8. Banksy (British b. 1974)
Soup Can (Original)
Screenprint on wove paper, edition 228/250
50 x 36 cm
Publishers Pictures on Walls blindstamp
est. $40,000 - 50,000
Fetched $120,000
Relative Size: Soup Can (Original)
Relative size

PROVENANCE
Private Collection, Auckland Purchased from Artrepublic, Brighton, UK 19/07/2006 by current owner. Original purchase receipt available Authenticated by Pest Control

Banksy's original four-colour screenprint Soup Cans, is a play on Andy Warhols now infamous Pop Art Campbell's Soup Cans. Banksy has taken the idea that commercial products can be art, as is the Pop Art ethos, but has rendered it in his tongue-in-cheek style with Tesco Value cans of cream of tomato soup.

This limited edition screenprint is one of Banksy's most iconic. Four different variations were released. The number of cans featured on the print and their colours vary.

Anonymous street artist Banksy first turned to graffiti as a young, disillusioned adolescent. Inspired by the thriving graffiti community in his home city, Bristol,

Banksy's works began appearing on trains and city streets in 1993, and by 2001 his signature, stenciled works had cropped up all over the United Kingdom. Typically crafting his images with spray paint and cardboard stencils, Banksy is able to achieve a meticulous level of detail. His aesthetic is clean and instantly comprehensible due to his unique ability to distill complex political and social statements into simple visual elements.

His graffiti, paintings, and screenprints use whimsy and humor to satirically critique war, capitalism, hypocrisy and greed. His anti-establishment wit has had an undeniable impact on today's contemporary street culture.

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