Skip to main content

New Banksy mural in north London puts a little greenery in a dense neighborhood

caption: A new Banksy artwork near Finsbury Park in north London shows a stencil of a person having spray painted tree foliage onto a wall behind a leafless tree.
Enlarge Icon
A new Banksy artwork near Finsbury Park in north London shows a stencil of a person having spray painted tree foliage onto a wall behind a leafless tree.
AFP via Getty Images

The street artist Banksy has confirmed the authenticity of a new mural that was painted on a north London street. The piece re-foliates a severely pruned tree in the Islington North area, a densely populated neighborhood.

In a "before" photo posted on Banksy's account Monday, the denuded tree, with most of its branches sawed off, stands before a rather sad building wall, its pale paint peeling away. Now, bright green paint has been sprayed on that same wall just behind the cut-back tree and its bare, stumpy limbs.

The green, dripped paint suggests tree foliage, while at the lower left side a stencil of a person holding a paint sprayer gazes upwards, seemingly toward the tree.

The mural appears to have gone up on Sunday; on Monday, Banksy posted before-and-after images of the tree and the wall. The building's owner told the BBC that the building is currently vacant and for rent, but that he plans to keep the mural up.

For this piece, the tree itself is integral to the mural's design and meaning — and therefore perhaps harder, and less attractive, to steal.

The last art known to have been created by Banksy — a stop sign with three military drones flying across it, which was widely interpreted as an anti-war piece — was stolen from its location in south London in December within hours of it being unveiled and confirmed as an authentic Banksy work. Two men were arrested for that theft, but are currently out on bail.

Last year, another Banksy work sold for more than $2 million at auction; perhaps most famously, Banksy's work Love is in the Bin sold for $25.4 million at a Sotheby's auction in 2021— three years after it had been partially shredded, on purpose, just after its sale for $1.4 million just after the auction had concluded, thanks to a shredder hidden within its frame.

The former leader of the Labour party, Jeremy Corbyn, told the PA news agency he is "delighted" to see the new mural in the neighborhood, for which he has served as a member of parliament for more than 40 years. Corbyn said Islington North needs more greenery. [Copyright 2024 NPR]

Why you can trust KUOW