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Banksy’s latest prank actually has a long history

Artists have been messing with audiences–and the art world establishment–for a long, long time.

Banksy’s latest prank actually has a long history

[Photo: Tristan Fewings/Getty Images/Sotheby]

BY Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan5 minute read

When the British street artist Banksy shredded his Girl with Balloon after it was purchased for $1.4 million at Sotheby’s, did he know how the art world would react?

Did he anticipate that the critics would claim that the work, in its partially shredded state, would climb in value to at least $2 million? That the purchaser would not object and would instead rejoice?

We have no way of really knowing, though the famously anonymous artist did suggest that the shredder malfunctioned: The painting was supposed to be fully shredded, not partially destroyed.

As an art historian, I view his act in a larger context–as the latest example of artists deploying guerrilla tactics to expose their disdain for the critics, dealers, gallery owners, and museum curators whom they depend on for their livelihood.

In shredding Girl with Balloon, Banksy seems to be pointing to a central absurdity of his graffiti art being treated as fine art. When it appears on city streets, anyone can vandalize it; now that the same images are in galleries and auction houses, they must be handled with white gloves.

But, as he may well know, the art market is far too wealthy and adaptable to be undone by a shredder.

In fact, we’ve seen the same pattern play out, time and again: An artist will launch a withering critique and instead of taking offense, the market simply tightens its embrace.

[Photo: Flickr user JasonParis]

The many versions of subversion

Some of the most well-known of Banksy’s subversive artistic predecessors were part of the early-20th century Dada movement. One of their principal strategies involved denying the market of objects that could be commodified.

French-American artist Marcel Duchamp is perhaps the most well-known Dadaist. In 1917, his Fountain, a urinal laid on its back and remounted on a pedestal, was his first volley against the art market’s intellectual pretenses about art.

Duchamp wanted to force the art world to acknowledge that its judgments about quality were based on media hype and money rather than artistic innovation.

However, years later Duchamp admitted to the futility of his gesture.

“I threw . . . the urinal into their faces as a challenge,” he lamented, “and now they admire [it] for [its] aesthetic beauty.”

In 1920, Francis Picabia, a Cuban-French Dadaist would follow Duchamp’s lead and participate in a performance purposefully designed to provoke the French art world.

Before a Parisian audience gathered at the Palais des Fêtes, Picabia unveiled a chalk drawing entitled Riz au Nez (Rice on the Nose). The artist’s friend, André Breton, one of the hosts of the event, then erased the drawing. The artwork lasted for just a of couple hours and is now lost to history. The work’s title, it’s been noted, sounds too similar to “rire au nez” (“to laugh in one’s face”) to be coincidental.

In 1953, Robert Rauschenberg, who was then an up-and-coming American artist, plucked up the courage to ask Willem de Kooning, an established abstract expressionist, for one of his drawings. Rauschenberg didn’t tell de Kooning much–just that he intended to use it for an unusual project. Although de Kooning was disapproving, he acquiesced.

After securing his gift, Rauschenberg proceeded, over the period of a month, to carefully erase all traces of the expressive pencil, charcoal, and crayon drawing that de Kooning had put to paper.

Rauschenberg then retitled the work, now preserved in the collection of the San Francisco Museum of Art, Erased de Kooning Drawing.

Jean Tinguely’s auto-destructing work, Homage to New York (1960), is probably the closest parallel to Banksy’s stunt. Made of scrap found in New Jersey junkyards, the massive work–27 feet high and 23 feet in length–was supposed to be a mechanical display, sort of like a Rube Goldberg device.

The piece was set up the sculpture garden of New York’s Museum of Modern Art, and those attending the show included collectors Walter Arensberg and John D. Rockefeller III, and artists John Cage, Mark Rothko, and Robert Rauschenberg.

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Tinguely briefly set the piece in motion–and then it burst into flames.

The Museum of Modern Art described the scene:

” . . . a meteorological trial balloon inflated and burst, colored smoke was discharged, paintings were made and destroyed, and bottles crashed to the ground. A player piano, metal drums, a radio broadcast, a recording of the artist explaining his work, and a competing shrill voice correcting him provided the cacophonic sound track to the machine’s self-destruction–until it was stopped short by the fire department.”

Apart from a fragment from Tinguely’s Homage preserved in the MoMA collection, all that remains of the work is some choppy film footage.

Some black-and-white film footage captured Homeage to New York before it disappeared forever.

It’s difficult to imagine anyone surpassing Tinguely’s sound-and-light spectacle.

But in 2001, Michael Landy of the Young British Artists group orchestrated the most comprehensive “art as destruction” work to date.

Titled Break Down, Landy placed objects on a conveyor belt running into a machine that pulverized them. In the process, he destroyed all of his belongings–7,227 pieces in all–including his own paintings and the art of his Young British Artist peers.

Guerrillas in the midst

These acts of destruction are motivated by the same impulse.

In the late 19th century, art production largely became untethered from patronage offered by the church or the state, and artists turned to powerful art dealers for their livelihood.

But many found that the radical, critical aspect of the artistic act was severely compromised–or erased altogether–when the most well-known feature of a work became the dollar sign attached to it.

To many, the market symbolized nothing more than a void.

With the urban street as his studio and insurgency as part of his artistic mission, Banksy’s graffiti often critiques institutions, such as the art museum, and authority figures like the police and the Queen of England.

Though the market value of his work has soared in recent years, Banksy continues to paint images in public spaces that make preservation near impossible–and even invite theft or defacement.

Still, as guerrilla theater, Banksy’s recent act will be tough to beat. It’s certainly his most subversive and penetrating public foray into the elite art marketplace.

But even with all his critique, the question continues to nag: Is Banksy complicit with the art market? The very society he undermines, one that feeds on spectacle, has made him famous and his art immensely profitable.

In the wake of World War I, Dadaist artists made a practice of shocking their public audiences by wantonly destroying their own artistic creations. The public soon learned to cheer them on, and to detach themselves from the attack artists were actively waging on their sensibilities.

A century later, at Sotheby’s, the initial shock of a shredded Girl with Balloon dissipated quickly. The hype only grew. The market adapted.

Sotheby’s has since released a statement declaring that the piece–renamed Love Is in the Bin–is “the first artwork in history to have been created live during an auction.”

Preminda Jacob is an associate professor of art history and museum studies at University of Maryland, Baltimore County. This post originally appeared on The Conversation

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Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan is Co.Design's deputy editor. More


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