Banana art work value $120K eaten by ‘hungry’ customer at South Korea museum
It was low-hanging fruit.
An artwork set up that featured a ripe banana taped to a wall at a Seoul artwork museum was devoured by a school scholar, who defended himself by saying he was “hungry” after skipping breakfast.
The long-lasting art work titled “Comic,” by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan, was on show as half an exhibition known as “WE” on the Leeum Museum of Artwork, which focuses on conventional Korean artwork and modern artwork.
On Thursday, Noh Huyn-soo, a scholar at Seoul Nationwide College, was visiting the artwork showcase when he apparently obtained a hankering for the well-known potassium-rich snack.
Noh’s impromptu feast lasted greater than a minute and was caught on video, which confirmed the scholar unceremoniously peeling the art work and having fun with his wholesome deal with beforehand valued at $120,000.
After snacking on the forbidden fruit, the ravenous museumgoer reattached the peel to the wall utilizing the artist’s duct tape and calmly walked away.
Requested by museum officers why he wolfed down the edible art work, the scholar reportedly mentioned he had missed breakfast and was hungry, according to BBC News.

In a subsequent interview with the native information outlet KBS, Noh argued that “damaging a piece of recent artwork is also art work.”
“Isn’t it taped there to be eaten?” Noh mentioned.
Cattelan took the destruction of his art work in stride, saying he had “no drawback in any respect” with the customer consuming it.
On the artist’s path, the banana is changed by museum curators each two days.



This isn’t the primary time that Cattelan’s viral artwork has been eaten.
In 2019, efficiency artist David Datuna gobbled up the world-famous banana after it bought for $120,000 at Artwork Basel in Miami.
Datuna cheekily remarked in an Instagram submit: “I actually love this set up. It’s very scrumptious.” Later, he denied that his actions amounted to vandalism and defended the stunt as a bit of efficiency artwork.
Leeum Museum mentioned it is not going to maintain Noh responsible for chomping down the banana, which was later changed with a recent one.