NEW YORK: A statue of Hitler on his knees was auctioned on Sunday for $17.2 million, a record for a work by the Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan.
The wax and resin statue entitled simply “Him” had been expected to fetch between $10 million and $15 million at the auction by Christie’s.
The previous record for a work by Cattelan, who is 55, was $7.9 million.
In the statue, Hitler is depicted as being the size of boy, on his knees in a gray woolen suit, with his hands clasped together as he gazes upward. The work was completed in 2001.
The sale came as part of a themed auction called “Bound to Fail,” a selection of 39 works of modern and contemporary art exploring the idea of commercial failure and risk-taking to expand the boundaries of art.
Loic Gouzer, deputy chairman of post-war and contemporary art with Christie’s who created the theme-oriented auction evenings, called this particular sale “difficult.” But “it came off well” and this shows the strength of the art market, he said.
Unlike in the movies, Gouzer said last week, “artists have hardly ever touched on the issue of Hitler.” “I wanted to destroy it myself. I changed my mind a thousand times, every day,” Cattelan has said.
Published in Dawn, May 10th, 2016
Dear visitor, the comments section is undergoing an overhaul and will return soon.