

Banksy
'Flying Copper'
Limited Edition
£45,000.00Sold
(From 0 Reviews)
Description
Limited Edition Print - Unsigned (2003)
Unframed Screen print on paper
Edition 224 of 600, numbered with full pest control COA.
Multiples of this image were originally sprayed onto cardboard and suspended from the ceiling as part of Banksy’s first official exhibition, 2003’s Turf War, on Kingsland Road in London. The image went on to become one of the artist’s most instantly recognisable works after multiple Flying Coppers were pasted into a prominent position in London’s Shoreditch as a street piece.
The police force has been a recurring motif for Banksy since he first started working as an artist: back in 1999, Banksy created his largest Bristol street work The Mild Mild West, which depicts a teddy throwing a petrol bomb at three police officers holding riot shields.
For more information, please contact the Gallery.
Want to see how this piece will look in your own home? Call our Gallery in Nottingham on 01159 243 555 to arrange a personal home viewing before purchasing the work
Artist
Although the artist retains full anonymity, Banksy is believed to have been born in Bristol in 1974. Taking inspiration from the Bristol Underground Scene, the artist claims that his distinctive style, which combines stencil and graffiti writing, developed out of a need to quickly create large-scale works.
Taking inspiration from the Bristol Underground Scene, the artist claims that his distinctive style, which combines stencil and graffiti writing, developed out of a need to quickly create large-scale works. Banksy's work typically includes satirical social and political commentary, and ranges from murals to sculpture and installation, often playing with the contextual aspects of the work.
The artist's first solo show was held in 2002 at Los Angeles' 33 1/3 Gallery, and in 2003 he was commissioned to design to cover of Blur's ThinkTank. Today, Banksy's work appears internationally; most notably, he painted nine sardonic images on the Palestinian side of the West Bank barrier. In Summer 2009, Banksy took over the Bristol Museum and Art Gallery with an exhibition attracting over 300,000 visitors and hour-long queues all the way down the road. Most recently the artist has experimented with film, achieving an Oscar nomination for his documentary Exit Through The Gift Shop.
Works by the artist will also be included in Art In The Streets at The Museum of Modern Art (MOCA), the first major survey of street art to be shown in the US later this year.
In 2005, Banksy pranked The Museum of Modern Art by secretly installing a painting of a Tesco Value soup can (a spoof on Andy Warhol’s famous silkscreens of Campbell’s Soup Cans) in one of its galleries—a hoax that went unnoticed by the museum’s staff for six days and inspired a series of Tesco Value soup can posters years later. You can purchase Banksy - Soup Cans Quad here
No gallery represents Banksy.
Dimensions
Depth | 2 " |
---|---|
Width | 27 " |
Height | 39 " |
Weight | 10 |