Dalya Alberge, Arts Correspondent
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Now you see it, now you don’t . . . and now you do again. A large-scale artwork by Banksy, the “guerrilla” graffiti artist, disappeared last weekend after a rival graffiti artist sprayed white paint over it.
Just as everyone assumed that the original work – painted on the wall of an arts centre two years ago – was beyond saving, it somehow materialised again yesterday.
The stencilled figure of a chambermaid appearing to lift up part of the wall like a curtain to sweep away some dust is protected by both the Roundhouse arts centre, northwest London, on whose wall it is painted, and Camden council, which spends thousands of pounds removing graffiti from its streets.
Whether someone removed the white paint or painted a new version of the Banksy work is unclear.
Banksy, who insists on anonymity, enhanced his reputation in a more conventional way on Thursday night, when one of his works sold at auction at Sotheby’s in New York for a record price. Keep it Spotless, a spray-painted canvas depicting a chambermaid appearing to lift up a Damien Hirst spot painting to reveal a brick wall, was sold for £950,300. A year ago the most that had been paid for a work by Banksy was £102,000.
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I think Banksy should come out.And paint over all his own work, publically.
He has earned his reputation and street credibility through being a radical and now he is cashing in in a filthy lucre manner!!!Selling this kind of political,anarchic,FREE work on the open market devalues it in REAL terms, in direct proportion to the (grotesque )rate at which it accrues value in the amoral,predatory,and unimaginative business world.
Banksy, if you are out there ,Faustus has two meanings...BEWARE!YOU ARE BETTER THAN THAT AND YOU KNOW IT!!!
xaninche, london,
Unlikely to have been a local, as several other Banksy pieces around London have had similar treatment recently. And it has been retouched before, somebody painted the maid's face solid black last summer.
Joe, London,
Interestingly enough, its believed that a local resident took to the work with whilte gloss, and not a rival. The work has been cleaned up but is badly damaged. Maybe Banksy wouldnt mind popping round and giving it a touch up?
Camdenite, London,