Author picture

Series

Works by Martin Bull

Tagged

$20 (2) 140SEK (3) 2000s (1) 2011 (2) :Nonfiction (2) @PMPress (2) ^Graphic (2) art (33) artists (3) arts (4) Banksy (12) books read 2010 (1) Britain (2) graffiti (15) Husband's Book (2) illustrated (1) Infoshop (3) labor-library (2) London (10) murals (1) N (2) non-fiction (4) OP2011-2015 (1) photography (3) PM Press (2) street art (11) to-read (2) travel (6) walking tours (2) WLL (2)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
20th Century
Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Associated Place (for map)
UK

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
Martin Bull’s Banksy: Locations & Tours is really a walking tour of some of the more important sites ornamented by London grafitti artist, Banksy. It’s a small book with postcard-sized images of Banksy’s works – bling rats, coke-snorting cops and kidnapping cash machines – accompanied by brief descriptions of the site and the work’s history.

Unfortunately, as Bull admits, much and maybe even most of this work will be gone – painted over or pressure-blasted – by the time any show more of his readers have a chance to swing by Shoreditch or Clerkenwell with guide in hand. From this starting point of ephemerality, one could imagine the city as a giant palimpsest of temporary signs and images, or perhaps debate the pros and cons of keeping or enshrining any of these works (what does it mean when “subversive” street art is adopted by the cultural mainstream?), but Bull doesn’t. Not wanting to “intellectualize” Banksy’s street art, he limits his text to directions and status reports. Herein lies the book’s failure because what it doesn’t provide the reader is any kind of rationale for undertaking its mapped-out tours. I think there are plenty of reasons, but Bull expects them to be self-evident.

If you’re interested in street art and don’t want to spend the cash on Wall and Piece, buy this book for the pictures. Otherwise, just skip it.
show less
These two collections are best for Banksy completists, a.k.a. obsessive fans. Of which I am one. As is demonstrated by the fact that I made these:



If you are new to Banksy, you are better off picking up [b:Wall and Piece|114683|Wall and Piece|Banksy|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1327904853s/114683.jpg|110426]. I have seen most of the works featured here before but did spot a few that I had never seen before, so I’m glad I snagged these. Banksy is primarily a street stencil artist. He show more occasionally does paintings or various installation/sculptural pieces, but primarily he cuts elaborate stencils then hits walls at night and spray paints the images using the stencils. His work is often straight up political but avoids being too didactic by leavening it with clever/biting/sarcastic humor.

The author of these two collections is a graffiti tour guide in London who documents street art via photography and then hosts tours of interesting work, mainly Banksy. In these two books, the author’s commentary did became somewhat repetitive, partly because I suspect these were originally blog posts, and he didn’t do a good job editing them as a whole. But regardless, I did learn some interest tidbits. I had no idea how many people would tear down walls and doors, peel off plaster, or remove storage boxes if Banksy had painted on them and then attempt to sell them at auction houses or on eBay. (The author repeatedly declares his opposition to tearing down work that was created for the street.) Sometimes the paintings sold for a lot of money, other times, they don’t sell at all. The auction houses have a difficult time proving the authenticity of the work. After all, it’s street art, and sometimes other people imitate Banksy’s style.

It was also interesting to read about the ongoing government whitewashing of graffiti, town debates on the subject, and how frequently the works disappears. I was also unaware of the graffiti war with “Team Robbo” after Banksy painted over an old work by Robbo that had been around for many years. So now Robbo supporters (or those who are just jealous of Banksy’s success) have gone around defacing Banksy’s works.

Of the two books, the second one has some of the lesser seen works. I’m glad I could see some of Banksy’s stencils in more of a street context, but overall, this won’t be too exciting for those unfamiliar with Banksy. Below are a few of my favorite images from these books.

OLD SKOOL


NO FUTURE


PETROL VULTURE


KID’S CAR UP ON BLOCKS AND BARBED WIRE PLAYHOUSE
show less
These two collections are best for Banksy completists, a.k.a. obsessive fans. Of which I am one. As is demonstrated by the fact that I made these:



If you are new to Banksy, you are better off picking up [Book:Wall and Piece]. I have seen most of the works featured here before but did spot a few that I had never seen before, so I’m glad I snagged these. Banksy is primarily a street stencil artist. He occasionally does paintings or various installation/sculptural pieces, but primarily he cuts show more elaborate stencils then hits walls at night and spray paints the images using the stencils. His work is often straight up political but avoids being too didactic by leavening it with clever/biting/sarcastic humor.

The author of these two collections is a graffiti tour guide in London who documents street art via photography and then hosts tours of interesting work, mainly Banksy. In these two books, the author’s commentary did became somewhat repetitive, partly because I suspect these were originally blog posts, and he didn’t do a good job editing them as a whole. But regardless, I did learn some interest tidbits. I had no idea how many people would tear down walls and doors, peel off plaster, or remove storage boxes if Banksy had painted on them and then attempt to sell them at auction houses or on eBay. (The author repeatedly declares his opposition to tearing down work that was created for the street.) Sometimes the paintings sold for a lot of money, other times, they don’t sell at all. The auction houses have a difficult time proving the authenticity of the work. After all, it’s street art, and sometimes other people imitate Banksy’s style.

It was also interesting to read about the ongoing government whitewashing of graffiti, town debates on the subject, and how frequently the works disappears. I was also unaware of the graffiti war with “Team Robbo” after Banksy painted over an old work by Robbo that had been around for many years. So now Robbo supporters (or those who are just jealous of Banksy’s success) have gone around defacing Banksy’s works.

Of the two books, the second one has some of the lesser seen works. I’m glad I could see some of Banksy’s stencils in more of a street context, but overall, this won’t be too exciting for those unfamiliar with Banksy. Below are a few of my favorite images from these books.

OLD SKOOL


NO FUTURE


PETROL VULTURE


KID’S CAR UP ON BLOCKS AND BARBED WIRE PLAYHOUSE
show less

Lists

You May Also Like

Statistics

Works
6
Members
175
Popularity
#122,546
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
5
ISBNs
29

Charts & Graphs