His work, ignored by critics, is a familiar aspect of British visual culture. He’s recognised by normal people with no other knowledge of art, and of minimal interest to the (decidedly non-normal) art world itself. The Venice work was a better example of how complacent his shtick can be: it was a broody stencil work that showed a child in distress, spray-painted in black on a drab urban wall, and offset by a colour that telegraphed poignancy.īanksy’s profile has long made him an oddity. This spur to activity, however, is rare for him. The Birmingham work is harmless, and with its bench and homeless occupant, it has a useful physicality: the passers-by are prompted to engage with real wood, real flesh-and-blood – and they did. He has poked fun at the Venice Biennale, too (not necessarily such a bad thing) with a satirical mural that he left in a different part of town. In October, he stole headlines during Frieze London when Devolved Parliament – a painting devoid of artistic or ethical merit – sold for £9.9 million. (A man, according to reports, was seen shouting: “Shall I tag it?”) The Jewellery Quarter Business Improvement District, with one eye on repeat offenders and another on the bottom line, will be employing “round-the-clock” security to avoid a repeat. The reindeer sit behind perspex now.īanksy has had a busy year. One reindeer gained a red nose, spray-painted fuzzily on. Soon, local artists – in their way – engaged. The artist filmed a homeless man, “Ryan”, settling down in the winter chill, and thanked passers-by in the Jewellery Quarter for the generosity they quickly showed. His latest work is a pair of stencilled reindeer, hooked up in a trompe l’oeil trick to an actual wooden bench. Banksy is back again, this time in Birmingham.
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