Quite some leap from spraying hard-to-reach canal walls in the dead of night. To what extent Banksy even remains a “street artist” – and what that in itself might mean – are questions Will Ellsworth-Jones takes some time to address. His book isn’t a biography, exactly: it would be hard to write one when you’ve opted not to reveal the identity of your subject. As such, it may disappoint the casual browser, attracted by an ambiguous subtitle and eager for the scoop on Who Banksy Is. The Mail on Sunday revealed this in 2008, so you’d think it would be common knowledge by now, but it’s still a half-kept secret most fans are happier not knowing.
Banksy’s anonymity makes him a creature of contradictions: he’s the most famous graffiti artist in the world, and the most determinedly faceless. In placing him implicitly above the rank and file of his peers, it also makes him the sell-out many of them love to hate.
Dissing a rival in this arena is, of course, as simple as painting over them, and Ellsworth-Jones talks us through some of the spats in which Banksy, the defacer par excellence, has found the shoe on the other foot. His long-running feud with the London-based Robbo, whose crew took to obliterating as many Banksy pieces as they could find, perhaps points to the basis for Banksy’s fame in the first place, because nothing Team Robbo did in modifying his work had quite the wit of what was underneath. The recent stunts of “Hanksy”, who specialises in superimposing the face of Tom Hanks onto existing works by his near-namesake, show a little more flair.
Full piece at The Teletgraph
Full piece at The Teletgraph
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