Donate

Banksy is the last thing we need right now

The snobby street artist is as tedious as ever.

Tim Black

Tim Black
Columnist

Topics Culture Politics

Want to read spiked ad-free? Become a spiked supporter.

Tedious street artist Banksy has been busy in London this past week. On Monday, a stencilled goat appeared near Kew Bridge. It was soon followed by two silhouetted elephant heads in the bricked-up windows of a house in Chelsea, three monkeys swinging across a bridge over Brick Lane, a howling wolf adorning a satellite dish in Peckham, two pelicans swooping for cod above a Walthamstow fish and chip shop, and a cat stretching on a damaged billboard in Cricklewood. Today, Banksy unveiled his latest creation in central London – a glass police box made to look like a tank of piranhas.

Apparently, there is a point to all this. A spokesperson for the famously pseudonymous graffiti artist told the Observer that the works are ‘designed to cheer up the public ­during a period when the news headlines have been bleak, and light has often been harder to spot than shade’. Apparently, Banksy hopes that the ‘uplifting works cheer ­people with a moment of unexpected amusement, as well as to ­gently underline the human capacity for ­creative play, rather than for destruction and negativity’.

So there you have it. He is performing a great, noble service to the nation, hoping his animal stencils will, I quote, lead us away from ‘destruction and negativity’.

Talk about delusions of grandeur. This is not Michelangelo painting the Sistine Chapel, is it? This is an ageing trustafarian spray-painting a few vaguely amusing animal murals on satellite dishes and townhouses.

Banksy’s self-aggrandisement aside, it’s also amusing to see him portrayed as pushing back against ‘negativity’. This is Banksy we’re talking about here – an artist who has peddled virtually every miserable, chattering-class prejudice going.

His 2015 project, ‘Dismaland’, offered up a ‘satirical’ attack on Disneyland – and the supposedly moronic masses who visit it. His 2017 anti-Brexit mural showed a workman mournfully chipping off one of the EU flag’s yellow stars, no doubt bringing a tear to the eye of Andrew Adonis.

At each stage of his decades-long career, Banksy has given expression to every misanthropic, anti-masses sentiment going, from climate alarmism to anti-consumerism. In his 2004 book, Cut It Out, he said he was obsessed with rat imagery because it’s a metaphor for the ‘the human race’ – some of whom just ‘eat junk food’ all day and ‘shout abuse’.

At least some people have treated Banksy’s latest sixth-former offerings with the respect they deserve. The drawing of a cat on a damaged billboard was removed within hours of its appearance by a contractor. ‘We’ll store that bit [the art] in our yard to see if anyone collects it’, he told reporters, ‘but if not it’ll go in a skip’.

If only Britain’s art critics had a fraction of this common sense.

Tim Black is a spiked columnist.

Pictures by: Getty.

To enquire about republishing spiked’s content, a right to reply or to request a correction, please contact the managing editor, Viv Regan.

Topics Culture Politics

Comments

Want to join the conversation?

Only spiked supporters and patrons, who donate regularly to us, can comment on our articles.

Join today