- By Doug Faulkner & Alex Smith
- BBC News
Image source, James Peak/The Banksy Story
The mural has been painted to make it look like tree foliage
An artwork which appeared overnight on the side of a building near Finsbury Park in London on Sunday is suspected of being by street artist Banksy.
A mass of green has been painted behind a cut-back mature tree to look like foliage, with a stencil of a person holding a pressure hose next to it.
“To my mind it looks like a dead cert,” he said.
“But as ever with Banksy – you never quite know, until he fesses up by posting it on his website.”
The elusive artist officially confirms his work by posting pictures on his website and social media – which has not yet been done for the Finsbury tree.
But documentary maker Mr Peak said the artwork, which appeared on Hornsey Road in north London, “certainly bears all of the hallmarks” of a Banksy.
“It has got the right techniques, it certainly has an easy-to-understand message, a very clever location, and it really resonates the second you see it”.
“The message is clear,” he said. “Nature’s struggling and it is up to us to help it grow back.”
Image source, James Peak/The Banksy Story
The colour used for the artwork is the same as that of the Islington Council signs, as seen in the foreground
Mr Peak said: “If you go way back to the beginning of his work, he is always looking for something he can do with minimum effort to make something look really cool.”
He added that the mural -a “great arterial spray of green paint” up a white wall, accompanied by a “classic Banksy-style stencil” – would probably have been created using a pressure hose or fire extinguisher.
The colour of the green paint used matches that used by Islington Council for signs in the local area, which Mr Peak said showed the Banksy eye for detail.
“When you step back it looks like the tree is bursting to life, but in a noticeably fake and synthetic way.
“It’s spring now, and this tree should be bursting forth with leaves, but Banksy must have cycled past and thought how miserable it looks,” he said.
“So, on St Patrick’s Day, he has taken exactly the same shade of green Islington Council use for their street signs and used a pressure hose or a fire extinguisher to spray the leaves back in, onto the rather dilapidated wall behind.”
And, speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr Peak said, by incorporating a tree into the artwork, the artist has “solved an emerging problem” of people trying to steal Banksy’s work.
“I don’t think anyone is going to be able to nick this… how are you going to steal a tree?”
Image source, James Peak/The Banksy Story
There were “lots of people milling about” by the artwork on Sunday afternoon, Mr Peak said, and “everyone’s very excited”.
While he was viewing the art, he met Islington councillor Flora Williamson while she was out canvassing.
She later tweeted: “By far the most exciting thing to happen on today’s canvass session on Hornsey Road was seeing that Banksy had come to Tollington over night.”
Mr Peak said there was often a “Banksy effect” which had been seen in places like Port Talbot and Norfolk when artworks had appeared there, with people rushing to take pictures of the murals.
It was still “causing a real stir” on Monday morning, according to BBC Radio London reporter Anna O’Neill, with at least 30 people there to see the artwork at any one time.
One of them was Finsbury Park resident Aileen, who said when she first walked past the mural on Sunday, she immediately thought “that must be a Banksy”.
Meanwhile podcast presenter Sally Flatman said she came down to view the artwork after hearing about it on radio.
“To me, it speaks about how precious green spaces are, and how we need more of them in our urban areas”.
Image source, Ella Nunn/PA Wire
Streams of people have come to see the artwork since it first appeared on Sunday
Locals have also taken to social media following the artwork’s appearance.
One said: “Banksy came overnight and now my rent will skyrocket.”
While another said: “Proud new caretakers of an apparent new Banksy piece in Finsbury Park… Woke up this morning to it on the side of the flat.”
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James Parker is a UK-based entertainment aficionado who delves into the glitz and glamour of the entertainment industry. From Hollywood to the West End, he offers readers an insider’s perspective on the world of movies, music, and pop culture.