Gothamist is claiming that this new humorous mural on the corner of Grand and Wooster in downtown Manhattan is courtesy of infamous street artist Banksy and executed by the painters at Colossal Media, the same company responsible for all those hand painted billboards in Soho for H&M, among others.
And so the world media thinks it has ‘unmasked’ the elusive Banksy once again. The UK’s Daily Mail has published a pic of an individual they believe to be Banksy.
The photo has been in circulation for a while, but it isn’t the only one Banksy. The photo first appeared in The Evening Standard Newspaper in 2004, and was supposedly taken by a Jamaican photographer named Peter Dean Rickards when banksy flew to Kingston to work on a project.
Anyway, we’ve collated a bunch of Banksy Unmasked pics (after the jump).
A Piece of Melbourne street artwork by reclusive British artist Banksy has now gone under cover.
A clear perspex screen has been installed to protect the quirky piece of graffiti from being vandalised.
The 1m spray-stencil work of a figure in a duffle coat with a diver’s helmet is on the back wall of the Nicholas Building at the entrance to Cocker Alley, off Flinders Lane. It was painted in 2003.
Despite its value, it is often hidden behind rubbish bins. Other Banksy works dotted around Melbourne’s laneways have disappeared under layers of graffiti or through council clean-ups.
The city council’s Street Art Assessment Panel designated the stencil as legal art.
The cover, paid for by the building’s owners, cost a few hundred dollars. Some of Banksy’s London graffiti art has sold for over $450,000.
To view more of Banksy’s Melbourne offerings, please visit my Banksy Flickr set here.
Banksy pulled off an audacious stunt to produce what is believed to be his biggest work yet in central London.
The secretive graffiti artist managed to erect three storeys of scaffolding behind a security fence despite being watched by a CCTV camera.
Then, during darkness and hidden behind a sheet of polythene, he painted this comment on ‘Big Brother’ society.
Yesterday the scaffolding gang returned to remove all evidence - again without the camera operator stopping them.
The work, above a Post Office yard in Newman Street near Oxford Circus, shows a small boy, watched by a security guard, painting the words: ‘One nation under CCTV.’
Andrew Newman, 35, a businessman from Dulwich, who works locally, said: ‘It was only on Sunday morning that the Post Offices guys realised what had happened.’
Artist Banksy Pranks Security.
Secretive graffiti artist Banksy is believed to have created his biggest work yet, under the not-so-watchful eye of security cameras in central London.
Banksy strikes again in Islington, north London - the graffiti artist is thought to have struck again overnight, leaving this image on the wall of a pharmacy in north London.
The new painting depicts two children pledging allegiance to UK supermarket giant Tesco. A Tesco plastic bag flies in the place of a flag.
The owner of the pharmacy in Essex Road, Islington, is said to be thrilled by his new paint job.
“I just walked into the shop on Monday and, lo and behold, there it was,” he told the London Paper.
“I am absolutely delighted - I think it’s just fantastic. I’ve heard how much these works can go for.
“We would consider selling the wall, but not the shop. I think anyone who would want to erase it is crazy. It’s a piece of art.” (It’s sad that Banksy has become synonymous with $$$ - JR)
Banksy’s latest graffiti follows Gordon Brown’s warning last week that retailers may be forced to cut down on plastic bags if they do not do so voluntarily.
The Prime Minister has hailed the example of retailers such as Marks and Spencer, who has announced it will charge customers 5p for every carrier bag given out by its food stores.
Sixty pieces by the beloved graffiti artist Banksy will go on show this Friday in what will be one of the biggest exhibitions of his works so far, and will include six pieces that have never been shown before. Among the offerings at the Andipa Gallery in Knightsbridge will be a drawing Banksy made for a band called Onecut in his native Bristol in 1999/2000: a black-and-white picture of something resembling a gramophone. Apparently, he didn’t have time to make a stencil for the piece, called “Underground Terror Tactics,” so he had to use white-out and pens on the picture. This is one of Banksy’s earliest commercial works, and its price is a cool £35,000 (about $69,500). Previously unseen works include “Lenin on Roller Blades,” from 2003, and “Roadwork Rat,” from 2006. Prices start at £7,500 (nearly $15,000).
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