9.9-million chimp parliament painting smashes Banksy

9.9-million chimp parliament painting smashes Banksy

LONDON - AFP
9.9-million chimp parliament painting smashes Banksy

A Banksy painting depicting the British parliament populated by chimpanzees smashed the record for the mysterious British street artist on Oct. 3, fetching nearly 9.9 million pounds, Sotheby's auction house said.

The 2009 work entitled "Devolved Parliament" sold for 9,879,500 ($12.1 million, 11.1 million euros) following a 13-minute battle between 10 different bidders.

"Record price for a Banksy painting set at auction tonight. Shame I didn't still own it," the artist said on his Instagram account.

The previous auction record for a Banksy artwork was $1.87 million, achieved by "Keep it Spotless" at Sotheby's New York in 2008.

"Devolved Parliament" was expected to fetch 1.5 million to 2 million in the sale.

The oil painting measures 4.2 meters by 2.5 meters unframed, the largest known canvas by the anonymous artist.

It shows chimpanzees on the green benches of the House of Commons, from the viewpoint of the main entrance.

The sale comes after the controversial five-week suspension of Britain's parliament by Prime Minister Boris Johnson was deemed unlawful by the Supreme Court, with time running out before Britain is due to leave the European Union on Oct. 31.

"Inevitably what we have been seeing in the Houses of Parliament over the last few months and weeks has become a daily soap opera, not just in the UK... but also across the rest of Europe and indeed the world," Alex Branczik, Sotheby's European head of contemporary art, said ahead of the sale.

"What he's pointing to here is the regression of the oldest parliamentary democracy in the world into tribalistic animalistic behaviour, the sort that we've seen broadcasted on our televisions," said Branczik.

"The real genius of Banksy is his ability to reduce this incredibly complex debate into one single simple image, which importantly is very readily shared in this age of social media and a very image-consuming population."

Banksy first unveiled the painting, then entitled "Question Time," a decade ago for an exhibition in his home city of Bristol, southwest England.

He later reworked and retitled the painting, snuffing out the lights and making an upturned banana face downwards.

The seller bought the painting from Banksy in 2011.

"Potent and poignant, bold and brash, Banksy's monumental oil painting of the House of Commons offers a premonitory insight into the increasingly tumultuous face of politics in contemporary Britain," the sale catalogue says.

The auction took place almost a year after Banksy's "Girl With The Balloon" partially shredded itself as the hammer came down at Sotheby's, becoming the freshly titled "Love Is In The Bin."

chimp parliament,