The New Yorker Talks About Banksy

The New York Times has posted an excellent article up about the enigmatic Banksy: The British graffiti artist Banksy likes pizza, though his preference in toppings cannot be definitively ascertained. He has a gold tooth. He has a silver tooth. He has a silver earring. He’s an anarchist environmentalist who travels by chauffeured S.U.V. He […]

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The New York Times has posted an excellent article up about the enigmatic Banksy:

The British graffiti artist Banksy likes pizza, though his preference in toppings cannot be definitively ascertained. He has a gold tooth. He has a silver tooth. He has a silver earring. He’s an anarchist environmentalist who travels by chauffeured S.U.V. He was born in 1978, or 1974, in Bristol, England—no, Yate. The son of a butcher and a housewife, or a delivery driver and a hospital worker, he’s fat, he’s skinny, he’s an introverted workhorse, he’s a breeze-shooting exhibitionist given to drinking pint after pint of stout. For a while now, Banksy has lived in London: if not in Shoreditch, then in Hoxton. Joel Unangst, who had the nearly unprecedented experience of meeting Banksy last year, in Los Angeles, when the artist rented a warehouse from him for an exhibition, can confirm that Banksy often dresses in a T-shirt, shorts, and sneakers. When Unangst is asked what adorns the T-shirts, he will allow, before fretting that he has revealed too much already, that they are covered with smudges of white paint.

The entire piece is full of a lot of fascinating tidbits about the hunt by British anti-graffitti officers to find and arrest him, as well as the Cult of Banksy loyalists, who feverishly protect Banksy's anonymity even when there seems to be very little reason to do so, and the acceptance of Banksy by the mainstream art world: "I love the way capitalism finds a place even for its enemies."

Banksy Was Here [The New Yorker]