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by michaelt
1004 days ago
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> So the museum director was happy, curators were interested and they were on display - feels like the money was his? Well, the context is they paid him to reproduce previous works, such as "An Average Danish Year Income, 2010" [1] which was literally comprised of 278500 Danish Kroner, mounted and framed. If he's contracted to produce something, and decides to produce something different instead, it seems pretty clear the money wasn't his. Interestingly, he's not the first artist to frame cash and put it in an art gallery - for example K Foundation's money-as-art works, "Money: A Major Body Of Cash" [2] [1] https://www.sabsay.com/artists/43-jens-haaning/works/9668-je...
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K_Foundation#Money:_A_Major_Bo... |
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You cannot mention this without also mentioning "K Foundation Burn a Million Quid".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K_Foundation_Burn_a_Million_Qu...
And yes, they really did do it. (This was the same blokes who, at the top of the UK charts, as an artistic statement deleted their entire music back catalogue, meaning you could no longer buy their music. In 1992, that really did mean no more sales of their music and no more profit for them.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_KLF