Crypto business owner eats banana artwork bought for $6.2m
Crypto business owner eats banana artwork bought for $6.2m
A Chinese-born cryptocurrency business owner has followed through on his commitment to eat the banana from a $6.2m (£4.9m) artwork he bought last week.
Justin Sun outbid six others to claim Maurizio Cattelan’s infamous 2019 work Comedian – a banana duct-taped to a wall – at Sotheby’s auction house in recent York.
He ate the fruit during a information conference in Hong Kong where he used the instant to draw parallels between the artwork and cryptocurrency.
The banana is regularly replaced before exhibitions, with Mr Sun buying the correct to display the installation along with a navigator on how to replace the fruit.
It has been eaten twice before – first by a act artist in 2019 and again by a South Korean learner in 2023 – but neither paid any money to do so, let alone $6.2m.
“Eating it at a press conference can also become a part of the artwork’s history,” Mr Sun said.
“It’s much better than other bananas,” he added.
The 34-year-ancient said he was intrigued by the work, admitting he had “silly questions” about whether the banana rotted.
The recent York Times reported a fresh banana was bought for 35 cents on the day of last week’s auction, before becoming possibly one of the most expensive fruits in the globe.
Each attendee at the occurrence on Friday was given a banana and a roll of duct tape as a souvenir.
“Everyone has a banana to eat,” Mr Sun said.
Mr Sun runs the Tron blockchain network – a service where users can trade in cryptocurrency.
Cryptocurrencies are digital currencies that operate independent of banks, offering the potential of very secure decentralised transactions.
Mr Sun compared the artwork, and other abstract pieces like it, to NFTs.
These “non-fungible tokens” are pieces of digital artwork that have no intrinsic worth, other than that prescribed by people.
NFTs can be traded on platforms like Mr Sun’s.
Last year, he was charged by the US stocks and bonds and swap percentage for offering and selling unregistered safety tokens. Mr Sun denies the charges and the case is ongoing.
This week, Mr Sun disclosed he made a $30m fund in a crypto assignment backed by US President-elect Donald Trump.
Post Comment