The artist Banksy has confirmed he is the creator of a large green mural of a tree with apparent environmental overtones which appeared in north London over the weekend.
Residents said they woke up on Sunday to the massive painting on the side of a block of flats in Hornsey Road near Finsbury Park.
Image: Pic: PA
Pest Control, the official body that authenticates Banksy work, confirmed to Sky News the painting was indeed Banksy’s latest offering.
The elusive artist – who shares his work on his Instagram page – also posted a picture of the site on his official page on Monday, showing the wall before and after the work was completed.
The large-scale painting is a green splatter-effect shape, painted behind a cut-back tree – giving the appearance of adding a halo of leaves and foliage to the bare branches.
The green paint drips down to the floor, where a figure of a young girl painted with a stencil in green and black is looking up at the work.
She appears to be holding a pressure sprayer.
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The shade of bright green paint used in the piece matches the colour of Islington Council branding, and also seems likely to be a nod to St Patrick’s Day, which was on Sunday 17 March.
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Local resident Amy, who lives in the building said she could never have predicted Bansky would have chosen her flat wall to paint on.
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She told Sky News: “We’ve lived here for three years, so we’ve seen the tree as it was when it was full of leaves and now it’s been chopped down.”
She described it as “a big willow tree” with “layers of leaves kind of over spilling”. She went on: “I suppose that’s what he’s tried to capture with the green. And then I think about a year or two ago, they chopped it down because it was getting too big”.
She described the unexpected painting as “really exciting” adding, “I’m really happy for the community that something so cool happened here“.
MP for Islington North, former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn also visited the site, sharing pictures on X and writing: “Banksy has come to Islington! What wonderful artwork, proving there is hope for our natural world everywhere.”
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Islington councillor Flora Williamson shared images of the art on X, and said she was a fan of Banksy’s work.
She wrote: “By far the most exciting thing to happen on today’s canvass session on Hornsey Road was seeing that Banksy had come to Tollington overnight. Lots of local interest – I’m a fan of it.”
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Lidia Guerra, another Hornsey Road resident, said: “The way it’s been done with the paint spraying down reminds me of a weeping willow, so there’s perhaps a message about the struggle of nature with the dead tree in front.
“It’s just great – when we read about it last night, we knew we had to come and see it as soon as possible.
“We feel so proud to think he chose our street.”
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Ahead of his latest creation, Banksy’s last confirmed work was a stop sign in Peckham, south London, with three military drones stuck across it, and was shared just before Christmas.
However, that work was removed less than an hour after it was confirmed to be genuine on the artist’s social media, with witnesses reporting it was taken down by a man with bolt cutters.
Two men were later arrested on suspicion of theft and criminal damage.
Banksy is back with his first confirmed installation of 2024.
The anonymous British street artist posted on his Instagram account on Monday that he was behind a mural that was first spotted in Finsbury Park in London over the weekend.
In the artwork, a stenciled figure of a woman appears to have sprayed green paint over a white wall behind a pollarded tree, thus giving an optical illusion effect of foliage.
Others suggested it was a pessimistic take on the environment or a commentary on greenwashing, the tactic the United Nations defines on its website as “misleading the public to believe that a company or other entity is doing more to protect the environment than it is.”
Banksy confirmed he was behind the mural in Finsbury Park, London. (Photo by Jonathan Brady/PA Images via Getty Images)
Jonathan Brady – PA Images via Getty Images
Documentarian James Peak, the creator of the BBC’s “The Banksy Story” radio series, said the message is “clear” that “nature’s struggling and it is up to us to help it grow back.”
“When you step back, it looks like the tree is bursting to life, but in a noticeably fake and synthetic way,” he told the broadcaster. “And it’s pretty subtle for a massive tree, I’d say.”
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LONDON — The Banksy appeared the way Banksy murals often do: overnight, unsigned and to everyone’s complete surprise.
Before the artist claimed credit, this north London neighborhood was embroiled in a full-on whodunit.
Was it truly the world-famous, elusive artist who had painted streaks of bright green paint that appeared as if they were foliage behind a large tree? Were there telltale signs of his work in the portrait of the young person holding a pressure sprayer on the peeling wall?
By the gray and rainy Monday morning, this normally sleepy corner of Finsbury Park had turned into a circus. Journalists and local politicians descended on the scene after the mural appeared Sunday. A Banksy expert rushed over and declared it to be the likely work of the artist. Neighbors shared photos on chat groups; an unusual crowd gathered to snap selfies and give interviews to journalists.
There were other questions aside from the mural’s provenance. What would it mean for the neighborhood? The Banksy work appeared on a wall just off Christie Court, a block of housing run by the local authority in the borough of Islington, where poor and working-class families live alongside very wealthy residents. “Banksy came overnight and now my rent will skyrocket,” one person posted on social media with an upside-down smiling face emoji.
And then, of course, there were questions about the meaning of the artwork itself.
“It’s been done for a purpose: to get people talking, to get people interested,” said Jeremy Corbyn, the member of Parliament who represents North Islington and a former leader of Britain’s Labour Party, who arrived near the mural on Hornsey Roadaround 10:30 a.m. and was immediately flocked by cameras and curious constituents.
But talking about what, and interested in what? Banksy’s anti-establishment street art has achieved global notoriety in recent years, and curiosity about the artist himself has lent an aura of mystery to his work. However, Banksy rarely — if ever — explains the meaning behind his street art, letting audiences interpret it for themselves. This makes reaching a definitive conclusion about any work by Banksy a tricky task.
Banksy’s own pictures of the work had no caption on social media.
“It’s typical Banksy,” said Jenna Edwards, 31, a local resident who came to see the mural when she heard about it around the neighborhood. Edwards thinks it’s a symbol of unity. “No matter if the branches and the leaves fall off, as long as you address the root, and we all come together, then we can grow back better,” she said of the tree and its painted foliage.
Jonathan Ward, 55, a local resident and community activist, believes the mural carries an environmental message. Ward said the young person painted on the wall “seems to be holding a weedkiller spray,” in what could be a reference to the “damaging effect” of products such as glyphosate.
Some observers noted that the paint’s shade of green is similar to a shade used by Islington Council, the district authority in charge, in street signs. Yet others said it was a reference to St. Patrick’s Day, which was Sunday.
Rafael Schacter, an associate professor of anthropology and material culture at University College London, said in an email that the mural was “one of the best Banksy works I’ve seen in a while,” and felt “genuinely site-specific.”
“The brutally pollarded tree against the plain side wall of the adjacent building it sits against provides a really perfect backdrop,” he said, speculating that the work was a statement on the debate about how to best maintain and care for trees. He said the use of color and technique “in which hand-pumped garden pressure sprayers are re-purposed to paint graffiti — something similarly done with fire extinguishers — is a nice touch in term of the relation to … their use in gardening, often for weeding.”
It quickly became an attraction. A group of 23-year-olds heard about the mural that morning and came to have a look. “It’s the first time I’ve ever seen [a Banksy] in the flesh,” one said.
In a local coffee shop and bakery called Jolene, the barista told patrons about the mural as she handed them their coffee, directing them to the right spot. Young people working on their laptops talked about who they thought did it.
In recent years, public art by Banksy has at times sparkedextreme reactions in the communities where it has appeared: Last year, The Washington Post reported that the district council in Margate, a seaside town in eastern England, dismantled an installation by Banksy timed for Valentine’s Day — prompting an outcry from residents who called it overreach by their local government at the expense of art that could draw touriststo their town.
And in December, two people were arrested after a piece of Banksy’s work — a London stop sign adorned with what appeared to be drones — went missing.
Islington Council told The Washington Post in an email that its “graffiti removal team is aware of the artwork” by Banksy “and won’t remove it.”
The mural “has sparked a real buzz across Islington and beyond, and we very much want the artwork to stay for people to enjoy,” said Roulin Khondoker, executive member of Islington Council for equalities, culture and inclusion, in the email. “We want to find more ways that we can tell important stories through art and culture.”
Adela Suliman and Anumita Kaur contributed to this report.