That's the title to this Bloomberg article about Judge Scola's case involving this "art" from Art Basel a few years ago:
Here's the intro to the article:
The artist behind a viral sculpture featuring a banana taped to a
wall at the 2019 Art Basel fair in Miami was unable to immediately shake
a lawsuit claiming he copied the artwork from another artist.
The
idea of a banana duct-taped to a wall is uncopyrightable, but the
specific “selection, coordination, and arrangement” of the various
elements of the sculpture can receive a degree of protection, Judge
Robert N. Scola Jr. said in his Wednesday opinion.
At this early
stage of the suit, artist Joe Morford sufficiently argued that the Art
Basel exhibit, known as “Comedian,” was substantially similar to his
work, called “Banana & Orange,” which he registered with the
Copyright Office in 2000.
“Comedian,” created by Italian artist
Maurizio Cattelan, garnered significant international press, commentary,
and controversy. Cattelan sold three copies of the work and two proofs
for more than $390,000. Morford, who represents himself, sued for
copyright infringement in 2021.
The judge, writing for the US
District Court for the Southern District of Florida, found that Morford
has also sufficiently alleged that Cattelan had access to “Banana &
Orange,” a piece featuring both a banana and an orange taped to a wall
with silver duct tape.
The work has been available on YouTube
since 2008, on Facebook since 2015, and on Morford’s personal website
since 2016. The artist showed that the work had been accessed in 25
different countries, Scola said.
“Banana & Orange” also met the minimum standard of originality to receive copyright protection, the judge said.
“While
using silver duct tape to affix a banana to a wall may not espouse the
highest degree of creativity,” he said, “its absurd and farcical nature
meets the ‘minimal degree of creativity’ needed to qualify as original.”
Of
the copyrigthable elements of Morford’s work, there was similarity to
“Comedian,” according to Scola. Both pieces use a single piece of silver
duct tape that “runs upward from left to right at an angle” that
affixes a banana “angled downward left to right” against a wall, he
said.