applecorped
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So is Sotheby's culpable of trying to increase the value of an artwork that they later might sell and get a higher Commission on?
So is Sotheby's culpable of trying to increase the value of an artwork that they later might sell and get a higher Commission on?
The New York Times said:As the $1.4 million artwork began passing through a shredder hidden in its frame, gasps were heard in the auction room. About halfway through, the shredding suddenly stopped, and the top portion of “Girl With Balloon” seemed to have been saved.
But that reprieve, according to Banksy, the street artist who created the work — and who organized the prank to destroy it — wasn’t planned. In a clip posted to YouTube on Wednesday, Banksy suggested that he had meant for the painting to be completely destroyed at the auction in London on Oct. 5, but that the plan had been foiled when the shredder unexpectedly jammed.
In the clip, called “Shred The Love,” a man is shown building the frame, his face hidden by a hoodie. “In rehearsals it worked every time,” a caption says. The video then shows a copy of “Girl With Balloon” being completely shredded as it slipped out of the frame.
The copy in the clip appears to have been printed on paper, whereas the “Girl With Balloon” sold at auction was spray-painted on canvas, a tougher material, which may explain why the shredder failed. Joanna Brooks, the director of JBPR, who answers media enquiries on behalf of Banksy, did not respond to phone calls or to an email asking whether the rehearsals had indeed been conducted on paper copies...
The new video shows rollers and a belt pulley thing but I still can't figure out how those blades worked in that position. Maybe we aren't shown the final assembly with the blades in a working position.
It must have weighed a lot and seemed really strange to anyone lifting it.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/18/arts/design/banksy-girl-with-balloon.html said:The copy in the clip appears to have been printed on paper, whereas the “Girl With Balloon” sold at auction was spray-painted on canvas, a tougher material, which may explain why the shredder failed.
The new video shows rollers and a belt pulley thing but I still can't figure out how those blades worked in that position. Maybe we aren't shown the final assembly with the blades in a working position.
It must have weighed a lot and seemed really strange to anyone lifting it.
That would be explained by the canvas laying over a roller instead of being perfectly flat. Total canvas length is reduced when it's curled over a roller.Oh, and if that's not convincing, then this also suggests that something isn't quite right:
[imgw=800]https://i.imgur.com/4UqBCve.jpg[/imgw]
I don't think that that is what happened. One roller and one canvas.1 roller and 2 separate pictures seems like the most parsimonious explanation, no?
"Winding it back up" or even opening the frame will alter the artwork and significantly effect the value. It won't be opened but it might be X-rayed.The person who bought it could easily just wind it back up. I think they'll have to do it eventually anyway. Then we'll see what's really in there.
"Winding it back up" or even opening the frame will alter the artwork and significantly effect the value. It won't be opened but it might be X-rayed.
That would be explained by the canvas laying over a roller instead of being perfectly flat. Total canvas length is reduced when it's curled over a roller.
You can also measure the height of the girl and see that she becomes shorter in the shredded result.
I don't think that that is what happened. One roller and one canvas.
Lack of complete information and therefore ignorance (on our part) is also very parsimonious.
That would be explained by the canvas laying over a roller instead of being perfectly flat. Total canvas length is reduced when it's curled over a roller.
You can also measure the height of the girl and see that she becomes shorter in the shredded result.
I don't think that that is what happened. One roller and one canvas.
Lack of complete information and therefore ignorance (on our part) is also very parsimonious.
A bin, I think.Imagine if it had worked as planned. You have an empty frame and a pile of canvas strips on Sotheby's floor. Do you stuff the shreddings into a sack or cardboard box? Or should they be gently placed into a very expensive Christian Dior or Kate Spade handbag?
Banksy is still trolling us. Note how the soldering iron is being held in the new video.
Clue: you don't hold a soldering iron by the hot part.
The new video shows rollers and a belt pulley thing but I still can't figure out how those blades worked in that position.
That would be explained by the canvas laying over a roller instead of being perfectly flat. Total canvas length is reduced when it's curled over a roller.
And the fact that it doesn't line up with the aperture?