“Why a £5 Million Banana Became the Ultimate Bite of Controversy: Inside the Wild Journey of a $6,000 Snack!”

In a delightful twist that bridges the gap between absurdity and art, one man recently spent a whopping £5 million on a banana—yes, you read that right, a banana! What might just be the most expensive snack ever consumed came from a humble fruit stand in Manhattan, where it originally sold for a mere 20 pence. This particular potassium-rich masterpiece, famously duct-taped to a wall by artist Maurizio Cattelan and dubbed ‘COMEDIAN’, has sparked curiosity, laughter, and perhaps a smidgen of envy among the rest of us who typically consider a trip to the grocery store thrilling if we get avocados on sale. After indulging in this ludicrously priced piece of conceptual art, the purchaser, cryptocurrency mogul Justin Sun, claimed it was “much better than other bananas.” But really, does a £5 million banana taste any different than those 20p ones? Join me as we peel back the layers of this story—art, commerce, and a sprinkle of confusion in between! LEARN MORE.

A man who bought a banana for £5 million has ended up eating the thing, making it possibly the most expensive snack anyone has ever consumed.

To truly understand this we must explore the origins of the banana. In the case of this particularly phallic yellow fruit it was sold for 20p on a Manhattan street in New York City by a fruit seller called Shah Alam, who won’t be receiving a portion of the proceeds from it being sold on.

The 74-year-old’s fruit stand is located near the famous Sotheby’s auction house where he sells bananas for 20p each or 79p a bunch, or at least the American equivalent of that money since he plies his trade in the US.

One of the bananas he sold became the centrepiece of an art exhibit by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan, who duct taped the curved fruit to a wall and called it ‘COMEDIAN’.

No, I don’t really get it either.

You could do a lot of good with £5 million, or you could just buy an art-installation banana and eat it. (PETER PARKS/AFP via Getty Images)

You could do a lot of good with £5 million, or you could just buy an art-installation banana and eat it. (PETER PARKS/AFP via Getty Images)

This isn’t the first time Cattelan has done this, as according to the New York Times he’s sold a banana taped to a wall for large sums of money in the past, but those pieces were eventually sold between $120,000 (£94,500) and $150,000 (£118,000). This time however, the bidding started at $800,000 (£630,000) before eventually being sold for an eye watering cost of $6.2 million (almost £5 million).

The banana buyer was one Justin Sun, a Chinese-born cryptocurrency guy, and after purchasing the particularly pricey source of potassium he promised that he would eat it and that’s exactly what he’s done.

At a very expensive hotel in Hong Kong and with plenty of reporters arrayed around him, Sun ate the £5 million banana, declaring it to be ‘much better than other bananas’.

After spending so much on it you’d hope so, and the banana buyer thinks that his consumption of the conceptual art will be part of the works history.

The Guardian reports that everybody who watched Sun eat the £5 million banana was provided with a duct taped banana so that ‘everyone has a banana to eat’.

This is apparently art. More specifically it's a banana duct taped to a wall that was sold for an obscene price. (John Nacion/Getty Images)

This is apparently art. More specifically it’s a banana duct taped to a wall that was sold for an obscene price. (John Nacion/Getty Images)

He’s not the first person to buy a stunningly expensive banana taped to a wall from Cattelan, nor even the first to eat his excessive purchase.

In 2019 a banana he taped to a wall sold three times at Art Basel Miami before a performance artist called David Datuna peeled the banana off the wall before eating it.

Another banana was procured and taped to the wall in its place, with gallery officials saying the banana was an ‘idea’.

When the fruit seller Shah Alam was told how much the single banana he’d sold had been auctioned off for he cried saying: “I am a poor man. I have never had this kind of money; I have never seen this kind of money.”

Cattelan’s response to his tears was to say: “The reaction of the banana vendor moves me deeply, underscoring how art can resonate in unexpected and profound ways.

“However, art, by its nature, does not solve problems — if it did, it would be politics.”

Meanwhile, Sun said that that he found Alam crying ‘poignant’ and claimed he would buy 100,000 bananas from the 74-year-old’s stall.

Post Comment

RSS
Follow by Email