Banksy captivates New
York with guerrilla graffiti art blitz
theguardian.com, Saturday 19
October 2013
Famously jaded New
Yorkers are getting swept up in the hype over Banksy, the renegade
graffiti artist who is leaving his mark across the city this month.
Known for his
anti-authoritarian black-and-white stencilled images, which have sold
at auction for upwards of $2m (£1.2m), the British street artist is
treating New Yorkers to a daily dose of spray-painted art – while
eluding the police and incurring the wrath of Mayor Michael
Bloomberg.
"Graffiti does ruin
people's property," Bloomberg said in a press conference on
Wednesday.
Reactions from other New
Yorkers to the pieces – which appear overnight, usually on side
streets in Lower Manhattan and Brooklyn – have ranged from the
defacing of images to offers of huge sums for walls Banksy has
painted.
"Somebody offered me
a million dollars if I took down the bricks," said Jose Goya,
the manager of a Williamsburg, Brooklyn, building that Banksy
spray-painted on Wednesday night.
Goya turned the buyer
down and had Plexiglas placed over the Japanese-themed image of a man
and a woman crossing an arched bridge. The art has a black squiggle
spray-painted over it, the work of an apparent Banksy hater.
The mysterious Banksy is
calling his month in New York his "Better Out Than In"
residency.
Every morning, he
announces the location of each piece on his website and invites
people to call a hotline for droll descriptions of the artwork's
inspiration.
The art is defined in
part by the artist's mystique. It is still uncertain whether Banksy,
who remains unidentified since emerging in England in 1993, is one
artist or a group. In the 2010 documentary about Banksy, Exit Through
the Gift Shop, which received widespread critical praise, the artist
is always shrouded in a head covering or his face is hidden in
shadows.
"He's sort of like
Batman," Matt Adams, a Williamsburg resident, said as he
photographed the Japanese-themed stencil. "No one knows who he
is, he does his work under cloak of darkness and everyone in New York
is looking for him."
New Yorkers have flocked
to Banksy's art, eager to view pieces before they are defaced or
removed, possibly by rival artists or those who think Banksy's work
is shallow and his fame undeserved.
An image of the Twin
Towers destroyed in the 11 September 2001 attacks that had been
spray-painted by the artist on a wall in Brooklyn Heights was removed
on Thursday night after less than a week in place. It is unclear who
was responsible.
Among the hundreds who
arrived to see Banksy's art on the Williamsburg wall was Evan
Mannell, an Australian musician visiting New York who has rushed to
three Banksy images. "Think of it like a jazz solo," he
said. "Unless someone records it, it's all finished and it's
over. I want to see Banksy's pieces before they're gone."
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire