Banksy at the Moco Museum, Barcelona.
British street artist Banksy is one of the most iconic figures in contemporary art, yet his identity remains anonymous. Emerging from the 1990s Bristol underground scene, he develooped a stencil technique to create works both visually direct and conceptually charged. Through satire, irony and dark humour, his work exposes pressing social and political issues.
Recurring motifs such as children, police and animals, allow Banksy to question systems of authority and mechanisms of control. Whether painted on city walls, found objects, or altered paintings, his interventions subvert familiar contexts and challenge viewer's assumptions.
Over the past decades, street art has entered mainstream cultural discourse, in part due to Banksy's influence, redefining ideas about where art belongs and whom it addresses. His works invite audiences to reconsider dominant narrative, proving how disruption can serve as a spark for reflection and change.
The title of the exhibition was Icons Reimagined because: ' A visual dialogue across time takes shape. Banksy draws on the legacy of Modern Masters Andy Warhol, Keigh Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat, transforming their iconic imagery into instruments of social critique. He brings together generations of street and pop art, showing how creativity can challenge authority and give voice to those often overlooked. By reinterpreting the Modern Master's strategies of exposure, humour and irony, Banksy develops his own visual language while honoring their lessons, revealing how their insights continue to resonate with contemporary challenges'.
Girl with Balloon (Gold), 2004, (screenprint)
Girl with Baloon (Pink), 2004, (screeprint on paper)
Banksy's Girl with Balloon is one of his most iconic works and a defining image of 21-st century art. Celebrated for its simple yet powerful message, it depicts a young girl reaching towards a heart-shaped balloon. Over time, Banksy has created multiple versions of this motif, sometimes altering the balloon's colour or adding subtle variations that invite viewers to reflect on its meaning in new ways.
Originally created in 2002, the piece no longer exists in its original form, yet its impact continues to resonate worldwide. Voted Britain's favourite artwork, the image was created in 2015 to commemorate the Syrian conflict, preserving its limitless message of hope and innocence. In 2018, a framed print partially shredded itself immediately after being sold at auction, turning the moment into a performative critique of the art market and reflection on art's fleeting value.
Flower Thrower, 2003
When Flower Thrower, also known as Love is in the Air, first appeared on the West Bank Wall in Jerusalem in 2003, it was revolutionary. The work has appeared internationally in cities with divisive histories, such as Berlin, proving to be a universal symbol with a rallying call to humanity worldwide.
In this triptych version the protestor is fragmented across three panels. The edition marks Banksy's first experiment spraying a stencil onto film and exposing it directly through screenprint. The process, both physical and imperfect, recalls the origins of pop and street art while rejecting the precision of digital reproduction.

At first glance, a figure poised to launch what we expect to be a Molotov cocktail seems to continue the cycle of violence. Instead Banksy replaces the expected weapon with a bouquet of flowers. Blossoms burst from a clenched fist to convey a message of peace and hope. With sympathy and satire, Flower Thrower suggests coflict resolution is rooted in love.

Love is in the Air, 2003
A hooded figure grips a leash that holds back a barking, cartoon-like dog. Both the masked figure, part protester, part everyman, and his graphic companion mirror Britain's disaffected youth culture, often portrayed as dangerous or lost. First appearing in London in 2010, the work captures Banksy's dialogue with American artist Keith Haring, whose famous Barking Dog motif became a global emblem of protest and a voice of the streets in New York. By reimagining Haring's icon, Banksy connects two generations of artists who replaced violence with creativity, their tools not swords but spray can. What we hold in our hands, a weapon, a leash or a brush, may decide the kind of world we build.
Basquiat, 2019, (print and hand finished)
A dialogue across time unfolds: a Ferris wheel spins, its carriages replaced by Jean-Michel Basquiat's iconic three-point crowns, symbols of artistic power, ambition and Black pride. Rendered in white lines, resembling chalk on a black surface, the image also recalls Keith Haring's subway drawings: spontaneous, public and alive. Banksy brings together the legacies of Basquiat and Haring, reviving the raw immediacy of 1980s street art while positioning himself within a lineage that transformed the city into a canvas and art into a collective experience.
First released through Gross Domestic Product, Banksy's satirical 'brand' store that blurred the boundaries between art and commerce, the work reveals how easily rebellion can be absorbed by the systems it challenges. Here, Banksy questions whether street art can remain subversive once its imagery, and even its spirit of defiance, are consumed by the marketplace.
A quiet act of care turns uneasy. A veiled mother nurses her child, yet rust bleeds through her breast beneath the infant's worried gaze. The corrosion becomes part of the wound. What should be tender now disturbs.
Banksy first shared the image on his social media, without title or context, a silence that amplified both mystery and emotion. Rooted in centuries of Madonna-and-Child imagery, the scene echoes Renaissance devotion, yet belongs to the present: a time of conflict, loss and hope. As in his earlier works, Banksy turns maternal imagery into a mirror of modern life's contradictions, while the material itself speaks of decay.
Whether read as a commentary on the West Bank, where Palestinian motherhood persists against impossible odds, or as a timeless reflection on suffering and indifference, the work resists simplicity. Banksy never confirms, leaving the iamge open and drawing us into uncertain space where the divine fades into the human.
A skeletal figure of Death sits casually atop a large clock, scythe in hand, its face replaced by a bright yellow smiley. The cheerful mask, borrowed from 1990s rave and acid house culture, contrasts with the Grim Reaper's deadly purpose, turning a symbol of fear through a playful twist.
First appearing on the streets of East London, the scene's clock, resembling Big Ben, reads five minutes to midnight. This refers to the Doomsday Clock, a metaphor for how close humanity stands to global catastrophe. Through this dance between humour and mortality, Banksy invites us to reflect on our desensitisation to danger and the absurdity of modern life. If the clock were truly ticking towards the end, would we still be smiling?
Stop Sign, 2023-2024, (hand painted resin on screenprinted stop metal sign)
First appearing on the streets of East London, the scene's clock, resembling Big Ben, reads five minutes to midnight. This refers to the Doomsday Clock, a metaphor for how close humanity stands to global catastrophe. Through this dance between humour and mortality, Banksy invites us to reflect on our desensitisation to danger and the absurdity of modern life. If the clock were truly ticking towards the end, would we still be smiling?
A bold, red stop-sign, ordinarily meant to regulate traffic, becomes a battlefield. Its surface beats three resin-cast drones, hand-painted and glued by Banksy onto a metal traffic panel. This guerilla installation was removed form Peckham street in South London, less than an hour after the artist confirmed its authenticity through social media.
For nearly two decades, Banksy has turned his gaze towards the genocide in Gaza. From his 2005 murals on the West Bank barrier to later works in occupied territories, he has consistently addressed the dynamics of power, surveillance and civilian suffering. Here, the drones that once symbolised control are repurposed as instrument of protest, transforming the stop signal into a call to end war.
FR(AGILE), 2022, (screenprint)
For nearly two decades, Banksy has turned his gaze towards the genocide in Gaza. From his 2005 murals on the West Bank barrier to later works in occupied territories, he has consistently addressed the dynamics of power, surveillance and civilian suffering. Here, the drones that once symbolised control are repurposed as instrument of protest, transforming the stop signal into a call to end war.
A white rat claws at a freight box stamped Fragile. With each desperate scratch, the first letters fall away, revealing a new word: Agile. In this small act of defiance, Banksy transforms a sign of weakness into a gesture of resilience.
The rat, one of Banksy's most recurrent motifs, stands for those who adapt in hostile environments. Released in 2022 as part of a fundraising campaign for civilians affected by the war in Ukraine, this linited edition combines purpose and care. Each rat's marks are unique, scratched by Banksy himself using a sharpened pizza cutter, a handmade act that mirrors the resourcefulness of those it supports.
Both message and method affirm Banksy's belief in art as action. In times of conflict, agility may become the most radical form of hope.
Bullet Hole Bust, 2006, (cast jesmonite)
Banksy writes a new ending to the classic David vs Goliath. In the Bible, David defeats the giant Goliath with a slingshot to the forehead.
Here, we're hit with a modern twist and see evidence of a gunshot wound in the perfectly polished marble bust. Is Banksy declaring that classical art is dead?
Happy Choppers, 2024, (acrylic, oil and spray paint on modified oil painting)
A squadron of military helicopters cuts through a severe, pastoral landscape, turning a peaceful scene into a machinery war invasion. Yet one detail disrupts the threat: a bright decorative yellow bow tied to the lead aircraft, transforming a symbol of conflict into one of contradiction. The ribbon, absurdly tender and almost childlike, softens the violence it crowns, exposing the uneasy coexistence of innocence and destrudtion.
Part of Banksy's Corrupted Oil series, the work merges street iconography onto found oil paintings sourced from thrift shops and flea markets. The result is a reflection on the human cost of armed conflict, particularly the impact on civilians and children, the most vulnerable victims of war.
What happens when the past is rewritten in the language of the present? Banksy's altered oil paintings, often called Crude Oils, Vandalised Oils, or Corrupted Oils, challenge the authority of the Western art tradition. The secondhand landscapes he uses are discarded scenes of calm, nostalgia and cultural prestige. Onto their surfaces, he inserts modern imagery and contemporary conflict. The result is an act of discuption. Quiet symbols become loud questions. They remind us that history, like art, is never neutral. Even a peaceful scene can carry the weight of power.
First appearing at Whitecross Street Market in London in 2002, the motif has become one of Banksy's most recognisable, embodying his ongoing call for freedom, peace and justice. Both satirical and defiant, Happy Choppers brings together delicacy and brutality, encouraging us to question what kind of violence we have come to accept as normal.

Goldfish Bowl, 2019, (PU resin, acrylic, glass eyes and printed canvas mounted on plywood in painted artist frame)
A goldfish leaps towards freedom, and lands in artifice. Banksy presents a tragicomic scene of absurd bravery, exposing our faith in false horizons: a resin fish frozen mid-flight between its plastic town and a painted sea that can never be reached.
Created for Gross Domestic Product, Banksy's pop-up 'store', Goldfish Bowl transforms a domestic ornament into a sharp reflection on modern existence. Every element deceives: the frame imitates age, and the seascape is a printed fiction, revealing how easily reality is packaged, polished and sold back to us.
Here, the goldfish becomes a mirror of the human condition: aspiring to freedom while trapped within systems that sell us the illusion of it. Whether we pursue consumer dreams, digital escapes, or political ideals, Banksy asks: what if the ocean we long for is only another bowl?
The life-size riot policeman stands before you like a barrier. His intention is masked by smiley face emoji. As protectors of peace, what could it be hiding?
Banksy's life was changed forever, after the unnecessary killing of two men who stole a police motorcycle, otherwise known as the 1992 Hartcliffe Riot. It's a tragedy that still brings grief and anger to the city of Bristol. Ever since the anonymous street artist witnessed this unjust powerplay, he has given a voice to the underdog.
Laugh Now, (Panel B), 2002, (spray paint and emulsion on door)
This work points to the spirit of street art - working on any and every possible surface with quick speed. A monkey wears a sandwich board that reads: Laugh now but one day we'll be in charge. The provocative text, both mocking and threatening, forewarns us of an imminent revolution.
A young girl hugs a military bomb as if it were a toy, her eyes closed and her smile in sharp contrast to the weapon she affectionately holds. Banksy creates a visual contradiction between innocence and the threat of conflict, exposing how modern society has come to normalise war and aggression. The child's tender embrace suggests that love, not cruelty, could disarm the world's machinery of violence.
First released in 2003 through Pictures on Walls, a London-based publisher that supported many of Banksy's early print editions, Bomb Love was produced in both signed and unsigned formats. It has since become one of the artist's most recognised works.
First released in 2003 through Pictures on Walls, a London-based publisher that supported many of Banksy's early print editions, Bomb Love was produced in both signed and unsigned formats. It has since become one of the artist's most recognised works.
Through playful yet unsettling imagery, Banksy invites viewers to confront their own desensitisation towards violence and to rediscover humanity's capacity for empathy and compassion, even when surrounded by instruments of destruction.
Di-Faced Tenners, 2004, (screenprint on paper)
Di-Faced Tenners, 2004, (screenprint on paper)
The average Londoner is captured on CCTV more than 300 times a day. Police use CCTV for almost everything, from traffic observation to neighbourhood watches, you are being watched.
































































