Courtesy of Sotheby’sArt & PhotographyNewsBanksy’s self-destructing artwork breaks records in £18.6 million saleIf Love is in the Bin was supposed to poke fun at the art market, then the art market had the last laughShareLink copied ✔️October 16, 2021Art & PhotographyNewsTextThom WaiteBanksy’s Great British Spraycation (2021)13 Imagesview more + In 2018, one of Banksy’s best-known works, Girl With Balloon, was sold at Sotheby’s, fetching more than £1 million before alarms sounded and it shredded itself in its frame at the auction house. After deciding to hang onto the artwork, rechristened Love is in the Bin, the buyer sent it back to auction this week, with a guide price of £4 million to £6 million. As expected, keeping the self-destructing piece (which was supposed to shred completely, but jammed halfway through) turned out to be a good call. Love is in the Bin didn’t just quadruple the buyer’s investment but, after a ten-minute bidding battle, went for eighteen times the original price at a record £18.6 million. The new sale took place almost three years to the day since the infamous prank, with Alex Branczik, the chairman of modern and contemporary art at Sotheby’s Asia, calling the artwork: “One of the most ingenious moments of performance art this century.” “Banksy is no stranger to making headlines and this latest chapter in his story has captured imaginations across the world,” Branczik adds. “We can only begin to guess what might come next.” Banksy’s work has been steadily increasing in value for some time, as marked by a series of broken records. In 2019, his portrait of MPs as a room full of chimps, Devolved Parliament, went for £9.9 million; this year, his tribute to the NHS, Game Changer, reached a new high of £14.4 million (without fees). Profits from the auctioned artworks that are still in his possession generally go toward charitable causes, previously including a Bethlehem hospital and a rescue boat for refugees. The street artist originally showcased the semi-self-destruction of Love is in the Bin on Instagram, stating that the auction house wasn’t in on the prank. He also followed up with a short documentary — Shredding the Girl and Balloon — that detailed how the shredder was installed. Banksy is yet to acknowledge the new sale, however, having not updated his Instagram since posting about his Great British Spraycation earlier this year. Revisit Dazed’s list of Banksy’s most infamous pranks here. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORECinematic, film noir photos that capture the rhythm of TokyoThis photo series captures the flame of a first queer love080 Barcelona Fashion080 Barcelona Fashion Week, these were your best moments‘Precarious, exhausting, and unfair’: How online censors stifle erotic artIntimate portraits of artists and the jewellery that matters to them CrocsTried and tested: taking Crocs new boots on a trial through LondonMeet the waitress who disrupted the British Museum’s ball The Renaissance meets sci-fi in Isaac Julien’s new cinematic installationMagnum and Aperture have just launched a youth-themed print saleArt Basel Paris: 7 emerging artists to have on your radarInside Tyler Mitchell’s new blockbuster exhibition in ParisAn insider’s portrait of life as a young male model