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Banksy's Unknown Hoodie
Establishment man: Banksy's Unknown Hoodie, part of a Waterloo art festival

Banksy lost his street cred the moment he found fame

Will Self
15 Jul 2008


There's been no confirmation yet but it looks as if the reclusive graffiti artist, Banksy, may have had his real identity revealed as 34-year-old ex-public schoolboy Robin Gunningham. You can understand why he went for nom-de-spraycan, if indeed Gunningham is the person responsible for all those subtly subversive images: the rats wielding rocket-propelled grenades along the Embankment, and the legend Do Not Paint Over This Graffiti by the Albert Bridge, to name but two.

But as to the supposed " revelation" that Banksy is far from being a man of the people - can that be any real surprise? Many of the great subversive artists of the 20th century, working when the avantgarde really meant something, were from middle-class and even patrician backgrounds. Frankly, you often need a little in the way of financial cushioning to risk real nonconformity.

Not that I think Banksy ever was truly avant-garde; or rather, such credentials as he had were soon mortgaged as he acquired a certain notoriety. To begin with, graffiti art is a field full of anguished young men desperate for some kind of recognition. The archetypal graffiti artist isn't Banksy but the obsessive-compulsive Enzo, who has marked an estimated 250,000 train windows with his simplistic tag.

As soon as "Banksy" became an identifiable artist - and particularly when his work began to appear in book form and be exhibited in galleries - he ceased to have any street cred at all, no matter that he still hung on to his anonymity. By the time his work began being collected by the likes of - gulp! - Brangelina, he was about as "street" as a Tory transport spokesman.

But anyway, having street cred isn't the same as being avant-garde; rather, it's the search by the jaded mainstream for some exciting and new primitivism. To be avant-garde - as the term suggests - is to be out in front of mainstream artists, creating work that through its sheer daring and brio increases the ambit of what may be possible.

Throughout the 20th century, truly avant-garde artists, writers and filmmakers fought a stiff battle against the forces of conformity: their aim was to make it possible to write and paint and make films about previously taboo subjects, principally sex and religion. They succeeded more than they ever could have believed possible, helping to make a culture in which it is now possible for us to experience the most extreme of mediatised experiences, scant few of which are genuinely art.

That has been one downside of the triumph - and subsequent death - of the avant-garde. The other is that while it's possible nowadays to say anything, nobody much is listening any more. Or rather, they're listening to whichever wannabe - such as Banksy - the media have seized on to.

Reader views (5)

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why do you want to find out about him leave him be he is a good artist leave him be he wants to do art let he aint harming no 1

- Adrian Walsh, london edgware, 17/04/2009 11:12
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Avant-garde he may not be, although I don't remember Banksy ever having claimed to be so... However he is in my view responsible for the engagement of the masses (including myself) who had probably never really considered art to be of any importance.
So the guy is not Carravaggio, but he’s the best most engaging artist we have right now and many millions of people around the world are captivated by what he does. His art makes every single one of those people (including Will Self) feel something even if only on a basic level... is this not the point? Through his art and the context he at the very least forces people to ask questions of themselves and their environment.
Avant-garde he is not... provocative he is... engaging he most certainly is!

- James Lea, stoke on trent, 16/07/2008 11:40
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Any chance of changing your profile picture? It looks as if you've swallowed a sour grape.

- Karl Young, London, 16/07/2008 10:23
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Perhaps, Will Self thinks he's avant-garde or - even better - has street cred (more about that in a bit). Who cares if the artist formerly known as Banksy is middle-class and went to a public school? Sorry, Will, but just because you live south of the river doesn't mean you have street cred either. A bit rich to write this piece and make these comments as you, too, (shock, horror) grew up in a middle class suburb, attended an 'independent' school and then went on to Oxford. So street. Who cares what school Banksy went to? That's not the point. I'm no fan of his 'art' but the overhyped secretive build-up to his work has been genius, and if the likes of 'Brangelina' care to indulge in overpaying for the tosh, let them. If anything, Banksy - or Robin Gunningham or whatever his name is - has caused a stir and entertained many, and the media just feeds into the hype.
So, you go on pretending you're 'down with the people' but just because you're out of a middle class suburb, it hasn't left you. Nothing stinks more than a champagne socialist. Clink clink.

- Street Cred - Puhlease, Look Who'S Talking, London, England, 16/07/2008 09:03
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Jealousy.

- Teddy Picker, London, 15/07/2008 14:29
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