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Bezos, Musk, Zuckerberg, Warhol – all in dog poo?
A unique artwork has gone viral at this year’s Art Basel as the annual event kicks off In Miami, Florida.
Skin-toned robotic dogs with Madame Tussauds-caliber wax heads of billionaires and famous artists — including Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Andy Warhol and Pablo Picasso — saunter around pen and photographs in a work titled “Ordinary Animals,” produced by Charleston-based Pebble Studios.
“The photo they take, they reinterpret how they see the world,” Mike Winkleman, also known as Beeple, said in an interview posted on TikTok. “So it has artists, it also has Elon and Zuckerberg.”
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“And increasingly, these technologists and the people who control these algorithms decide what we see, how we see the world. And then I’m there – I throw myself there,” he added, noting that his head is also on a robotic dog.

“Regular Animals” by Beeple Studios at the Art Basel Miami Beach Preview at the Miami Convention Center on December 3, 2025, in Miami, Florida. (Getty Images)
The robotic dogs wander, sit, bump into each other and, from time to time, blink their backs with the words “poop” before producing a digital image to leave on the floor.
“Thanks, I wasn’t planning on sleeping tonight anyway,” one TikTok user wrote.
“Those things are almost as unsettling as Actual peoplesaid another person on the podium.

Andy Warhol (left) and Jeff Bezos (right) “bump into” each other in Pebble’s “Regular Animals.” (Sean Zane/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images / Getty Images)
One Art Basel Instagram user commented: “This is genius and terrifying at the same time.”
“Is this real or artificial intelligence?” one person asked.
Winkelmann told CNN that the robots are designed to stop working after three years, and their primary task is to record and store images. On blockchain.

A realistic replica of Elon Musk’s head can be seen on one of Beeple’s “Regular Animals” robotic fangs at Art Basel Miami Beach 2025. (Sean Zane/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images / Getty Images)
Art Basel confirmed to Fox News Digital that every copy of the “Regular Animals” robot has sold out, priced at $100,000 each.
This installation can be found at Zero 10 Gallery, a “curated space dedicated to art for the digital age,” according to the event’s website.
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Pablo Picasso’s likeness is also included in “Ordinary Animals”. (Sean Zane/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images / Getty Images)
Beeple’s claim to artistic fame came during the non-fungible token (NFT) craze of 2021, when his NFT artwork “Everydays: The First 5000 Days” sold for more than $69 million at Christie’s, instantly making him one of the most valuable living artists.
Art Basel Miami Beach runs from December 5 to 7 and brings together 283 leading galleries from 43 countries. This art fair is known to attract the world’s richest people every year, and regularly closes art acquisitions worth seven figures.
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2025-12-04 20:16:00