A sculpture of a man with a serious expression, wearing a black shirt and beige pants, hangs with arms extended and feet bare against a white background.

We are the Revolution

€1,500

Art sculpture of a man with a serious expression, wearing a black shirt and beige pants, hanging vertically against a white background.

Maurizio Cattelan

We are the Revolution

€1,500

Limited edition

Edition of 1000

Each sculpture will be individually hand-painted, and dispatched to collectors in the order they purchased.

Shipping begins in February and finishes in June.

Draw closing on

Friday, 24 October – 16:00 UTC

Minimum 50 available by draw

Maurizio Cattelan makes himself the punchline in this hand-painted, sculptural self-portrait.

A new limited edition sculpture, the work is the latest of Maurizio's revered miniatures – perhaps the most famous of which, La Rivoluzione Siamo Noi (2000), nods to German artist Joseph Beuys and his canonical felt suit. Cattelan’s motto, “I am not really an artist,” flips Beuys’ famous claim that “every man is an artist”. The statement encapsulates the tongue-in-cheek sentiment of this sculpture: at once a parody of Cattelan’s own role as creator and a reflection on the place of the artist in society.

Each edition is individually numbered and includes a certificate of authenticity signed by the artist. 

If you never thought you would be able to hang my effigy in your home, that makes two of us.

Maurizio Cattelan

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A yellow banana is taped to the wall with silver duct tape
Maurizio Cattelan

Maurizio Cattelan

1 collaboration

Maurizio Cattelan has been called many names, but do not call him an imposter – “an impostor is someone who wants to be someone else… I am who I’ve always been.” Maurizio, the troublemaker, grew up in an industrial town in northern Italy, faking his parents’ signatures on school report cards. Maurizio, the outsider,  received no formal art training but has been hailed ‘the most famous Italian artist since Caravaggio.’ Maurizio, the heretic who dropped a meteorite on the pope (La Nona Ora, 1999), holds no institution sacred – not even the art world. A century after Duchamp’s Fountain (1917), Maurizio inverted the idea of readymade art with America (2016) – a fully-functional solid gold toilet in the restrooms at Guggenheim Museum.

While Comedian (2019) – an ordinary banana duct-taped to a wall – has captured mainstream attention for years, it’s not the first time it seemed like Maurizio was playing a joke on the world. For example, L.O.V.E (2010), an 11m marble hand with four digits missing – leaving only a middle finger outside the Italian Stock Exchange in Milan. Is it a response to the fascist history of the square, or the 2008 financial crisis? Is it a postmodern comment on the emptiness of gestures, or just a really good joke? Any single answer would be unsatisfactory. To Maurizio, “if something can be reduced to one clear concept, it is as sure as hell artistically dead.” Only one thing unifies this sprawling, sardonic oeuvre – the figure of Maurizio the Artist. Or is that just another Mini-Me (1999)?

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Reviews from Avant collectors

  • Gorgeous quality and print. Thank you!

  • artwork is simply exquisite and Avant Arte’s customer service was exceptional as always. Thank you!

  • Outstanding presentation, looking forward to ordering more artwork.

  • Thanks again for great collaboration and looking forward to new projects and pieces for my collection.

  • Congratulations for the perfect service!

  • an amazing artwork. my second Tomas Sanchez. very happy to have it framed bu you. thank you.

  • Looks amazing - Very Happy

  • Great piece, arrived in excellent condition, thanks!