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A few weeks ago, a work by British street artist Banksy
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went up for auction at Sotheby's London.
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Moments after the auctioneer banged his gavel
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announcing its sale for over $1.3 million,
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a beep sounded and the canvas began
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to fall through the bottom of the frame
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and emerge in shreds on the other side
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just after Banksy posted a picture of it
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with the caption going, going, gone
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and then followed up with a video showing
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how he installed a shredder in the frame in case
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it ever went up for auction.
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Sotheby's claimed they had no idea
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that this was going to happen and had been Banksyed.
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And the buyer was anonymous, which is common in auctions.
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After a week when media conjecture had
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run dry over who knew about it and would the buyer have
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to pay for it, Sotheby's put out a press
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release explaining that what actually happened
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was that a new work by Banksy had been created
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at the auction, one that's been authenticated by the artist
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and given the new title "Love is in the Bin".
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After that, Banksy released a director's cut explaining that
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in rehearsals, the paintings shredded fully every time,
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including some vertical video to firmly place the rehearsals
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in the recent past, proving both that he's a master manipulator
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and that his word cannot be trusted.
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OK, but let's take a closer look at what this work actually is.
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Banksy first painted the image of a child reaching out
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toward a red, heart-shaped balloon in London in 2002,
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this one with the inscription "There is always hope."
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Other versions were made around the city,
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but none of the original murals remain
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because this, like most of Banksy's work,
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was unsanctioned street art made without permission
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for the public to enjoy and for property owners or city
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government to paint over or protect as they see fit.
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Individuals can and have tried to remove and resell
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his public art, but for the most part
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Banksy's work has been fleeting and free
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and is actively planned to be that way by its creator.
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The heart balloon appeared alone in 2013
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with bandages in Brooklyn and also with kids standing
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on a pile of guns at a Central Park art stall on sale for $60.
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In 2014, he reworked the girl with balloon image in supported
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the With Syria campaign, explaining,
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"The red balloon carries the girl above and away
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from the chaos below, beyond the burnt-out buildings
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and bullet-potted walls."
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Also in 2014, Justin Bieber had the image tattooed on his arm.
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A version with a Union Jack balloon
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surfaced in 2017 in a print Banksy
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tried to give away to UK citizens in some constituencies
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if they voted against the Conservative Party.
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But since it's illegal to accept a gift in return for a vote,
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the offer was rescinded.
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And a few days later he posted this.
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In a 2017 poll, "Girl with Balloon"
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beat out both this painting by JMW Turner and this one
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by David Hockney to claim the title
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of the UK's favorite artwork.
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This is all to say that by the time the work in question
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arrived at auction it was a well-loved and widely
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recognizable image, estimated to sell for as much
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as about $400,000 US.
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The auction report shares that it's not
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a multiple but a unique work made
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in 2006 with Banksy's signature method of stenciled spray
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paint but this time on canvas instead of on a wall
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or as a print on paper.
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It was authenticated by Pest Control, the handling
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service that acts on the artist's behalf
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and authenticates his work.
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Sotheby's claims it was acquired directly from the artist
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by the unnamed present owner the year
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it was made following a show he organized of his work
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in an LA warehouse, and it came in that gilded frame--
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ah, the frame-- which Sotheby's states was,
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quote, "chosen by Banksy himself."
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Gold frames are one of the artist's favorite motifs.
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In conjunction with that same LA warehouse show,
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he released a print that clearly expresses
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his dubiousness of the auction process
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and even presented it in a ridiculous gold frame.
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And for his 2009 exhibition at the Bristol museum,
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Banksy mixed his works in with the museum's collection, many
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of them in period appropriate frames, helping his art
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blend in, at least sort of.
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One of these was a gold frame laid over a concrete slab
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with one stick figure asking, "Does anyone really take
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this kind of art seriously?", and another replying,
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"Never underestimate the power of a big gold frame."
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A year later, this image appeared on a wall
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in San Francisco clearly demonstrating
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the uneasy situation Banksy has found himself
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in as his profile has risen and more and more people try
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to benefit of unauthorized sales and exhibitions of his work.
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Now I find it unlikely that no one at Sotheby's knew
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what was going to happen with this big gold frame
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or that anyone inspecting it would find
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nothing suspicious about it.
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I also find it unconvincing that Banksy's video
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showing his frame construction was made back in 2006
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or that it's coincidental that it was
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the last lot in the auction.
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Banksy very well could have been the prior owner.
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Sotheby's doesn't have to disclose that information.
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Regardless, what happened indicates
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very strongly that people really do take this kind of art
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seriously.
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They probably would have even if it
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hadn't been in the gold frame, but they're certainly
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taking it even more seriously now that the frame has
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revealed itself to be an integral part of the work.
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When he posted his video, Banksy included the quote by Picasso,
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"The urge to destroy is also a creative urge."
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And Banksy certainly isn't the first artist
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to incorporate destruction in art making.
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Man Ray made his first indestructible object
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in 1923, an altered metronome that the viewer
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is instructed to smash when they've reached,
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quote, "the limit of endurance."
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Robert Rauschenberg is famous for his 1953 erased Willem de
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Kooning drawing, and Nicki de Saint Phalle for her 1961
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exhibition in which she asks visitors
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to fire at her relief paintings with a .22 caliber rifle.
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There are many ways a work of art comes into being, be it
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an additive process, a subtractive process,
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one that must unfold in space and time,
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or one that's immaterial, not existing
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until the moment it's performed and then disappearing
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as soon as it's over.
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"Girl with Balloon" was one artwork,
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and now it's another that came into being
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through a public action but which still very much has
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a material presence because the object wasn't destroyed.
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It's only half shredded.
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And since it was canvas going through,
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the remaining fringe is pretty stable.
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I can totally see an art packer carefully
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crafting a crate that will keep it safe
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and sound until its next exhibition.
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It really only got more interesting when shredded.
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Editioned prints, or paintings of Banksy's images,
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even if sanctioned by the artist, are all right,
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but they certainly don't have the subversive power
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or presence of his art made in and for the public arena.
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His gilt frames had served the purpose
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of emphasizing the artificiality of putting these images meant
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for the public into private hands,
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but now one of those frames has revealed
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itself to be an agent of insurrection,
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however incomplete its act of destruction.
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And the art world loves being questioned and criticized.
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It's weird.
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It's almost like a kind of high-class nagging
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which they've even given their own academic-sounding term.
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Institutional critique is what they call the art that actively
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critiques the structures it lives in
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and that make it possible, like museums or galleries
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or, in this case, an auction house.
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It became a thing after institutions
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started to collect more ephemeral and performative
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works made by artists in the '60s and '70s
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by artists strategically trying to avoid
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the traditional spaces for art.
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But no matter.
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Museums were happy to matriculate
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these invasive works and include them in their histories of art,
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and in many cases people proved willing to buy them too.
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And so it's not at all surprising
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when something as straightforwardly material
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as this work by Banksy can fetch such a high price at auction,
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and it's not surprising either when
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its collector is willing to accept it's transformed
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and likely even more valuable state,
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especially now that post action it
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embodies some aspect of the subversion that
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makes Banksy Banksy.
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It can actually live more comfortably in an exhibition
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now than it could before, hanging half
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in and out of its frame, telling its own history of Banksy's
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shenanigans.
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But there's also another important element of this work
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that we might be overlooking, and that's the publicity
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and press that has swirled around it,
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which I'd argue is as much a part of the work as what went
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down at Sotheby's.
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Banksy is brilliant at attracting attention
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and generating controversy.
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His anonymity is part of that and something I hope never
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goes away.
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With this work, he draws attention
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to the auction process in general,
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which is followed closely only by an extremely tiny community.
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Most of us see headlines about multimillion dollar sales,
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feel nauseous, and then move on.
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The auction system in its current form
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survives in part because most people aren't paying attention
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to it.
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It's a highly efficient way for the international uber-rich
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to buy and trade valuable assets.
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Sure, some are in the game for good reasons,
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but Banksy's action has made us all more
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aware of a few key facts.
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People are willing to pay ungodly sums of money for art
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these days.
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With rare exceptions, none of that money goes to the artists.
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These are secondary sales, meaning
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one owner is selling to another.
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Most artists are completely powerless when
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their work goes to auction.
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To take back some of that power, you might have to get
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your hands a little dirty, like when Damien Hirst orchestrated
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his own direct-to-auction sale in 2008 and like this recent
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stunt by Banksy, which may or may not have been executed with
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the cooperation of Sotheby's.
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Whether or not we assume what Banksy says is true--
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which we really shouldn't--
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"Love is in the Bin" still reminds us
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of the convoluted power structures
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that vie for what art and which artists
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get anointed as important and valuable.
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We like Banksy's work because it helps us see the gross power
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imbalances all around us, even if they're
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imperfect and temporary and corruptible by outside forces,
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or perhaps we love them more because of those things.
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Banksy may seem like less of the pure countercultural rebel he
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once was, but I, for one, appreciate
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these recent attempts at effecting change, however
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small, from the inside, or at least with one foot in and one
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foot out, able to capture money from sales
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that will happen with or without his blessing,
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and perhaps apply those proceeds to new work in the future.
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I, for one, will be looking out for some very public
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$1.3 million expenditures from Banksy
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in the not-too-distant future.
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I'll leave it to him to surprise me.
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Do you want to know more about money so you can maybe
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buy a Banksy one day?
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"Two Cents" is a PBS Digital Studios
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series about money and you.
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Financial experts and husband and wife team Philip Olson
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and Julia Lorenz-Olson guide you through the complex world
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of personal finance.
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You'll get practical knowledge and insight