‘Take the Money and Run’ artist ordered to repay museum after submitting blank canvases

A Danish artist has been ordered to repay a museum after running off with its money upon being commissioned to create a piece of artwork but instead submitted two empty canvases titled “Take the Money and Run.”

In 2021, Jens Haaning was given the equivalent of nearly $84,000 in Danish kroner and euro banknotes by the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art in Aalborg.

He has now been ordered to repay around $70,600 and another $11,000 in court fees. 

“I am shocked, but at the same time it is exactly what I have imagined,” Haaning told Danish public broadcaster DR on Monday.

For its exhibition on labor conditions and money, entitled “Work It Out,” the museum commissioned Haaning to recreate two of his earlier pieces, which featured banknotes attached to a canvas representing the average annual wage in Denmark and Austria.

As well as lending him the notes, the museum also paid him $3,900 for the work.

When the museum received the completed artworks, they were blank. 


A Danish artist has been ordered to repay a museum after being commissioned to create a piece of artwork but instead submitted two empty canvases titled "Take the Money and Run."
A Danish artist has been ordered to repay a museum after being commissioned to create a piece of artwork but instead submitted two empty canvases titled “Take the Money and Run.”
EPA
Haaning is now been ordered to repay around $70,600 and another $11,000 in court fees. 
Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images

In 2021, Jens Haaning was given the equivalent of nearly $84,000 in Danish kroner and euro banknotes by the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art in Aalborg.
In 2021, Jens Haaning was given the equivalent of nearly $84,000 in Danish kroner and euro banknotes by the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art in Aalborg.
EPA

“The artwork is that I have taken the money,” Haaning told DR at the time. “I encourage others who have just as miserable working conditions as I to do the same. If they are being asked to give money to go to work, then take the money and run.”

The museum said Haaning broke an agreement on how to use the money.

The artist disputed the allegations.

“It’s not theft, it is a breach of contract, and the breach of contract is part of the work,” he said at the time. 

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