logo
Location of new Banksy artwork confirmed after elusive artists posts pic of lighthouse design – & locals give their view

Location of new Banksy artwork confirmed after elusive artists posts pic of lighthouse design – & locals give their view

The Suna day ago

THE location of Banksy's latest artwork as been revealed after the mysterious street artist left a tricky riddle for fans.
The elusive artist posted a picture of a lighthouse to his Instagram on Thursday, but give no clues as to where it could be found.
7
7
7
But now, the piece has been traced to a beige wall in Marseille, southern France.
The photo uploaded on Thursday showed Banksy's latest creation with a couple walking two dogs past it.
It depicts a black-and-white stencil of a lighthouse, overwritten with the phrase: "I want to be what you saw in me."
Deft paint strokes give the impression of sweeping light beams, and there is a false shadow painted on the pavement from a street bollard.
The exact location has been confirmed as Rue Félix Fregier.
The cryptic message first appeared in the song Softly by the American country group Lonestar - though the link with Banksy's work is yet to be interpreted.
His new work follows a series of pieces which have cropped up across the UK.
Just last year, a teacher who lives in Acton, London shared her delight over spotting one of the artist's pieces of work in her area.
The image of a goat perched precariously on a wall left many fans speculating over its meaning.
Elsewhere, a couple with a home in Lowestoft, Suffolk were left fuming when they received a call to say one of the wall's of their house was now plastered with a Banksy.
It was the largest work ever done by the famous yet anonymous street artist.
In the foreground he had placed a real skip which had strips of insulation in it that resembled chips.
The piece, which appeared in August 2021, attracted worldwide attention with hundreds of people flocking to the site, some putting their young children in the skip that the gull was dive-bombing, to take photographs.
With talk of the art work being worth £3million, the stunned couple wondered what to do next.
But instead of making them a fortune, the street art caused them years of anguish and left them seriously out of pocket.
It eventually cost them in excess of £400,000 to have it removed and put in storage and they continue to fork out £3,000 a month to keep it there in the hope of eventually finding a buyer.
'It's not a seagull, it's an albatross!' says an angry Gert.
'At first you think you are gifted by Banksy but you are actually not.'
Who is Banksy?
WHILE the exact identity of Banksy remains a tight-lipped secret, there is one man who many believe is behind the iconic artwork.
In 2008, a picture of a man in Jamaica emerged who was allegedly going by the pseudonym Banksy.
The man was later revealed to be Robin Gunningham, per the Mail on Sunday.
Robin was born in 1973 in Bristol - a place known to be Banksy's long-supposed stomping ground.
He was a pupil at Bristol Cathedral School.
Robin's father, Peter Gordon Gunningham, was a retired contracts manager from the Whitehall area of Bristol.
His mother, Pamela Ann Dawkin-Jones, was a company director's secretary and grew up in the exclusive surroundings of Clifton and he has an older sister called Sarah.
When Robin was nine, the family moved to a larger home in the same street and it is there he spent his formative years and became interested in graffiti.
He is married to lobbyist Joy Millward.
Other reports have suggested that he could be artist and musician Robert del Naja due to Naja also being a graffiti artist and member of the Bristol collective The Wild Bunch.
7
7
7

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ALEXANDRA SHULMAN'S NOTEBOOK: It's a stitch up that men still decide what women wear
ALEXANDRA SHULMAN'S NOTEBOOK: It's a stitch up that men still decide what women wear

Daily Mail​

time26 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

ALEXANDRA SHULMAN'S NOTEBOOK: It's a stitch up that men still decide what women wear

The fashion crew descended on Rome last week for Dior's annual cruise show, for a display of exceptional evening gowns. It was the final collection by creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri – the next day the fashion house announced she was leaving. She's done a fabulous job for the past nine years. Remarkably, one of her strengths has been creating clothes that women actually want to wear. You might think that's a given, but it's not. So much of fashion designs are about attracting noise and heat around the brand – which then makes its real money from perfume and handbag sales. Word has it that the Irishman Jonathan Anderson, who has joined Dior as head of menswear, will take Chiuri's place. If that is indeed the case it will mean the only couture house in the world with a female designer is Givenchy, where Sarah Burton is creative director. It's extraordinary that the luxury fashion industry – which in huge part is driven by female customers – is still largely run by men. Clothes are the most intimate of possessions, covering our body and affecting the way we move and feel. It should follow that women might understand better than a man what women want to wear. And yet, time after time, men are given the big-money jobs. The whole creative director pool becomes a closed circle of musical chairs, as the majority of designers with experience in top roles are men. Even Chanel, where founder Coco remains one of the most famous names in fashion, has hired Matthieu Blazy from Bottega Veneta to take the helm. Fortunately, the Italian leather house that Blazy left behind is one the few places with the guts to hire a woman. His replacement is the British designer Louise Trotter. Mozzie bites again – now it's personal We put men on the moon and cracked the secrets of DNA, but why has nobody found a way to end the misery of mosquito bites? I write from a beautiful house in Majorca, gazing over a majestic valley scented by terraces of jasmine and orange groves and serenaded by the early morning sound of tinkling goat bells. It should be paradise – and it is, apart from the fact that every day I am covered in new red welts that appear almost as soon as I arrive in any hot climate. Despite cramming an arsenal of mozzie-busters into my suitcase – including a chargeable hot pen I have bought that's meant to instantly combat the itching, but is actually just painful – nothing works. I remain lethally attractive to these demons. Other guests are totally bite-free, and a discussion of my woes threw up the suggestion that certain blood types may be irresistible to mosquitoes. If that's the case, mine must be like Chateau Petrus to the blighters. Sadly, a complete blood transfusion isn't a practical option. Any solutions greatly welcomed, as it's only May and I'm already a patchwork of bumps. But please don't bother suggesting citronella, Vitamin B, or deet. Been there, done that, and they don't make any difference. Ball games allowed, but all the time… What is it with boys and balls? Watching two men compete at ping pong the other day before they headed off to do combat on the local tennis court, I wondered why the male of the species is so attracted to ball games. It doesn't matter their age. If they can move, they will be up for football, cricket, tennis, padel – anything that involves a sphere they can bash around. Some might say it's the British public school system that ingrains a culture of ball games into our men. A good chap is good at sports. But the reality is that almost all small boys head for the nearest ball as soon as they can walk, and remain inseparable from them for the rest of their lives. It's one thing we can't blame on the British class system. Show it off – that's why you bought it! We went shopping to buy more holiday clothes that we will be able to wear only a few weeks a year. Back at the house, I immediately put on my new shirt. But my host was having none of that – he was saving his for some occasion that merited breaking it out. And so I discovered a great hidden divide among shoppers. One group of people promptly wear new clothes. The other squirrels theirs away, waiting for heaven knows what. Baffling. Trump has brought Canada into the light Canada owes a debt of thanks to President Trump for his mission to turn the nation into the 51st American state. His ludicrous scheme has thrust into the limelight a country that's often regarded as a rather dull place that interesting people leave as soon as they can. As the daughter of a Canadian father, I feel entitled to make such an insulting observation of a place that I have never visited – because I was brainwashed from childhood into that opinion. My dad was proud of the fact that he left Toronto with the Canadian Military during the war, fell in love with London and never returned. But now it's all change. Canada is in the news along with a bevy of Canadians such as Ryan Reynolds, Pamela Anderson, Graydon Carter and Neil Young. Even King Charles and Queen Camilla dashed over there last week for a state visit to show their support for this huge – and under-rated – country with Trump's crazy ambitions looming over it. And just like that, another book's done Pity the poor Booker Prize entrants. This year's celebrity judge Sarah Jessica Parker announced recently that to get through the workload she's reading two books a day. If you've sweated over your oeuvre, polishing every adjective and stressing over a semicolon, the idea of a judge racing through your precious sentences at breakneck speed will come as a blow. Perhaps SJP thinks you can binge-read Booker novels the same way you binge-watch her Sex And The City follow-up series And Just Like That in one night on Netflix.

‘Always in my heart': Luis Enrique pays tribute to late daughter after PSG triumph
‘Always in my heart': Luis Enrique pays tribute to late daughter after PSG triumph

The Guardian

time37 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘Always in my heart': Luis Enrique pays tribute to late daughter after PSG triumph

As Paris Saint-Germain clinched their first Champions League title, Luis Enrique's thoughts turned to his late daughter. Six years ago Xana died of osteosarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer. She was nine. And at the moment when he scaled the peak of his coaching career, Luis Enrique paid tribute to the child who he said was 'always in my heart'. At full-time the Paris fans unveiled a tifo depicting Luis and Xana, recreating the moment when he planted a flag in the pitch alongside her after winning the Champions League with Barcelona in 2015. 'It was very emotional with the banner from the fans for my family,' Luis Enrique said. 'But I always think about my daughter.' As for his history-making side, Luis Enrique could reflect on a mission spectacularly accomplished, after a 5-0 win over Inter that PSG dominated from start to finish. 'Since day one, I said I wanted to win important trophies,' he said. 'Paris had never won the Champions League. We did it for the first time. It's a great feeling to make many people happy.' Paris scored two goals inside 20 minutes and completed the rout in the second half, with the winger Désiré Doué scoring twice. 'We had a great start to the game, dominating from the beginning,' said Luis Enrique. 'But I wanted them to keep pushing, scoring, to ensure we won the game.' Doué, 19, was still processing a game that has elevated him into the very elite of world football. 'I can't believe what happened tonight,' he said. 'We made history for the club, in French football, in European football. We're a great team, and we showed it.' Inter's manager, Simone Inzaghi, tried to put a brave face on his side's humiliation. 'This hurts,' he said. 'Of course the game wasn't good enough on our part.' But he also insisted: 'We can come out stronger from this defeat, like we did in 2023 [after losing the final to Manchester City] and then won the league the following season.'

Conclave author reveals Ralph Fiennes was third choice for lead role in Oscar nominated film - behind two other A-list Hollywood actors
Conclave author reveals Ralph Fiennes was third choice for lead role in Oscar nominated film - behind two other A-list Hollywood actors

Daily Mail​

time38 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Conclave author reveals Ralph Fiennes was third choice for lead role in Oscar nominated film - behind two other A-list Hollywood actors

His acclaimed performance as a liberal cardinal in Conclave secured him an Oscar nomination – but Ralph Fiennes was not the first choice for the part. Both Hollywood legend Robert de Niro and Spanish star Javier Bardem were in line to take the lead role, author Robert Harris has revealed. But negotiations with both actors' representative broke down, opening the way for 62-year-old Fiennes. His casting also meant a change to his character. In Harris's original 2016 novel, the dean of the council of cardinals was an Italian called Jacopo Baldassare Lomeli. But once Fiennes was cast, he became the English Cardinal Thomas Lawrence. The author told the Hay-on-Wye literary festival: 'For a long time, Robert De Niro was supposed to play the Fiennes role, but that fell through, and then Javier Bardem was supposed to do it.' But again a deal could not be struck, so producers turned to Fiennes, best known for playing evil Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter blockbusters and M in the Bond films. It was Fiennes and director Edward Berger who decided to change the character's nationality, Harris revealed. 'They came to lunch and told me they wanted to change the nationality of Cardinal Lomeli, because Ralph wanted to play an Englishman. I looked across the table and thought, ''Do I really want to lose Ralph Fiennes?'' And of course, it doesn't make any difference at all.' Harris – whose other bestselling novels include Fatherland and Enigma – also told the Hay audience that film producers had been circling around his novel before he had finished writing it. But after the initial clamour, the executives decided to hold back the film's release – which turned out to be fortuitous as it ended up in cinemas just before the real Vatican conclave to select Pope Francis's successor. Harris, 68, said: 'They sat on it for a year to prevent it being swamped by other films, which was a stroke of genius as it got a lot of attention. There was this rolling interest in conclaves, and I found myself peculiarly having written a primer on conclaves.' Among those who watched the film this year was American Cardinal Robert Prevost, who saw it just before the conclave voted him to become Pope, subsequently taking the name Leo XIV. Conclave, which also starred Stanley Tucci, John Lithgow and Isabella Rossellini, was nominated for eight Academy Awards, but secured only the Oscar for best adapted screenplay for Peter Straughan's script. Two Oscar voters later told trade magazine Variety that they hadn't backed Fiennes as they wrongly believed he had won the award before.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store