NEW YORK – Graffiti by the secretive British artist Banksy is turning
up on the streets of New York City – and all over social media.
Banksy announced on his website that he is undertaking “an artists residency on the streets of New York” this month.
He’s posting pictures of his work on the website and fans are
plastering the images all over Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Though
he’s not providing exact locations, those who spot the graffiti are
spreading the word online to aid other fans in the treasure hunt.
Jennifer Hawkins, who runs a public relations agency in Chelsea,
posted pictures on Facebook after finding “a Banksy sighting right out
my office backdoor,” on 24th Street between Sixth and Seventh avenues.
Spray-painted on a building wall already defaced by illegible
scrawls, the graffiti shows a black silhouette of a dog lifting his leg
on a fire hydrant, with the words “You complete me” in a cartoon bubble.
“My favourite part of the whole thing is having the little groupies
standing out there,” Hawkins said, referring to the small crowds of fans
taking pictures.
The Daily Telegraph, a British outlet, has created an online map to
track the images. The Museum of Modern Art posted links on its Twitter
feed with a “Banksy watch” tag.
At least one of the works is gone already, altered by other graffiti
artists and then whitewashed. The picture, done on a wall in Chinatown,
showed a barefoot boy with a cap standing on another boy’s back,
pointing at a sign that says, “Graffiti is a crime.”
Banksy is calling the New York City effort “Better Out Than In,” a
reference to a quote by impressionist Paul Cezanne, “All pictures
painted inside, in the studio, will never be as good as those done
outside.”
His website includes a toll-free number and an online “Click here to
listen” button with commentary on each image that spoofs the
pre-recorded cellphone tours commonly offered at museum exhibits. The
commentary mispronounces his name as Ban-sky and is read against a
soundtrack of cheesy elevator music.
One line from the phone tour says: “You’re looking at a type of
picture called graffiti, from the Latin graffito, which means graffiti
with an O.”
The commentary goes on to say, “Let us pause for a moment to consider
the deeper meaning of this work. OK, that’s long enough,” later adding,
“What exactly is the artist trying to say here? … Perhaps it is a
postmodern comment on how the signifiers of objects have become as real
as the object themselves. Are you kidding me? Who writes this stuff?
Anyway, you decide.”
Banksy – who refuses to give his real name – began his career in the
British city of Bristol spray-painting local buildings. His works now
fetch thousands of dollars around the world, but many of his street
paintings have been defaced, destroyed or removed.
His website for the New York project has posted images every day of
the month so far. He captioned three pictures posted Friday as “Random
graffiti given a Broadway makeover (an ongoing series).”
The pictures showed the words “The Musical,” stamped in a stenciled
script beneath existing scrawls, so that they read, “Dirty Underwear,
The Musical,” “Occupy! The Musical” and “Playground Mob, The Musical.”
He also gave rough locations for the three as Delancey Street on the
Lower East Side and two Brooklyn neighbourhoods, Bushwick and
Williamsburg.
Another of Banksy’s New York City efforts bears the words “This is my
New York accent” spray-painted in classic graffiti-style handwriting
with “…normally I write like this,” in neat print underneath.
By Friday afternoon, the work, on 25th Street between 10th and 11th
avenues, had been so tagged over by other graffiti artists that it was
almost impossible to make out the original.