Banksy
“We don’t need any more heroes, we just need someone to take out the recycling” –Banksy
Banksy is the unidentified mysterious artist that for the last 20 years has been vandalising walls across the world with imagery that is known for its ability to capture an audience with a profound and methodical phase or statement. Banksy’s work aims to confront society with the issue faced in today’s culture and challenges the viewer to justify their action. Although Banksy’s true identity is unknown, his artistic style is easily found in his artwork alongside his signature .
Rage the Flower Thrower, 2003 (see Figure 1) was discovered in Jerusalem in 2003 and what later became one of Banksy most well-known pieces of artwork. The artwork shows
“Street art is omnipresent in urban streets and is a rish source of inspiration for artistic creativity. . . It possesses the aesthetic voices of the ordinary and enables resistance for the marginalized. Banksy’s street art, in particular, can guide students to think about various social and political issues and to reflect upon the immediate, if not unjust, world in which they live, to transform that world, and to
His satirical street art and subversive epigrams combine dark humor with graffiti done in a distinctive stenciling technique. Such artistic works of political and social commentary have been featured on streets, walls, and bridges of cities throughout the world.
Vincent Van Gogh was born on March 30, 1853 at the Zundart Netherlands. Vincent Van Gogh was a post impressionist. Van Gogh's paintings stand out from other artists of his time. The colors he used most were lemon yellow and blue. His self-portraits are wet with blue background, coat, and eyes, and with a yellow face, beard, and hair. Stars and books, which were his passion, were painted yellow.
The reason he is able to continue to release controversial art in highly populated, public places without consequences to his person solely because of his anonymity, and that his work represents itself enough without him. His work is criticized by many, but as it is an inanimate voice of opinion, Banksy is able to use it to his advantage, and plaster his opinion on current issues, wherever he can/wants.
Banksy, a street artist whose identity remains unknown is believed to have been born in Bristol, England, around 1974. He rose to prominence for his provocative stenciled pieces in the late 1990s. Banksy is the subject of a 2010 documentary, Exit Through the Gift Shop, which examines the relationship between commercial and street art. Banksy's artwork is characterized by striking images, often combined with slogans. His work often engages political themes, satirically critiquing war, capitalism, hypocrisy and greed. Common subjects include rats, apes, policemen, members of the royal family, and children. In addition to his two-dimensional work, Banksy is known for his installation artwork. Other pieces have drawn attention for their edgy themes or the boldness of their execution. Banksy's worldwide fame has transformed his artwork from acts of vandalism to sought-after high art pieces. Banksy's identity remains unknown, despite intense speculation. The two names most often suggested are Robert Banks and Robin Gunningham. Pictures that surfaced of a man who was supposedly Banksy pointed toward Gunningham, an artist who was born in Bristol in 1973. Gunningham moved to London around 2000, a timeline that correlates with the progression of Banksy's
Throughout the course of time, Banksy’s street art is known for bringing a specific point across through his affective use of certain visual art that are very eye opening. For example, his signature use of black and white paints for the image itself and a very bold color such as red for magnifying the text. His art also brings up very controversial topics that most of his audience fail to realize or recognize. In one of his many famous pieces of art, he effectively uses the four rhetorical considerations and the two Aristotic considerations to convey to his audience that there are still many societies that have no interest in girls getting an education.
Nonetheless, Robin Banx (original moniker, a shortened form of robbing banks) or Banksy are a few of the flamboyant monikers for a revolutionary street artist who is most known for his controversial stenciled pieces in public property. His stencils incorporated descriptively starching messages that are both humorous as well as meaningful. His messages ranged from antiviolence to an economic standpoint – an audacious representation
Directly after his death, the first bibliography for Vincent Van Gogh was written, by Emile Bernard, who was a painter and friend of Vincent’s. It was three pages long and discussed his aspirations as well as his love for his brother Theo. Emile Bernard continued to celebrate Vincent’s life by later publishing some of the letters he had written. Vincent’s sister Elisabeth later published a booklet of poetry detailing his life. This brought forth the attention of many others who knew Van Gogh to then write about him as well. Later, in the Municipal Museum in Amsterdam, hundreds of his drawings and paintings were displayed. After 1914, many publications of letters, art, and biographies were published in remembrance of Vincent Van Gogh’s work
The British artist has no true public identity. With no background on the individual responsible for the mural it is difficult to know if he carries any clout in the political or sociocultural world. Banksy is known to be somewhat of a socialistic democrat, as implied by the genre of his art, but otherwise there is no information given to assess his credibility. Given that Banksy is quite popular and well known, his reputation reinforces his credibility as an opinionated street artist, but not as a credible resource in regards to immigration policy and government aid. Banksy’s affinity towards political and socially controversial art makes it easy to understand his interests in issues surrounding the treatment of migrants, refugees, and humanitarianism.
Who Runs the Gift Shop: A Cultural Critique of Banksy’s Documentary Banksy is a street artist who is both famous and infamous for the work he does. His 2010 documentary, Exit Through the Gift Shop only adds to this. As the popularity of reality television and the cult of celebrity become ever more present in the current culture, drawing the line between what is real and what is fake becomes more and more difficult. What works such as Exit Through the Gift Shop do is raise the question: How much do these distinctions matter.
Banksy is a well known, anonymous graffiti artists in England. He started doing freehand in 1194. On June 19, 2002, Banksy's first exhibition debuted at 33 Gallery, a tiny silver lake venue owned by Frank Sosa.
The nature of Banksy’s work is iconoclastic in the way he blatantly designs images to rebel governmental authority or depict the failings of
Art is a persons’ opinion. The definition of art is the quality, production, expression, or realm, according to aesthetic principles, of what is beautiful, appealing, or of more than ordinary significance. There is no real definition for what is beautiful or appealing to the human eye. Banksy is said to be an artist by some and a graffiti lawbreaker by others. Basically, it is up to the person to define Banksy as someone who is doing the right thing verses doing the wrong thing. Banksy creates his graffiti pictures to make a stand for what he believes is the right way to look at controversial issues. Some people may not like Banksy’s graffiti because they do not have the same views as him. Some people might
Banksy has created works all over the world on controversial issues of today. It is also believed that each one of his works contains one of the following themes: modern behavior, animal treatment, the Israeli-Palestinian Crisis, the police state in Britain, and rats and monkeys (116). In 2008 Banksy made this piece in the United States, and it would later be named The Wall Street Rat: Let Them Eat Crack.
One of the most popular places where Banksy’s art fills the streets is New York City, which was