Monday 18 April 2011

BANKSY

My son loves him; Banksy, formerly known as street artist. His art (formerly known as vandalism) sells at Sotheby's for several hundred thousand pounds a piece, and can be seen at renowned art galleries the world over.


Yesterday we watched a documentary about Banksy, 'Exit Through the Gift Shop'- which in the end turned out to be more about the guy who had managed to capture the elusive Banksy on film, Thierry Guetta. More of a clever businessman than an artist, Thierry later tries his hand at street art himself, using the techniques (and themes) he picked up from Banky and other street artists he has followed for years, mixing it with clever marketing (using social and regular media) and becoming an overnight commercial success.
I have admired Banksy's work ever since 2008. Years earlier I worked for the Weather Channel and was based in Newman Street, W1, London. Across the street from out building was an old post office, and a huge blind ugly wall, kitted out with the standard CCTV cameras which are omnipresent in London, and at the time cause for a lot of debate as to whether CCTV - big Brother watching - was a good or a bad thing. Reality soaps have long since taken the sting out of CCTV cameras in the street.... Anyway - one day in 2008 this ugly wall was decorated with a piece of graffiti - or rather 'street art'. The latest stunt by Banksy, pulled right under the eyes of the cameras....  I loved it, and so did the press.

Banksy's comment: "He broke all the rules - although we're not supposed to have any rules...". In the end, the film has been finished by Banksy himself, when he realised Guetta was only capable of recording, not of cutting a movie. A very interesting documentary, although the B-film - a short video purely about Banksy, contains the real gems for Banksy fans. Pictures, interviews and great quotes such as from the critic who initially felt Banksy's work was just "an entertaining bit of rubbish", or how the purpose of art is "to get up the noses of the establishment". One artist who was very critical about Banksy's use of stencils ("real street artists were ready to beat him up for using such gay techniques"), concluded that every single street artist was a real artist, and that Banksy "just got a fucking headstart on us". Well, yes - isn't that the difference between the real stars and the legion of following nobodies: a head start? Below are some more great Banksy originals...


































































   

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21st Century Learning

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Teacher, trainer, Head of IT, mum of three online teens, into social networks, open educational resources and visual learning. Head in the Global Cloud and feet in the Dutch clay.