Supreme Mundi Skateboard
The Supreme Mundi was designed by Adrian Wilson, a British artist, to criticize the art business. Supreme is a skateboarding brand known for being costly only to be expensive. The board is just a wooden artist's palette with wheels that have a Supreme emblem that is a rip-off. This skateboard is really a painted artist's palette that was turned into a skateboard by the firm itself. It nevertheless sold for $20,000, demonstrating that fools are willing to spend a lot of money for the proper branding.
The board itself doesn't appear to be large enough to skate on, which is hilarious given that Supreme began as a skate brand for New York City's stylish kids. People still buy it, despite how awful it is because there are a lot of people willing to pay the top price for this design right now.
On a hardwood artist palette with wheels below, the Supreme Mundi board shows a precise counterfeit rendition of the Supreme insignia. Former gallery owner Jon Satin bought the board on behalf of a private customer described as a "private high-end collector." Supreme has nothing to do with this one-of-a-kind skateboard. Furthermore, despite its appearance, The Supreme Mundi was skated on the Lower East Side sidewalks, demonstrating that it is a completely functional skateboard.
Price: $20,000