“¡¡Achoo!!” in Bristol. 10 December 2020.

There had been some buzz before the piece appeared on the Banksy website http://www.banksy.co.uk on 10 December around 17h. A few hours later, it was published on the official Instagram account @banksy.

Photographs: http://www.banksy.co.uk

The Guardian commented the artwork a few hours later:

The owners of a house in Bristol have apparently pulled out of the sale of the property after a Banksy piece appeared on the wall. On Thursday, the anonymous street artist confirmed he was behind the artwork showing an older woman sneezing out her false teeth, which has appeared on a semi-detached house in steep Vale Street, Totterdown. The stencil mural, Aachoo!!”, had been covered up before its unveiling on Thursday morning. It shows a woman in a headscarf holding a handkerchief but dropping her walking stick and handbag as she loses her dentures while sneezing.

Vale Street is England’s steepest residential street – its 22-degree slope used during annual Easter Sunday egg-rolling competitions. ITV News West Country spoke to the owners of the house, which had a sold sign up outside, and were told they have pulled out of the sale. They were due to exchange contracts next week but the artwork could see the value of their house rocket.

Nicholas Makin, whose mother Aileen owns the property, said people had been climbing over the house to get a better look at the new piece. He told ITV News West Country that his mother was distressed by the attention and they will take time to consider what to do next.

Fred Loosmore, 28, a furniture maker who until recently rented a room in the house, told the PA Media news agency he had put a clear covering over it for protection. “We wanted to come up because people will deface it, and luckily we’ve got a workshop and a massive piece of acrylic we’ve got left over,” he said.

“When we lived here so many people would come, especially on bikes and stuff because they were trying to do the challenge up the hills. It’s a great spot. The artwork is so nice. It’s so relevant, isn’t it?”

From the Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2020/dec/10/bansky-confirms-he-created-aachoo-artwork-in-bristol

Banksy confirms hula-hoop girl in Nottingham. 17 October 2020.

The piece first appeared on social media on 14 October. After a few days of speculations about whether it was done by a local street artist, Banksy confirmed the piece as his on Saturday morning.

Photograph: Banksy’s Instagram

The work depicts a girl hula-hooping with a tyre. The tyre once seemed part of the slaughtered bike lock chained at the lamppost beside her.

As always, there are many interpretations to be made. One goes like this: Even if you suffer from the economy and the pandemic, you can find happiness in the little things. Find new uses for obsolete materialism. A simple but powerful advice from stoicism?

According to local residents of Lenton talking to The Guardian, the bike appeared at the scene at the same time as the artwork:

“Surinder Kaur, 42, who runs the beauty salon next to the mural, said the bike had appeared at the same time as the mural. She said within hours the council had rushed to protect the piece by placing clear plastic sheeting over it. Vandals have spray-painted over the plastic two or three times already. Everyone is very excited and many, many people are coming to see the picture,” Kaur said. “Everyone was confused about whether it was real or not real but it’s an amazing picture, it’s amazing art.”

Excerpt from : https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2020/oct/17/banksy-confirms-hula-hoop-girl-mural-in-nottingham-is-his

Feeding frenzy in the Banksy market. September 2020.

The market for Banksy’s prints and multiples has been dynamic over the last decade, with prices increasing 25% annually on average. Not this year. According to the website https://www.banksy-value.com, prices for Banky’s prints have increased by 104% since the beginning of 2020. The estimate is based on real results from the auctions in London and elsewhere. In 2020, well over 250 prints were bought and sold between collectors at big auction houses. Of particular interest are the upcoming auctions at Christie’s I can’t believe you morons actually buy this sh*t, and Sotheby’s Banksy, with several iconic prints up for sale, such as Girl with BalloonChrist with Shopping Bags, and Love is in the Air.

Another interesting example is the print Banksquiat, from a signed edition of 300, released at the Gross Domestic Product exhibition in October 2019. It was Banky’s first regular print release since 2010. One of the Banksquiat prints was put up for sale by a collector at Tate Ward Auctions in London in August, and it sold for £118,750, including Buyers Premium.

Banksy’s Banksquiat print, sold at Tate Ward in August for GBP 118,750

How can a print by Banksy sell for £ 100,000 when a print by Picasso goes for £ 2,000? Possible explanations:

First, the prints have been an essential part of Banksy’s “oeuvre”. The prints are more than reproductions of a motive; they are handprinted art pieces in their own right. The idea behind making prints is to provide affordable artwork for the broader public. The irony is that the same print Banksy sold for £50 at the initial release in the early 2000s is now sold for more than £50,000 on the secondary market.

The trust factor: The Picasso Foundation doesn’t certify Picasso’s prints; they only care about the unique pieces. Banksy’s handling service, Pest Control Office, has created an almost fake-proof certification system for the prints, leading to high trust in the secondary market.

It’s also a question of limited supply and increasing demand. Picasso was enormously prolific and produced thousands and thousands of prints in different techniques and large editions. Banksy has only printed 50 motives. If we count the different colourways for some of these motives, such as the Soup Cans, the total is somewhere around 130 different motives, all printed in small editions. The total supply of certified Banksy prints is relatively small if we compare it to other established artists; if we sum all of the editions made from the 130 different motives, we will arrive at approximately 10,000 signed prints and approximately 20,000 unsigned prints, which are also authentic if they have a Certificate of Authenticity.

The increasing demand comes from Banksy being perceived as the most influential artist of our time. His printed motives are among the most iconic images around and, therefore, highly coveted by a growing base of collectors. You not only get a piece of paper for your money, but you also get a part of an artistic narrative unprecedented in the art world. 

One factor especially influences demand and supply: long-term collectors finally understand that they can buy a Banksy. According to initiated sources, important art foundations are now starting to buy Banksy. When long-term collectors buy on the secondary market, they not only increase demand; the pieces will “disappear” from the market, thus limiting supply further.

Banksy funds refugee rescue boat in the Mediterranean. 27 August 2020

Photographs: Ruben Neugebauer / The Guardian

The Guardian published the exclusive story on 27 August:

The British street artist Banksy has financed a boat to rescue refugees attempting to reach Europe from north Africa, the Guardian can reveal. The vessel, named Louise Michel after a French feminist anarchist, set off in secrecy on 18 August from the Spanish seaport of Burriana, near Valencia, and is now in the central Mediterranean where on Thursday it rescued 89 people in distress, including 14 women and four children. It is now looking for a safe seaport to disembark the passengers or to transfer them to a European coastguard vessel.

Banksy’s involvement in the rescue mission goes back to September 2019 when he sent an email to Pia Klemp, the former captain of several NGO boats that have rescued thousands of people over recent years.

“Hello Pia, I’ve read about your story in the papers. You sound like a badass,” he wrote. “I am an artist from the UK and I’ve made some work about the migrant crisis, obviously I can’t keep the money. Could you use it to buy a new boat or something? Please let me know. Well done. Banksy.”

Klemp, who initially thought it was a joke, believes she was chosen by Banksy due to her political stance. “I don’t see sea rescue as a humanitarian action, but as part of an anti-fascist fight,” she told the Guardian.

She has made clear that Banksy’s involvement in the operations is limited to providing financial support. “Banksy won’t pretend that he knows better than us how to run a ship, and we won’t pretend to be artists.”

With a top speed of 27 knots, the Louise Michel would be able to “hopefully outrun the so-called Libyan coastguard before they get to boats with refugees and migrants and pull them back to the detention camps in Libya”, said Klemp.

From The Guardian 

‘Mediterranean Sea View’ sold for 2,235,000 GBP at Sotheby’s. 28 July 2020

Banksy’s take on the refugee crisis went for 2,235,000 GBP, including buyer’s premium at Sotheby’s ‘Rembrandt to Richter’ auction, more than double the initial estimate. The selling party was ABCD Bethlehem – a Palestinian charity, after receiving the piece as a donation from Banksy. The information sheet for the lot continues: “All proceeds will go towards building a new acute stroke unit and purchasing children’s rehabilitation equipment for BASR hospital in Bethlehem.” 

The triptych has been on display at Walled Off Hotel since its opening in March 2017. Due to the corona situation, the hotel remains closed until further notice. The question is whether the hotel will open again or if the sale marks the beginning of the end for the iconic hotel. Hopefully not. See the previous post: The Walled Off Hotel. Palestine, March 2017.

2017 UP Mediterranean seaview

Photograph: Sotheby’s

Banksy hits the London Underground. 14 July 2020

Photographs: Banksy’s Instagram

The video of the hit was posted on Banksy’s Instagram on 14 July with the title “London Underground – undergoes deep clean”. It depicts Banksy entering an underground train carriage while dressed as a cleanup crew member. Banksy paints a rat sneezing while the other rats struggle to get their masks on. At the end of the clip, we see the words “I get lockdown, but I get up again” sprayed on the carriage doors, referring to Chumbawamba’s hit Tubthumping from 1997.

“Transport for London confirmed on Tuesday evening that the work was removed “some days ago” due to strict anti-graffiti policy, but that it would welcome Banksy to recreate his message “in a suitable location”.

The official video on his visit to the London Underground:

London / Banksyfilm

Banksy’s idea for toppled statue of Bristol slave trader Edward Colston. 9 June 2020

20200609-Unique-Colston statue-Instagram
Photograph: Banksy’s Instagram

In his own words:

“What should we do with the empty plinth in the middle of Bristol? Here’s an idea that caters for both those who miss the Colston statue and those who don’t. We drag him out the water, put him back on the plinth, tie cable round his neck and commission some life size bronze statues of protestors in the act of pulling him down. Everyone happy. A famous day commemorated.”

Banksy’s tribute to NHS-workers. 6 May 2020

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Photograph: Banksy’s Instagram
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The piece hanging at Southampton General Hospital. Photograph: Instagram / banksy_dealer

As reported by The Guardian a few hours after the piece appeared at the Southampton General Hospital in the southern UK:

“Banksy left a note for hospital workers, saying: “Thanks for all you’re doing. I hope this brightens the place up a bit, even if it’s only black and white.”

After lockdown measures are lifted, the piece will be put on public display. It will then be auctioned to raise money for NHS charities, a spokeswoman for Banksy confirmed.

Paula Head, the chief executive of University Hospital Southampton NHS foundation trust, said: “Here at Southampton, our hospital family has been directly impacted with the tragic loss of much loved and respected members of staff and friends. The fact that Banksy has chosen us to recognise the outstanding contribution everyone in and with the NHS is making, in unprecedented times, is a huge honour.”

“It will be really valued by everyone in the hospital as people get a moment in their busy lives to pause, reflect and appreciate this piece of art. It will no doubt also be a massive boost to morale for everyone who works and is cared for at our hospital.”