plan to save the Italian Forum breaks ‘golden rule' of theatre

The owners of the Italian Forum are hoping for an arts-led renaissance for the troubled Leichhardt development with the opening of a new 300-seat theatre staging big-name Broadway and West End shows. The new theatre, the brainchild of industry veterans Nathan M. Wright and Andrew Bevis, will be located in the Italian Cultural Centre at the forum and dubbed Teatro, in a nod to the venue's Italian roots. The venue has already been fitted out as a theatre, but has never fulfilled its potential as an arts and cultural hub. However the pair intend to improve it and stage shows there. And they have broken the 'golden rule' of theatre with their ambitious venture. 'So, obviously, the golden rule of theatre is never invest your own money,' says Wright. 'And we haven't taken any notice of that. We've self-funded to get into this building. We want to be able to create great theatre.' Wright and Bevis have long dreamt of having their own theatre where they can nurture young talent and stage high-calibre shows, but were unable to find the right space. 'We started looking at venue after venue,' says Wright. 'Then Andrew called me in December and said, 'I found it'. I said, 'What are you talking about?' He said, 'There's this theatre in Leichhardt'. And I said, 'A theatre? In Leichhardt?'' Loading After nearly seven months negotiating with the not-for-profit Italian cultural organisation that owns the venue, Wright and Bevis sealed the deal and today receive the keys to their new theatre, which they have leased for two years with an option for a further four. The premiere season will launch in October with a fully staged production of The Addams Family musical, featuring a young cast, many of whom are graduates of the THEatreBRIDGE training program run by Wright and Bevis. They will follow that up with the award-winning musical comedy The Prom in 2026.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store