Banksy + 5: October 12th

Banksy. Photo by carnagenyc.
Banksy. Photo by carnagenyc.

I’m late on this one, but hey, it was the weekend and I was in Little Italy watching this wall come together. Saturday’s Banksy, while a pretty standard stencil besides the great placement, continues on Banksy‘s theme for Better Out Than In of it really being about the crowd. Concrete Confessional is just perfect for photos like the one above, and really requires a fan to activate the piece.

Here’s today’s + 5 by Ntel, Frank Ape, La Ira, and two unknown artists edit: Cane Morto and one unknown artist:

Ntel. Photo by Bill Benzon.
Ntel. Photo by Bill Benzon.
Frank Ape. Photo by edenpictures.
Frank Ape. Photo by edenpictures.
La Ira. Photo by món mort.
La Ira. Photo by món mort.
Unknown artist. Does the signature say Mari?
Unknown artist. Does the signature say Mari? Photo by Beth M527.
M? Photo by svennevenn.
Cane Morto in Bergen. Photo by svennevenn.

Photos by carnagenyc, Bill Benzon, edenpictures, món mort, Beth M527 and svennevenn

Banksy + 5: October 11th

Today‘s Banksy for Better Out Than In was a pretty impressive production, a roving truck featuring what appear to be a combination of animatronic and human-controlled animal puppets. Good stuff.

And for our + 5, there’s work by Buildmore, Nether, edit: London Kaye (thanks to Daniel in the comments) and three two unknown artists:

Buildmore. Photo by Damon Landry.
Buildmore in Philadelphia. Photo by Damon Landry.
Nether. Photo by duncan c.
Nether in Berlin. Photo by duncan c.
Unknown artist in Berlin. Photo by duncan c.
Unknown artist in Berlin. Photo by duncan c.
Unknown artist in London. Photo by The Integer Club.
Unknown artist in London. Photo by The Integer Club.
Unknown artist in NYC. Photo by allan molho.
London Kaye in NYC. Photo by allan molho.

Photos by Damon Landry, duncan cThe Integer Club and allan molho

Banksy + 5: October 10th

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Banksy in NYC. Photo by carnagenyc.

Today‘s Banksy for Better Out Than In is nice and all, but the most interesting thing about it is these guys who covered the artwork with a piece of cardboard and charged for photos. Also, note, this piece is a beaver, not a rat:

Banksy. Photo by carnagenyc.
Banksy in NYC. Photo by carnagenyc.

For today’s + 5, we have work by Invader, Dain, Dee Dee, Mr. Toll and a few unknown artists (as always, let us know if you know the artists that we don’t):

Invader. Photo by Chris Christian.
Invader. Photo by Chris Christian.
Dee Dee and Dain. Photo by Jamie.
Dee Dee and Dain. Photo by Jamie.
Unknown artist in Chicago. Photo by Seth Anderson.
Unknown artist in Chicago. Photo by Seth Anderson.
Unknown artists in Beijing. Photo by Adrien Fauth.
Unknown artists in Beijing. Photo by Adrien Fauth.
Unknown artist. Photo by Chris Christian.
Mr. Toll in NYC. Photo by Chris Christian.

Photos by carnagenyc, Jamie, Chris Christian, Adrien Fauth and Seth Anderson.

Banksy + 5: October 9th

Banksy. Photo by carnagenyc.
Banksy. Photo by carnagenyc.

First of all, I’ll quickly note that Banksy did an interview with The Village Voice and Banksy made two covers for the issue, both collaborations with Os Gêmeos.

On Wednesday, Banksy unveiled this installation on the Lower East Side, the latest from his Better Out Than In show/series. According to Hyperallergic, the area had been covered with a tarp recently, hiding any potential work Banksy was doing. It’s not Banksy’s best work from a technical standpoint, but hey, it’s a complicated piece that was presumably executed illegally. One thing that became very clear during our Illegal August experiment (in case it wasn’t clear before) is the pretty obvious point that a mural an artist can spend a week on is usually going to look more visually stunning and well-executed than something done illegally in the dark. Even with the tarp, this installation was risky. So I certainly can’t fault Banksy for the execution.

The piece reminds me of something like Goya’s The Disasters of War series, although maybe that’s just because horses make me think of classical painting… Anyway…

What really strikes me about this piece is the “audio description” component of this installation. Instead of the funny museum-style audio descriptions that have accompanied about half the works in Better Out Than In, today’s was just a snippet of the audio from the Collateral Murder video that was leaked by Chelsea Manning through Wikileaks in 2010. The video shows US Army airstrike that kill Reuters journalist Namir Noor-Eldeen, his driver Saeed Chmagh and at least others (the airstrike also wounded two children). Here is the full Collateral Murder video (warning: this video is quite graphic and potentially  disturbing):

A few days ago, I raised some questions about Banksy appropriating audio of an by Syrian rebels that brought down a Syrian military helicopter in his video where rebels shoot down Dumbo the elephant. I’m still not sure what to think of that appropriation, but I think here Banksy did a great job. He isn’t using death to make a joke (even if that joke has a serious point). This installation is a sort of anti-war memorial, and the Collateral Murder audio makes the piece even more powerful.For today’s + 5, we have work by stikman (whose show I just organized at the Mural Arts Program in Philadelphia), Jace, Saki and Bitches and two artists that I’m not sure about:

stikman in Philadelphia. Photo by Damon Landry.
stikman in Philadelphia. Photo by Damon Landry.
Jace in La Reunion. Photo by Philippe Vieux-Jeanton.
Jace in La Reunion. Photo by Philippe Vieux-Jeanton.
Saki and Bitches in London, UK. Photo by Chris Beckett.
Saki and Bitches in London, UK. Photo by Chris Beckett.
Unknown artist (Kame?) in Normandy, France. Photo by Michel Alessandrini.
Unknown artist (Kame?) in Normandy, France. Photo by Michel Alessandrini.
Unknown artist. Photo by Chris Christian.
Unknown artist (Vicky?) in NYC. Photo by Chris Christian.

Photos by carnagenyc, Michel Alessandrini, Chris Beckett, Philippe Vieux-Jeanton, Chris Christian and Damon Landry

Banksy + 5: October 8th

Photo from Banksyny.com
Photo from Banksyny.com

Kinda a funny one from Banksy today. As Hrag notes though, even though the intent is different, it’s definitely going to remind people of Elbowtoe‘s street poetry. Still, not a bad piece.

For today’s + 5, we have work by Ever, Never, Clet Abraham and two unknown artists edit: Earth Crusher and Yarbs (thanks to everyone who let me know about Earth Crusher and Yarbs):

Ever. Photo by Ever.
Ever. Photo by Ever.
Never. Photo by This is Awkward .
Never. Photo by This is Awkward.
Clet Abraham. Photo by Larry Carr.
Clet Abraham. Photo by Larry Carr.
Unknown artist. Photo by Andre Vandal.
Earth Crusher. Photo by Andre Vandal.
Unknown artist. Photo by
Yarbs. Photo by Seth Anderson.

Photos by Ever, This is Awkward, Larry Carr, Andre Vandal, Seth Anderson from Banksyny.com

Banksy + 5: October 7th

Saki Waki with Banksy's latest piece. Photo courtesy of The L.I.S.A. Project.
Saki Waki with Banksy’s latest piece. Photo courtesy of The L.I.S.A. Project.

Today for Better Out Than In, Banksy revealed the above balloon piece in Brooklyn. The photos on his site look a bit better, but I have used the above image of my friend Saki Waki because I want to show how this piece is really about audience interaction. On the first day of the show, I wondered if Banksy was maybe using the individual works in this show as props to make a larger point. If we look at the works so far, with this one and the box truck being prime examples, Better Out Than In seems to be at least in part about the spectacle and the crowds that Banksy’s work attracts. The box truck was meant to be a display of calmness, but this is what it looked like once people found out where the piece was parked. Today’s piece is of course reminiscent of Banksy’s classic Balloon Girl image, but now the girl is missing and the audience has to participate to complete the work (the balloon reference also lends credence to Hrag Vartanian’s idea that the show might be Banksy’s version of a retrospective). Other works in Better Out Than In point to the show being about crowds in less obvious ways. With the Random graffiti given a Broadway makeover series, Banksy drew out massive crowds to look at what was essentially the crappiest graffiti in New York City. So, that’s my current theory: The show is about the spectacle that Banksy can create and the crowds (including bloggers like me) that he can manipulate.

For today’s + 5, we have work by ASVP and some unknown artists:

ASVP and others in Zurich, Switzerland. Photo by Bernard Oh.
ASVP and others in Zurich, Switzerland. Photo by Bernard Oh.
Unknown artists in Zurich, Switzerland. Photo by Bernard Oh.
Unknown artists in Zurich, Switzerland. Photo by Bernard Oh.
Unknown Artist in Nottingham, UK. Photo by KylaBorg.
Unknown Artist in Nottingham, UK. Photo by KylaBorg.
Unknown artist in New York City. Photo by Hrag Vartanian.
Unknown artist in New York City. Photo by Hrag Vartanian.
Unknown artist in New York City. Photo by Hrag Vartanian.
Unknown artist in New York City. Photo by Hrag Vartanian.

Photos by Bernard Oh, KylaBorg, Hrag Vartanian and courtesy of The L.I.S.A. Project

Banksy on YouTube

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Almost half a million views in under 24 hours

Last month, just before Banksy teased Better Out Than In on his site, I tweeted that maybe Banksy should make more gifs (he’s made one in the past) because they are “Public art you can’t really steal.” Today, Banksy did something similar and posted a video titled Rebel rocket attack to YouTube. The video is part of Better Out Than In. Check it out:

Although there is of course Exit Through The Gift Shop and Banksy has participated in short films about his work (and it’s fair to assume that this one had his blessing), this is the first time I can think of where Banksy has really posted any video art in the same vein as his street art. Someone please correct me if I’m mistaken about that.

Greg at Melrose&Fairfax wonders, “Sure, [sic] its entertaining, but how does this online video fit into the theme for this show, Better Out Than In?” But what Greg seems to be missing is that the internet is a public space now. So much street art and art in general is made to be seen online be the same public that’s supposed to be seeing street art on the street. Besides, this video is still “out” in the sense that it has been published online, to be seen for free by anyone with the capabilities to visit YouTube, rather than made for a gallery where an art dealer might screen the piece and then sell it to private collectors in DVD format as an edition of 10. This video may not be on a wall, but it’s definitely more out than in. In that same post on M&F Greg also asked, “Why not do some street projecting of the video onto a wall in New York to keep it outdoors?” But nearly half a million people have seen this video less than 24 hours after it was first published. Why do a street projection for a few hundred people? The only advantages I can see to that over posting the video to YouTube are are the randomness of the physical crowd and the shock of a video projection suddenly starting up (and on a silly technical level, keeps the show “on the streets of New York”). Valuable advantages, but YouTube still seems a better route and not out of line with the theme of the show.

Another cool thing about this video is that we actually get to see stats. Normally it’s impossible to say how many people have seen a given work by Banksy. The answer with this one: A lot. But I guess that’s no surprise.

There are at least two questions that the production of this video raises: 1. Was it legal to use Dumbo in the video, and if not, what might happen here? 2. What does it mean that Banksy used audio footage from what appears to be a real video of a rebel in Syria shooting down a helicopter with a rocket in his video (thanks to Felim McMahon on YouTube for catching that)?

As for Dumbo, I’m no lawyer but American courts have generally determined that fair use exists in cases of parody, but not satire. Since in Rebel rocket attack Banksy uses Dumbo as in a larger satire and not to parody the character of Dumbo, it seems unlikely that a fair use defense would fly in (an American) court. So, if Disney cares about this and Banksy didn’t license the use of Dumbo in this video, there could be theoretically be legal issues here, though I doubt it will come to that. Just something to keep in mind, though I only bring it up because I’m a nerd about our messed-up copyright system.

The second question is particularly tricky. Today, half a million-ish people chuckled while listening to audio of a someone being killed. And hopefully, after they laughed, they paused a moment to think about the stupidity of war. I’m not sure what it means, but surely it means something that Banksy appropriated some of that audio from somewhere other than a Hollywood movie.

My initial reaction to discovering the audio source was “Wow, that’s terrible that Banksy used that audio,” but I don’t think it’s so simple. The audio was already out there, as was the original video, so why shouldn’t he use audio that already exists? Banksy didn’t tell anyone to shoot down a helicopter? Still, perhaps it’s disrespectful to the dead, even if they were soldiers in a brutal regime. Before today, I sure hadn’t seen that original video, but now I have. Banksy’s video has more than 10x the views of the video that he got the audio from. Maybe this knowledge makes the video more meaningful. Like I said, I’m still processing this information. It’s something to think about, and I would love to read your thoughts in the comments.

PS, there’s no Banksy + 5 today because I felt like I would have covered this piece on Vandalog even if I weren’t doing the Banksy + 5 series, plus it’s a video so that slightly complicates the Banksy + 5 theme.

Banksy + 5: October 5th

Banksy's mobile garden for the urban jungle. Look for it tonight on the streets of New York. Photo from banksyny.com.
Banksy’s mobile garden for the urban jungle. Look for it tonight on the streets of New York. Photo from banksyny.com.

UPDATE: Well, while the audio description for this piece says that Banksy (called “Bambi” in the description) “is delivering calm,” the scene on St. Mark’s between 2nd and 3rd Ave is anything but calm, with a hoard of photographers desperate to snap pictures of the piece. So, maybe this truck was a bit more clever than I initially anticipated. So much for calm, the people want spectacle!

Despite the late-in-the-day post, today’s Banksy hasn’t been tracked down yet, although with the sun going down, I suspect we are only a short time away from the piece being found. For Better Out Than In piece, Banksy has installed a fake garden scene in the back of a box truck. Starting this evening, the truck will be traveling around the city “every evening from dusk.” According to the Better Out Than In site, the truck will be in the East Village tonight. I couldn’t help think of Marcel Duchamp’s Étant donnés when I first saw this piece, but Banksy’s piece doesn’t seem to have the same sinister twist. It’s just a bit of greenery (although perhaps fake greenery) in the city. So, get ready to chase down this truck. Or, try visiting a park or (if you have access to a car) going camping this weekend. Either way. Still, I like the idea of this lush little world contained in a tagged-up box truck.

Before getting to today’s + 5, I want to bring up this Buzzfeed article. First of all, the idea is pretty similar to Banksy + 5, which was adapted from an idea by Jonathan Lynn of Anewspace.  That could be a coincidence of course, but Buzzfeed has a history of swiping content and ideas from others. Also, the headline, “F#©K Banksy, What About NYC’s Real Graffiti Artists?”, is ridiculous because they they go on the write about 3 street artists, and the only graffiti in the post is what is shown in the background in two of the photos. How about real writers like KATSU, ADEK, KUMA…?

But screw writing about art and graffiti. If Banksy’s audio descriptions are saying anything, they are saying, “YOU ARE OVERTHINKING THIS! LOOK AT THE ART AND ENJOY!” So here are some photos… Today’s + 5 are by Petro, El Bocho, JohnXC and two unknown artists:

Petro in Sheffield, UK. Photo by KylaBorg.
Petro in Sheffield, UK. Photo by KylaBorg.
El Bocho in Berlin, Germany. Photo by Olivier Bruchez.
El Bocho in Berlin, Germany. Photo by Olivier Bruchez.
JohnXC. Photo by svennevenn.
JohnXC. Photo by svennevenn.
Street art in Prague, Czech Republic. Photo by Daniel Hadley.
Street art in Prague, Czech Republic. Photo by Daniel Hadley.
Street art in Landshut, Germany. Photo by Fabian Mohr.
Street art in Landshut, Germany. Photo by Fabian Mohr.

Photos by KylaBorg, Olivier Bruchezsvennevenn, Daniel Hadley, Fabian Mohr and from banksyny.com

Banksy + 5: October 4th

Banksy
Banksy. Photo from banksyny.com.

Today’s new Banksy pieces are my favorite so far of Better Out Than In, his month-long series of works in NYC. Today three new pieces appeared on the project site in a series described on the website as “Random graffiti given a Broadway makeover (an ongoing series).” Banksy has shown time and time again that he is great at placing his works in interesting locations and playing with the existing environment. These are the first pieces of Better Out Than In that have shown that off. These Broadway pieces were located on the Lower East Side and in Williamsburg, but one has already been buffed.

AnimalNY reports that at least one of the pieces may have been painted 3 days ago and has locations for all of the pieces. If we trust the metadata in Banksy’s photos (which can be tweaked), the photos were taken yesterday (can’t say exactly when because it’s unclear what time zone the camera’s internal clock is set for), so Banksy would have painted the pieces and then waited more than a day to photograph them (or at least one of them). But we are relying on two assumptions here: 1. AnimalNY’s source is accurate, and 2. The metadata in the photos is accurate. Sidenote: Other random metadata includes that Banksy or his photographer generally use a Nikon D60 and edit photos on a Mac using Photoshop CS4.

Check out the other two Broadway stencils at the end of this post. First, today’s + 5. This afternoon we have work by DOT DOT DOT (another great example of placement), Peter Fuss, Ludo, SP-38 and Francisco de Pajaro aka Art Is Trash (whose piece is actually somewhat similar to today’s Banksy pieces):

DOT DOT DOT in Bodø, Norway. Photo by All Rights Destroyed.
DOT DOT DOT in Bodø, Norway. Photo by All Rights Destroyed.
Peter Fuss in Gdynia, Poland. Photo by Peter Fuss.
Peter Fuss in Gdynia, Poland. Photo by Peter Fuss.
"Biohazard" in Paris, France by Ludo. Phoot by Ludo.
“Biohazard” in Paris, France by Ludo. Phoot by Ludo.
SP-38 in Berlin, Germany. Photo by aesthetics of crisis.
SP-38 in Berlin, Germany. Photo by aesthetics of crisis.
Art is Trash. Photo by Dave "NoLions" Stuart.
Francisco de Pajaro aka Art is Trash in London, UK. Photo by Dave “NoLions” Stuart.

And now those other two great Banksy pieces:

Banksy. Photo from banksyny.com.
Banksy. Photo from banksyny.com.
Banksy. Photo from banksyny.com.
Banksy. Photo from banksyny.com.

Photos by All Rights Destoryed, Peter Fuss, Ludo, aesthetics of crisis and Dave “NoLions” Stuart and taken from banksyny.com