Banksy : photo of
an artwork by Banksy which can be seen in the Bronx
Space - street setting: a plain brick
wall, a metal shutter, an old sofa
an underprivileged neighbourhood
on the wall: a stencil: a butler wearing white
gloves, holding a tray with spay cans on it, waiting on a little boy (his
master) from a wealthy/affluent family – the child has spray painted the words
Ghetto4life on the wall,
Exchange: a man who presumably lives in the
area is guarding the artwork which is valuable as it was done by a world-famous
street artist: his presence adds to the irony of the piece. He is the one who
will probably be in the ghetto for life. It is like a gift from the artist to a
neighbourhood that could never afford his artwork (it fetches hundreds of
thousands of dollars at auction sales). Thanks to the artist, the world of the
privileged and the world of the underprivileged exist in the same space. In
addition, the piece attracted many people to the neighbourhood, so they
explored a place they would never have visited otherwise, In reality they are
worlds apart. Artists like Banksy promote exchanges by investing public
spaces (the street = a huge canvas, an open air museum)
the Bronx, on October 21, 2013 – a tray (plateau) – a butler (majordome)
– spray cans – white gloves – a security guard – to spray-paint – a rope
(cordon)
Banksy : photo of
an artwork by Banksy which can be seen in Brooklyn
This piece represents 2 Japanese women on a
bridge wearing a kimono, carrying a fan), there is also a small bonsai at the bottom. it’s a stencil. The graffiti
was done on a wall in Brooklyn. This artwork triggered various reactions: we
saw a picture of a rival graffiti artist
trying to deface the work, he spray
painted squiggles over the 2 feminine figures. He may have been jealous or
maybe he hated Banksy’s work. Several other graffiti artists reacted
negatively, because they considered that Banksy was trespassing and invading
their turf, their territory. At the same time, there are 2 men who intervene
and try to stop the artist from vandalising the piece.
After that, the owner of the building decided
to protect/preserve Banksy’s work and he put some plexiglass over it and
installed a metal shutter to protect it at night. There is also a man who is
guarding the piece. Now people come and take pictures of it. Someone even
offered the owner of the building a million dollars to take down the bricks in
the wall but he refused (he turned down the offer). Banksy’s pieces are worth
tens of thousands of dollars (at auction sales). On the pictures we studied,
someone had written “value is arbitrary” next to the graffiti. This sort of
thing would not be possible in a museum.
Street art promotes exchanges for better or for worse.
The Twin Towers (the
World Trade Center)
A graffiti located in Lower Manhattan: it
represents the twin towers, it’s a very small piece done at the bottom of a
wall covered with other graffiti. What makes the piece striking is the red
flower that Banksy stuck the top of one of the buildings. It’s a real flower.
It symbolises the explosion, the moment when the plane hit the tower. It is
also a way to pay tribute to all the victims of 9/11. This piece attracted a
lot of attention. People flocked to see it and take pictures. Others added
comments, people put lighted candles and flowers on the sidewalk. So this
artwork really triggered all kinds of reactions. There is even a man who came
every day to put a fresh flower on the drawing. Later it was painted over, so
now it is gone (it doesn’t exist anymore), like most street art, it is
ephemeral, short-lived.
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