A $6,200 piece of art is the work of another man.
There is an art gallery in New Zealand.
There is an exhibition at the Michael Lett Gallery. One of the pieces in the exhibition is probably something you have seen before.
The Michael Lett Gallery has a piece of work that was taken from a McDonald's cheeseburger. The pickle is stuck to the ceiling because of the sauce. The so-called sculpture is going for 10,000 New Zealand dollars.
An exhibition will be on display.
Ryan Moore is the director of Fine Arts.
He told The Guardian that a funny response to the work is ok.
He said that "pickle" raises questions of how people decide on things.
The people who make and do things are the ones who decide whether something is art or not. He told The Guardian that "whether something is valuable and meaningful as artwork is the way that we collectively use it or talk about it."
Whoever buys "Pickle" will receive instructions on how to recreate the work in their own space, but on top of their thousands of dollars, they'll have to pay an additional fee for a second Mcdonald's burger.
A few years ago, Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan duct-taped bananas to the walls and sold them for $120,000 each.