Reuters/AFP London
Crowds gathered in coastal towns in eastern England yesterday to view new artworks by Banksy, after the secretive street artist claimed responsibility for the murals.
Ten images appeared in towns in Norfolk and Suffolk over the past week, sparking speculation that Banksy was behind them.
His website has since depicted images of the works under the title A Great British Spraycation, a play on the word staycation.
Government coronavirus (Covid-19) rules have deterred Britons from holidaying abroad, prompting many people to take a “staycation” at home.
Banksy, Britain’s most famous street artist, confirmed on Friday what many had already suspected – that he is indeed the author of the works that have appeared in British seaside towns.
An Instagram video clip, just over three minutes long and entitled A Great British Spraycation, shows the elusive artist taking a summer road trip in a beat-up camper van with cans of spray paint stashed in a cooler.
In one work on the concrete sea-defence wall of a British beach, a rat lounges in a deckchair, sipping a cocktail.
In another artwork, sticking to the seaside theme, a mechanical claw dangles above a public bench – as if anyone who sits there is about to be plucked up like a prize in an arcade game.
Another shows a giant seagull swooping down to snatch some outsized chips – French fries to US readers – from a waste skip or dumpster.
A fourth shows three children in a rickety boat.
One looks ahead while another is busy bailing out water with a bucket.
Just above the children appears the inscription: “We’re all in the same boat.”
On the roof of a bus shelter, a couple also dance to the tune of a flat-capped accordion player, in a black and white painting evoking the faded, down-at-heel feel of many of the country’s once-prosperous seaside resorts.
In recent years, the Bristol artist, who cleverly maintains the mystery of his identity, has kept the attention of the contemporary art world with his social commentaries and causes – migrants, opposition to Brexit, denunciation of Islamist radicals – as well as stirring the excitement of the moneyed art markets.
Last March, a work honouring caregivers fetched a record £14.4mn (about $20mn, €20mn).
The proceeds went to a hospital charity, Christie’s auctioneers said at the time.
Banksy’s works that have appeared on walls in various east England towns.
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