Early career (1990–2001) Banksy started as a freehand graffiti artist in 1990–1994 as one of
Bristol's DryBreadZ Crew (DBZ), with two other artists known as Kato and Tes. He was inspired by local artists and his work was part of the larger
Bristol underground scene with
Nick Walker,
Inkie, and
3D. During this time he met Bristol photographer
Steve Lazarides, who began selling Banksy's work, later becoming his agent. By 2000 he had turned to the art of
stencilling after realising how much less time it took to complete a work. He claims he changed to stencilling while hiding from the police under a rubbish lorry, when he noticed the stencilled serial number and by employing this technique, he soon became more widely noticed for his art around Bristol and London. Banksy's first known large wall mural was
The Mild Mild West painted in 1997 to cover advertising of a former solicitors' office on
Stokes Croft in Bristol. It depicts a
teddy bear lobbing a
Molotov cocktail at three
riot police. Banksy's stencils feature striking and humorous images occasionally combined with slogans. The message was often
anti-war,
anti-capitalist, or
anti-establishment. Subjects could include rats,
apes, policemen, soldiers, children, and the elderly.
Exhibitions (2002–2003) On 19 July 2002, Banksy's first
Los Angeles exhibition debuted at 33 Gallery, a tiny
Silver Lake venue owned by Frank Sosa, and was on view until 18 August. The exhibition, entitled
Existencilism,
"an Exhibition of Art, Lies and Deviousness" was curated by 33 Gallery, Malathion LA's Chris Vargas, Funk Lazy Promotions' Grace Jehan, and B+. The flyer of the exhibition indicates an opening reception was followed by a performance by
Money Mark with DJ's Jun, AL Jackson,
Rhettmatic,
J-Roc, and Coleman. In 2003, at an exhibition called
Turf War, held in a London warehouse, Banksy painted on animals. At the time he gave one of his very few interviews, to the BBC's
Nigel Wrench. Although the
RSPCA declared the conditions suitable, an animal rights activist chained herself to the railings in protest. An example of his
subverted paintings is
Monet's
Water Lily Pond, adapted to include urban detritus such as litter and a
shopping trolley floating in its reflective waters; another is
Edward Hopper's
Nighthawks, redrawn to show that the characters are looking at a British football hooligan, dressed only in his
Union Jack underwear, who has just thrown an object through the glass window of the café. These oil paintings were shown at a twelve-day exhibition in
Westbourne Grove, London in 2005. Banksy, along with
Shepard Fairey, Dmote, and others, created work at a warehouse exhibition in
Alexandria, Sydney, for
Semi-Permanent in 2003. Approximately 1,500 people attended.
£10 notes to Barely Legal (2004–2006) In August 2004, Banksy produced a quantity of spoof
British £10 notes replacing the picture of the Queen's head with
Princess Diana's head and changing the text "Bank of England" to "Banksy of England". Someone threw a large wad of these into a crowd at
Notting Hill Carnival that year, which some recipients then tried to spend in local shops. These notes were also given with invitations to a Santa's Ghetto exhibition by Pictures on Walls. The individual notes have since been selling on
eBay. A wad of the notes was also thrown over a fence and into the crowd near the
NME signing tent at the
Reading Festival. A limited run of 50 signed posters containing ten uncut notes was also produced and sold by Pictures on Walls for £100 each to commemorate the death of Princess Diana. One of these sold in October 2007 at
Bonhams auction house in London for £24,000. The reproduction of images of the banknotes classifies as a criminal offence under s.18 of the
Forgery and Counterfeiting Act 1981. In 2016, the
American Numismatic Society received an email from a Reproductions Officer at the Bank of England, which brought attention to the illegality of publishing photos of the banknotes on their website without prior permission. The Bank of England holds the copyright over all its banknotes. Also in 2004, Banksy created a limited edition screenprint titled ''Napalm (Can't Beat That Feeling)
. In the print, Banksy appropriated the image of Phan Thi Kim Phuc, a Vietnamese girl who appeared in the iconic 1972 photograph The Terror of War by Nick Ut. Napalm
shows the image of Kim Phuc as seen in the original photo, but no longer within the tragic war setting. Instead, he situates the young girl against an empty background, still screaming, but now accompanied by Ronald McDonald and Mickey Mouse. The two characters hold her hands as they cheerfully gesture to an invisible audience, seemingly oblivious to the terrified girl. The image of Kim Phuc is flat, grainy and monochromatic; in most of the prints, Ronald McDonald and Mickey Mouse are yellow. In a few limited prints, the corporate characters wear pink or orange. Banksy produced 150 signed and 500 unsigned copies of Napalm''. In August 2005, Banksy, on a trip to the
Palestinian territories, created nine images on the
Israeli West Bank wall. Banksy held an exhibition called
Barely Legal, billed as a "three-day vandalised warehouse extravaganza" in Los Angeles, on the weekend of 16 September 2006. The exhibition featured a live "
elephant in a room", painted in a pink and gold floral wallpaper pattern, which, according to leaflets handed out at the exhibition, was intended to draw attention to the issue of world poverty. Although the Animal Services Department had issued a permit for the elephant, after complaints from
animal rights activists, the elephant appeared unpainted on the final day. Its owners rejected claims of mistreatment and said that the elephant had done "many, many movies. She's used to makeup." Banksy also made artwork displaying
Queen Victoria as a lesbian and satirical pieces that incorporated art made by
Andy Warhol and
Leonardo da Vinci. Peter Gibson, a spokesman for
Keep Britain Tidy, asserts that Banksy's work is simple vandalism. Another official for the same organisation stated: "We are concerned that Banksy's street art glorifies what is essentially vandalism." on 19 October 2006, a set of
Kate Moss paintings sold in
Sotheby's London for £50,400, setting an auction record for Banksy's work. The six silk-screen prints, featuring the model painted in the style of
Andy Warhol's
Marilyn Monroe pictures, sold for five times their estimated price. Their stencil of a green
Mona Lisa with real paint dripping from her eyes sold for £57,600 at the same auction. In December, journalist
Max Foster coined the phrase, "the Banksy effect", to illustrate how interest in other street artists was growing on the back of Banksy's success. On 21 February 2007, Sotheby's auction house in London auctioned three works, reaching the highest ever price for a Banksy work at auction: over £102,000 for
Bombing Middle England. Two of his other graffiti works,
Girl with Balloon and
Bomb Hugger, sold for £37,200 and £31,200 respectively, which were well above their estimated prices. The following day's auction saw a further three Banksy works reach soaring prices:
Ballerina with Action Man Parts reached £96,000;
Glory sold for £72,000;
Untitled (2004) sold for £33,600; all significantly above price estimates. To coincide with the second day of auctions, Banksy updated his website with a new image of an auction house scene showing people bidding on a picture that said, "I Can't Believe You Morons Actually Buy This Shit." In February 2007, the owners of a house with a Banksy mural on the side in
Bristol decided to sell the house through Red Propeller art gallery after offers fell through because the prospective buyers wanted to remove the mural. It is listed as a mural that comes with a house attached. In April 2007,
Transport for London painted over Banksy's
image of a scene from
Quentin Tarantino's film
Pulp Fiction (1994), featuring
Samuel L. Jackson and
John Travolta clutching bananas instead of guns. Although the image was very popular, Transport for London claimed that the graffiti created "a general atmosphere of neglect and social decay which in turn encourages crime" and their staff are "professional cleaners not professional art critics". Banksy painted the same site again and, initially, the actors were portrayed as holding real guns instead of bananas, but they were adorned with banana costumes. Sometime later, Banksy made a tribute artwork over this second
Pulp Fiction work. The tribute was for 19-year-old British graffiti artist Ozone who, along with fellow artist Wants, was hit by an underground train in
Barking, east London on 12 January 2007. Banksy depicted an angel wearing a bullet-proof vest holding a skull. He also wrote a note on his website saying: On 27 April 2007, a new record high for the sale of Banksy's work was set with the auction of the work
Space Girl and Bird fetching £288,000 (€ US$576,000) around 20 times the estimate at
Bonhams of London. On 21 May 2007 Banksy gained the award for Art's
Greatest living Briton. Banksy, as expected, did not turn up to collect his award and continued with his anonymous status. On 4 June 2007, it was reported that Banksy's
The Drinker had been stolen. In October 2007, most of his works offered for sale at Bonhams auction house in London sold for more than twice their reserve price. Banksy has published a "
manifesto" on his website. The text of the manifesto is credited as the diary entry of British
Lieutenant Colonel Mervin Willett Gonin,
DSO, which is exhibited in the
Imperial War Museum. It describes how a shipment of lipstick to the
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp immediately after its liberation at the end of World War II helped the internees regain their humanity. However, as of 18 January 2008, Banksy's Manifesto has been replaced with Graffiti Heroes No. 03, which describes Peter Chappell's graffiti quest of the 1970s that worked to free
George Davis from imprisonment. Banksy, who "is not represented by any of the commercial galleries that sell his work second hand (including Lazarides Ltd, Andipa Gallery, Bank Robber, Dreweatts, etc.)", claims that the exhibition at Vanina Holasek Gallery in New York City (his first major exhibition in that city) is unauthorised. The exhibition featured 62 of their paintings and prints.
2008 In March, Nathan Wellard and Maev Neal, a couple from
Norfolk, UK, made headlines in Britain when they decided to sell their mobile home that contains a mural, entitled
Silent Majority, done by Banksy a decade prior to his rise to fame. According to Nathan Wellard, Banksy had asked the couple if he could use the side of their home as a "large canvas", to which they agreed. In return for the "canvas", the Bristol stencil artist gave them two free tickets to the
Glastonbury Festival. The mobile home purchased by the couple 11 years earlier for £1,000, was priced at £500,000. Also in March 2008, a stencilled graffiti work appeared on
Thames Water tower in the middle of the
Holland Park roundabout, and it was widely attributed to Banksy. It was of a child painting the tag "Take this—Society!" in bright orange.
London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham spokesman, Councillor Greg Smith branded the art as vandalism, and ordered its immediate removal, which was carried out by H&F council workmen within three days. In late August 2008, marking the third anniversary of
Hurricane Katrina and the associated
levee failure disaster, Banksy produced a series of works in
New Orleans, Louisiana, mostly on buildings derelict since the disaster. of
New Orleans, August 2008 A stencil painting attributed to Banksy appeared at a vacant petrol station in the
Ensley neighbourhood of
Birmingham, Alabama on 29 August as
Hurricane Gustav approached the New Orleans area. The painting, depicting a hooded member of the
Ku Klux Klan hanging from a noose, was quickly covered with black spray paint and later removed altogether. His first official exhibition in New York City,
The Village Pet Store and Charcoal Grill, opened 5 October 2008. The
animatronic pets in the store window include a mother hen watching over her baby
Chicken McNuggets as they peck at a barbecue sauce packet, and a rabbit putting makeup on in a mirror. The
Westminster City Council stated in October 2008 that the work
One Nation Under CCTV, painted in April 2008 would be painted over as it was graffiti. The council said it would remove any graffiti, regardless of the reputation of its creator, and specifically stated that Banksy "has no more right to paint graffiti than a child". Robert Davis, the chairman of the council planning committee told
The Times newspaper: "If we condone this then we might as well say that any kid with a spray can is producing art." The work was painted over in April 2009. In December 2008,
The Little Diver, a Banksy image of a diver in a duffle coat in Melbourne, Australia, was destroyed. The image had been protected by a sheet of clear
perspex; however, silver paint was poured behind the protective sheet and later tagged with the words "Banksy woz ere". The image was almost completely obliterated. Banksy has also been long criticised for copying the work of
Blek le Rat, who created the life-sized stencil technique in early 1980s Paris and used it to express a similar combination of political commentary and humorous imagery. Blek has praised Banksy for his contribution to urban art, but said in an interview for the documentary
Graffiti Wars that some of Banksy's more derivative work makes him "angry", saying that "It's difficult to find a technique and style in art so when you have a style and you see someone else is taking it and reproducing it, you don't like that."
The Cans Festival (2008) In London, over the weekend 3–5 May 2008, Banksy hosted an exhibition called
The Cans Festival. It was situated on
Leake Street, a road tunnel formerly used by Eurostar underneath
London Waterloo station. Graffiti artists with stencils were invited to join in and paint their own artwork, as long as it did not cover anyone else's. Banksy invited artists from around the world to exhibit their works.
2009 In May 2009, Banksy parted company with agent
Steve Lazarides and announced that Pest Control, the handling service that acts on his behalf, would be the only point of sale for new works. On 13 June 2009, the Banksy vs Bristol Museum show opened at
Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery, featuring more than 100 works of art, including animatronics and installations; it is his largest exhibition yet, featuring 78 new works. Reaction to the show was positive, with over 8,500 visitors to the show on the first weekend. Over the course of the twelve weeks, the exhibition was visited over 300,000 times. In September 2009, a Banksy work parodying the Royal Family was partially destroyed by
Hackney Council after they served an enforcement notice for graffiti removal to the former address of the property owner. The mural had been commissioned for the 2003
Blur single "
Crazy Beat" and the property owner, who had allowed it to be painted, was reported to have been in tears when she saw it was being painted over. In December 2009, Banksy marked the end of the
2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference by painting four murals on global warming. One included the phrase, "I don't believe in global warming", with the words being submerged in water. A feud and graffiti war between Banksy and
King Robbo broke out when Banksy allegedly painted over one of Robbo's tags. The feud has led to many of Banksy's works being altered by graffiti writers.
Exit Through the Gift Shop and United States (2010) The world premiere of the film
Exit Through the Gift Shop took place at the
Sundance Film Festival in
Park City, Utah, on 24 January. He created 10 street artworks around Park City and
Salt Lake City to tie in with the screening. In February,
The Whitehouse public house in
Liverpool, England, was sold for £114,000 at auction. The side of the building has an image of a giant rat by Banksy. In March 2010, a modified version of the work
Forgive Us Our Trespassing–a kneeling boy with a spray-painted
halo–was displayed at
London Bridge Station on a poster. This version of the work did not possess the halo due to its stylistic nature and the prevalence of graffiti in the underground. After a few days the halo was repainted by a graffitist, so Transport for London disposed of the poster. Banksy reportedly paid a
San Francisco Chinatown building owner $50 (€) for the use of their wall for one of his stencils. In May 2010, seven new Banksy works of art appeared in
Toronto. Later in May, to coincide with the premiere of
Exit Through the Gift Shop in
Royal Oak, Banksy visited the
Detroit area and left his mark in several places in Detroit and
Warren. Shortly after, his work depicting a little boy holding a can of red paint next to the words "I remember when all this was trees" was excavated by the 555 Nonprofit Gallery and Studios. The gallery claimed that they did not intend to sell the work, but planned to preserve it and display it at their Detroit gallery. It was later sold in 2015 for US$137,500 (€). There was also an attempted removal of one of the Warren works known as
Diamond Girl. While in the United States, Banksy also completed a painting in
Chinatown, Boston, known as
Follow Your Dreams. In late January 2011,
Exit Through the Gift Shop was nominated for a
2010 Oscar for Best Documentary Feature. Banksy released a statement about the nomination, stating, "This is a big surprise... I don't agree with the concept of award ceremonies, but I'm prepared to make an exception for the ones I'm nominated for. The last time there was a naked man covered in gold paint in my house, it was me." Leading up to the Oscars, Banksy blanketed
Los Angeles with street art. Many people speculated if Banksy would show up at the Oscars in disguise and make a surprise appearance if he won the Oscar.
Exit Through the Gift Shop did not win the award, which went to
Inside Job. In early March 2011, Banksy responded to the Oscars with an artwork in
Weston-super-Mare, of a little girl holding the Oscar and pouting. Many people think that it is about 15-month-old Lara, who dropped and damaged her father's (''
The King's Speech co-producer Simon Egan) Oscar statue. Exit Through the Gift Shop'' was broadcast on British public television station
Channel 4 on 13 August 2011 as part of a night of other shows compiled by Banksy. Banksy was credited with the opening
couch gag for the 2010
The Simpsons episode "
MoneyBart", depicting people working in deplorable conditions and using endangered or mythical animals to make both the episodes cel-by-cel and the merchandise connected with the program. His name appears several times throughout the episode's opening sequence, spray-painted on assorted walls and signs. Fox sanitised parts of the opening "for taste" and to make it less grim. In January 2011, Banksy published the original storyboard on his website. According to Banksy, the storyboard "led to delays, disputes over broadcast standards and a threatened walkout by the animation department". Executive director
Al Jean jokingly said, "This is what you get when you outsource." In May 2012 his
Parachuting Rat, painted in
Melbourne in the late 1990s, was accidentally destroyed by plumbers installing new pipes. In July, prior to the
2012 Olympic Games Banksy posted photographs of paintings with an Olympic theme on his website but did not disclose their location. On 18 February 2013,
BBC News reported that a recent Banksy mural, known as the
Slave Labour mural portraying a young child sewing
Union Flag bunting (created around the time of the
Diamond Jubilee of Elizabeth II), had been removed from the side of a
Poundland store in
Wood Green, north London, and soon appeared for sale in a catalogue of the US auction site Fine Art Auctions Miami. News of this caused "lots of anger" in the local community and is considered by some to be a theft. Fine Art Auctions Miami had rejected claims of theft, saying it had signed a contract with a "well-known collector" and that "everything was above board"; despite this, the local councillor for Wood Green campaigned for the work's return. On the scheduled day of the auction, Fine Art Auctions Miami withdrew the work of art from the sale. On 11 May,
BBC News reported that the same Banksy mural was up for auction again in
Covent Garden by the Sincura Group. The auction was scheduled to take place in June, and was expected to fetch up to £450,000 (€). On 24 September, after over a year since his previous piece, a new mural went up on his website along with the subtitle
Better Out Than In. Much criticism came forward during his series of works in
New York in 2013. Many New York street artists, such as
TrustoCorp, criticised Banksy, and much of his work was defaced. In his column for
The Guardian, satirist
Charlie Brooker wrote in 2006 that Banksy's "work looks dazzlingly clever to idiots".
Better Out Than In (2013) On 1 October 2013, Banksy began a one-month "show on the streets of
New York [City]", for which he opened a separate website and granted an interview to
The Village Voice via his publicist. A pop-up boutique of about 25 spray-art canvases appeared on
Fifth Avenue near
Central Park on 12 October. Tourists were able to buy Banksy art for just US$60 (€) each. Two of the canvasses sold at a July 2014 auction for $214,000 (€). Asked about the artist's presence in New York, then-
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who had led a citywide
graffiti cleanup operation in 2002, said he did not consider graffiti a form of art. One creation was a
fibreglass sculpture of
Ronald McDonald and a real person, barefoot and in ragged clothes, shining the oversized shoes of Ronald McDonald. The sculpture was unveiled in
Queens but moved outside a different
McDonald's around the city every day. Other works included a YouTube video showing what appears to be footage of
jihadist militants shooting down an animated
Dumbo; travelling installations that toured the city including a slaughterhouse delivery truck full of stuffed animals and a waterfall; and a modified painting donated to a charity shop which was later sold in an online auction for US$615,000 (€). Banksy also posted a mock-up of a
New York Times op-ed attacking the design of the
One World Trade Center after the
Times rejected his submission. The residency in New York concluded on 31 October 2013; many of the pieces, though, were either vandalised, removed or stolen.
2015–2018 In February 2015 Banksy published a 2-minute video titled
Make this the year YOU discover a new destination about his trip to the
Gaza Strip. During the visit, he painted a few artworks including a kitten on the remains of a house destroyed by an Israeli air strike ("I wanted to highlight the destruction in Gaza by posting photos on my website—but on the internet people only look at pictures of kittens") and a swing hanging off a watchtower. In a statement to
The New York Times his publicist said, Banksy opened
Dismaland, a large-scale group show modelled on Disneyland on 21 August 2015. It lampooned the many disappointing temporary themed attractions in the UK at the time. Dismaland permanently closed on 27 September 2015. The "theme park" was located in
Weston-super-Mare. According to the Dismaland website, artists represented on the show include
Damien Hirst and
Jenny Holzer. In December, Banksy created several murals in the vicinity of
Calais, including the so-called "
Jungle", where migrants then lived as they attempted to enter the United Kingdom. One of the pieces,
The Son of a Migrant from Syria, depicts
Steve Jobs as a migrant. In 2017, marking the 100th anniversary of the
British control of Palestine, Banksy financed the creation of the
Walled Off Hotel in
Bethlehem. This hotel is open to the public and contains rooms designed by Banksy,
Sami Musa, and
Dominique Petrin, and each of the bedrooms faces the wall. It also houses a contemporary art gallery. 2018 saw Banksy return to New York five years after his
Better Out Than In residency. A trademark rat running around the circumference of a clock-face, dubbed
Rat race, was torn down by developers within a week of it appearing on a former bank building at 101 West 14th Street, but other works, including a mural of imprisoned Kurdish artist
Zehra Doğan on the famed
Bowery Wall and a series of others across
Brooklyn, remain on display.
Love Is in the Bin (2018) '' (2018) In October 2018, a Banksy work, initially titled the
Girl with Balloon, was sold for £1.042M (€M) at London auction house
Sotheby's. The purchaser of the work was an unnamed European woman. As the
gavel hit the sound-block, an alarm sounded within the picture frame and the Banksy canvas passed through a shredder hidden within the frame, partially shredding the picture. Banksy then posted an image of the shredding on
Instagram captioned "Going, going, gone...". After the sale, the auction house acknowledged that the self-destruction of the work was a prank by the artist. The prank received wide news coverage around the world, with one newspaper stating that it was "quite possibly the biggest prank in art history". told the
Evening Standard: "The auction result will only propel this further and given the media attention this stunt has received, the lucky buyer would see a great return on the £1M they paid last night, this is now part of art history in its shredded state and we'd estimate Banksy has added a minimum of 50% to its value, possibly as high as being worth £2M+." A man seen filming the shredding of the picture during its auction has been suggested to be Banksy. Banksy has since released a video on how the shredder was installed into the frame and the shredding of the picture, explaining that he had surreptitiously fitted the painting with the shredder a few years previously, in case it ever went up for auction. To explain his rationale for destroying his own artwork, Banksy quoted
Picasso: "The urge to destroy is also a creative urge". (Although Banksy cited Picasso, this quote is usually attributed to
Mikhail Bakunin.) It is not known how the shredder was activated. Banksy has released another video indicating that the painting was intended to be shredded completely. The video shows a sample painting completely shredded by the frame and says: "In rehearsals it worked every time..." The woman who won the bidding at the auction decided to go through with the purchase. The partially shredded work has been given a new title,
Love Is in the Bin, and it was authenticated by Banksy's authentication body, Pest Control Office Ltd. Sotheby's released a statement that said "Banksy didn't destroy an artwork in the auction, he created one", and called it "the first artwork in history to have been created live during an auction". On 14 October 2021, the remains of the partially-shredded painting was reported by
The Guardian to have been re-sold by
Sotheby's auction house, for £18,582,000 (€M), in London.
2018–2019 A two-sided graffiti piece, one side depicting a child tasting the falling snow, the other revealing that the snow is in fact smoke and embers from a dumpster fire, appeared on two walls of a steelworker's garage in
Port Talbot in December. Banksy then revealed that the painting was in fact his via an
Instagram video soundtracked by the festive children's song "Little Snowflake". Many fans of the artist went to see the painting and
Plaid Cymru councillor for
Aberavon, Nigel Thomas Hunt, stated that the town was "buzzing" with speculation that the work was Banksy's. The owner of the garage, Ian Lewis, said that he had lost sleep over fears that the image would be vandalised. A plastic screen, partially funded by
Michael Sheen, was installed to protect the mural, but was attacked by a "drunk halfwit". Extra security guards were subsequently drafted to protect the graffiti piece. In May 2019, the mural was moved to a gallery in the town's Ty'r Orsaf building. In early October 2019, Banksy opened a "pop-up shop" named
Gross Domestic Product in
Croydon, South London, to strengthen his position in a trademark dispute with a greeting card company that had challenged his trademark on the grounds that he was not using it. In a statement, Banksy said "A [greeting card] company is contesting the trademark I hold to my art, and attempting to take custody of my name so they can sell their fake Banksy merchandise legally." Mark Stephens, arts lawyer and founder of the
Design and Artists Copyright Society, called the case a "ludicrous litigation" and is providing the artist legal advice. Stephens recommended opening the shop to Banksy on the grounds that it would show he is making use of his trademark, saying: "Because [Banksy] doesn't produce his own range of shoddy merchandise and the law is quite clear—if the trademark holder is not using the mark, then it can be transferred to someone who will." On 4 October, greeting card distributor
Full Colour Black publicly revealed itself as the company involved in the trademark dispute whilst rejecting Banksy's claims as "entirely untrue". The company claimed it had contacted Banksy's lawyers several times to offer to pay royalties. On 14 September 2020, the
European Union Intellectual Property Office ruled in favour of Full Colour Black in the trademark dispute over Banksy's infamous "
Flower Thrower". The European panel judges in
Full Colour Black Ltd v Pest Control Office Ltd [2020] E.T.M.R. 58) decided that Banksy's trademark was invalid as it had been filed in
bad faith according to Regulation 2017/1001 art.59(1)(b). The judges were not convinced that the opening of the artist's "pop-up shop" demonstrated a real intention to legitimise the trademark, condemning it as "inconsistent with the honest practices of the trade" [at 1141]. The artist's choice to be represented anonymously was not received well by the court either, noting that even if they found in favour of Banksy, legal rights could not be attributed to an unidentifiable person [1151]. However, counsel for the defence strongly argued that to reveal his identity would diminish the persona of the artist [at 1135]. Although not binding, the judges also referenced Banksy's previously critical statements about copyright, which contributed to the lack of sympathy for the artist's case [at 1144]. In October 2019, a 2009 painting by Banksy entitled "
Devolved Parliament", showing
Members of Parliament depicted as chimpanzees in the
House of Commons, sold at Sotheby's in London for just under £9.9M (€M). On Instagram, the artist said it was a "record price for a Banksy painting" and "shame I didn't still own it".
2020–2024 On 13 February 2020, the
Valentine's Banksy mural appeared on the side of a building in Bristol's
Barton Hill neighbourhood, depicting a young girl firing a slingshot of real red flowers and leaves. In the early hours of
Valentine's Day (14 February), Banksy confirmed this was his work on his Instagram account and website. The painting was defaced just days after appearing. Banksy dedicated a painting titled
Painting for Saints or
Game Changer to
NHS staff, and donated it to the
University Hospital of Southampton during the global
COVID-19 pandemic in May 2020. The painting was sold for £14.4M (£16.8M including buyer premium; or €M) on 23 March 2021, which is a record for an artwork by Banksy. The proceeds from the sale would benefit a number of NHS-related organisations and charities. In March 2021, the image of an escaping prisoner appeared overnight on the side of
Reading Prison. Two days later Banksy claimed the artwork. The former prison's next use had been disputed locally, some wanting it to be used as an arts hub, while developers proposed it could be sold to a housing developer. The escaping prisoner was said to resemble
Oscar Wilde, who had been imprisoned in Reading Prison, with the "rope" as tied together bedsheets with a typewriter attached to the end. Banksy created an original artwork for the 2021
BBC One/
Amazon Prime Video comedy
The Outlaws. The image of a stencilled rat sitting on two spray cans signed by Banksy featured in the sixth episode of the first series, and was
painted over by the character Frank, played by
Christopher Walken, while he was cleaning a graffiti-covered wall as part of his
Community Payback sentence. (Independence Square),
Kyiv, Ukraine , Ukraine , Ukraine In November 2022, Banksy posted on social media images of a mural on the side of a damaged building at the town of
Borodianka, appearing to confirm a visit to Ukraine following the
Russian invasion. He also created six murals in
Kyiv,
Irpin,
Hostomel and
Horenka. One of the images he produced in Borodianka was of Russian president
Vladimir Putin in a judo throw. The image has since been turned into a stamp in Ukraine. Banksy was accused of being "inconsistent with honest practices" when trying to trademark his image of a protester throwing a bouquet of flowers. The
European Union trademark office threw out his trademark claim, "saying he had filed it in order to avoid using copyright laws, which are separate and would have required [him] to reveal his true identity. The ruling quoted from one of his books, in which he said 'copyright is for losers'." On
St Patricks Day 2024, a confirmed Banksy "mural" appeared overnight on a flank wall of a housing estate near to
Finsbury Park. The artwork is located in an area known as
Upper Holloway, in the London Borough of
Islington. The mural is behind a stark heavily pruned tree, which dominates the foreground. The artwork's green shades and leafy foliage used paint that matches Islington's own municipal green, which is used on their housing estate nameplates. The sprawling artwork gives the impression of lush foliage in full leaf on the wall backdrop. An adjoining life size figure is stencilled onto the wall at ground level, showing a worker using a
pressure washer, as if they were spontaneously spraying the artwork. One of the first to visit the Banksy, was the local MP,
Jeremy Corbyn. Experts have speculated that the choice of subject and the location make it difficult to remove to sell at auction, as the context of the setting is everything and the sale value would be minimal. In August 2024, he claimed credit for a number of black silhouette compositions, that appeared in London and were part of an
animal-themed series. Various theories exist for what they mean and represent, with the artist himself declining to comment.
2025–present In February 2025, it was announced that Banksy, or a representative, is to appear at a tribunal at the UK's
Intellectual Property Office. The tribunal will be one of the few times that the secretive artist’s legal team – or those representing the artist – will speak in public. In May 2025, he revealed a new artwork depicting a lighthouse, located in the streets of
Marseille. In the early hours of 8 September 2025, passers-by noticed a Banksy mural on the
Royal Courts of Justice in London. It depicted a protester being beaten with a gavel by a judge. The work became controversial due to its location on a prominent judicial landmark, which some media commentators said was connected to the recent arrests and prosecutions in the UK of protestors of various causes. The artwork was covered up on the same day in the afternoon with a large metal sheet and fencing. Workmen were pictured at the mural a day later. On 10 September, the mural was removed from the building, but it had left a shadow of the mural and was still partly visible, but heavily faded. On 21 December 2025, Banksy revealed a new mural on a wall in
Bayswater, central London of two small children dressed in winter clothing and lying on their backs and pointing towards the sky; Banksy acknowledged the work in an Instagram post. A similar image appeared on 19 December, near the
Centre Point tower in central London but Banksy has not claimed this work. == Other artworks ==