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A Jeff Koons ‘balloon dog’ sculpture was knocked over and shattered in Miami

  • By Giulia Heyward/ NPR
FILE - In this Thursday, May 29, 2008 file photo, artist Jeff Koons poses beside one of his works,

 Charles Rex Arbogast / AP Photo

FILE - In this Thursday, May 29, 2008 file photo, artist Jeff Koons poses beside one of his works, "Balloon Dog," on display at Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art. The more than 10-foot-high chromium stainless steel sculpture of a balloon-animal dog has an orange metallic coating and is part of an exhibit of about 60 other sculptures and paintings by Koons.

An art collector accidentally shattered a porcelain Jeff Koons “balloon dog” sculpture, valued at $42,000, at an arts festival in Miami on Thursday.

“I was shocked obviously and a bit sad about it,” Cédric Boero, who was managing the booth that displayed the sculpture, told NPR. “But the lady was obviously very ashamed and she didn’t know how to apologize.”

The shattered sculpture was on display at the booth of Bel-Air Fine Art, where Boero is a district manager, at an exclusive preview event for Art Wynwood, a contemporary art fair. It’s one of several balloon dog sculptures by Koons, whose balloon animal sculptures are instantly recognizable across the world. Four years ago, Koons set a record for the most expensive work sold at an auction by a living artist: a rabbit sculpture that sold for $91.1 million. In 2013, another balloon dog sculpture of Koons sold for $58.4 million.

The shattered sculpture, according to Boero, was valued at $24,000 a year ago. But its price went up as other iterations of the balloon dog sculpture sold out.

Cedric Boero

The “balloon dog” sculpture, pictured, shortly after it shattered.

Boero said the art collector accidentally knocked the sculpture over, which fell to the floor. The sound of the shattered sculpture instantly stopped all conversation in the space, as everyone turned to look.

“It shattered into a thousand pieces,” an artist who attended the event, Stephen Gamson, posted on Instagram, along with videos of the aftermath. “One of the most crazy things I’ve ever seen.”

In his post, Gamson said he unsuccessfully tried to purchase what remained of the sculpture. He later told the Miami Herald that the story added value to the shattered sculpture.\

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Stephen Gamson (@gamsonart)

Fortunately, the pricey sculpture is covered by insurance.

“It’s broken, so we are not happy about that,” Boero said. “But then, we are a famous group of 35 galleries worldwide, so we have an insurance policy. We will be covered by that.”

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