Similar questions have been raised multiple times over the last century as the idea of what is art and what is not changes. Marcel Duchamp famously presented a porcelain urinal, signed “R. Mutt”, to a non-juried exhibition in New York where it was rejected by the show organizers in 1917. And thus, “readymade” art was born. A 1964 replica of Fountain sold for $1.76 million in 1999, demonstrating just how far the concept of an everyday object imbued with meaning by an artist had come.
An even wider gap between material and artistic value was evident in the sale of Cattelan’s duct-taped banana. Comedian was sold at Sotheby’s for $6.24 million in 2024 to a cryptocurrency entrepreneur who ate it in the following days. And, this was not a one-off phenomenon. Earlier versions sold for up to $150,000 after the piece was introduced at Art Basel Miami Beach in 2019. All were accompanied by a certificate of authenticity and instructions for how to replace the banana when it rotted. Mundanity very quickly collided with materialism.


















