Thursday 28th of March 2024

taking sides with banksy........

THIS IS A PICTURE OF BANKSY TAG ART IN UKRAINE, SHOWING A KID BEATING PUTIN AT JUDO, AFTER THE BOMBING OF A SCHOOL. WE CRY FOR THE KIDS WHO MAY HAVE DIED, YET WE CANNOT SUPPORT BANKSY'S EFFORTS WHICH HAVE TAKEN A WESTERN SIDE TO AN ISSUE THAT HAS BEEN 100 PER CENT CREATED BY THE WEST (USA). BANKSY COULD HAVE DONE SIMILAR ART BETWEEN 2014 AND EARLY 2022 IN THE DONETSK REGION, WHICH HAD BEEN BOMBARDED BY UKRAINIAN NAZI TROOPS — KILLING MORE THAN 14,000 (UNITED NATIONS RECORDED FIGURE). AS WELL, BANKSY COULD HAVE DONE A TAG ABOUT THE BURNING OF RUSSIANS/UKRAINIAN IN ODESSA. THUS TAKING SIDE IS FRAUGHT WITH WESTERN DISINFORMATION USING REAL HUMAN TRAGEDIES.

 

I THUS REFRAINED TO MODIFY THIS PICTURE WHICH I COULD HAVE AS THUS:

 

THE UKRAINIAN NAZIS TEACH THEIR KIDS TO HATE THE RUSSIANS AS EARLY AS KINDERGARTEN.... PUTIN IS A JUDO BLACK BELT, AND THOUGH WE HAVEN'T SEEN HIM JUDOING LATELY, THIS (NAZI-INDOCTRINATED) KID WOULD NOT HAVE A BAR OF WINNING AGAINST A 70 YEAR-OLD PUTIN.... 

 

GUSnote: there is a report BY THE DAILYBEAST that "Putin is about to bowled out by his secret service...". WHO KNOWS.... I would not believe a word from the raggy DailyBeast.... BUT IF PUTIN IS BOWLED OUT would be because he's been too soft on Ukraine....

 

 

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banksy goes rogue....

The mysterious British artist Banksy has accused clothing retailer Guess of stealing his graffiti motif for a store display.

On Friday, Banksy urged his Instagram* followers to shoplift from Guess London store on Regent Street saying it had used his artwork without permission. 

 

"They've helped themselves to my artwork without asking, how can it be wrong for you to do the same to their clothes?" he said in his post.

 

According to him, the clothing retailer stole his iconic “Flower Thrower” motif for a store display.

The store window featured Banksy's “Flower Thrower” graffiti with a new collection from Guess, which the website says was created in partnership with Brandalised, an urban graffiti license whose mission is to provide Banksy fans with affordable graffiti collectibles.

It is unknown if Guess has obtained the rights to use the artist's image in its clothing line. A Guess x Brandalised press release said that a fall/winter capsule collection 2022 with casual clothing was “inspired by Banksy graffiti”.

According to copyright lawyer Liz Ward, founder of Virtuoso Legal, quoted by the media, Guess "appear to have legitimately sourced the Banksy artwork via a third party, namely Brandalised, who say they have rights to commercialize and use Banksy's artwork on goods".

If Banksy didn't know about legitimate use of his art by Guess, then his reaction is understandable, the lawyer added. 

After Banksy's post, store staff covered the window.

Over the years, the artist has seen the registration of his trademark challenged due to, in part, to his desire to hide his identity.

 

READ MORE:

https://sputniknews.com/20221119/banksy-encourages-followers-to-shoplift-from-guess-store-in-london-after-it-uses-his-artwork-1104417584.html

 

 

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FREE JULIAN ASSANGE NOW....... MAY BE BANKSY COULD DO A FREE JULIAN ASSANGE ARTWORK....

banksy is a precious capitalist fascist.....

Legendary UK graffiti artist Banksy has rebuked Ukrainians for selling pieces of at least one of the seven murals that he created near Kiev. He revealed the new paintings earlier this week.

“Ukrainian vandals started selling pieces of my artwork without my permission on eBay,” the anonymous Bristol street artist said in an Instagram post on Saturday. “I gave you art, and this is how you repay me.”

The post included an apparent screenshot of an eBay listing offering fragments of a Banksy mural in the rubble of Borodyanka, northwest of Kiev, for $50 each. The ad notes that the price is negotiable and suggests that buyers may “transfer money and tell me which piece you want to repay $200.”

The mural shows a gymnast who appears to be doing a handstand on a piece of rubble outside a bombed-out building. Banksy confirmed that he created the mural, along with six others, in a video that he posted on Thursday on Instagram. The post attracted more than 1.2 million likes. A photo of the gymnast mural had 2.2 million likes and more than 22,000 comments.

 

READ MORE:

https://www.rt.com/news/566849-banksy-scolds-ukrainian-vandals-over-stolen-artwork/

 

ART? BANKSY GAVE PEOPLE ART? BANKSY HAS BECOME A FASCIST WHO CRIES ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE FASCISM BECAUSE OF CASH... GET A LIFE. STOP BEING A WASHINGTON APOLOGIST...

 

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dead by design.......

Police in London raided an art gallery owned by Banksy’s former agent after they mistook a hyper-realistic sculpture of an unconscious woman for a real body, according to Artnet News. Officers assumed the model had suffered a heart attack, a gallery worker told the outlet.

Hannah Blakemore was locking up the Laz Emporium on London’s Lexington Street last month, and after heading upstairs to make a cup of tea, came back down to find “the door off its hinges and two confused police officers” inside, the news site reported on Friday.

The officers said that they had received a report of a woman who hadn’t moved for two hours, and assumed that she had “a heart attack or she’s overdosed,” Blakemore said.

Instead, they found ‘Kristina’, a life size sculpture of a woman passed out at a computer desk by American artist Mark Jenkins. The sculpture was commissioned by gallery owner Steve Lazarides, who wanted a depiction of a time his sister fell asleep with her face in a bowl of soup. Made from foam filler and packing tape and dressed in a hoodie and trainers, ‘Kristina’ is valued at $22,065, Artnet noted.

 

READ MORE:

https://www.rt.com/pop-culture/568067-police-enter-gallery-sculpture/

 

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dream vandalism......

 

BY Binoy Kampmark

 

“This is quite shocking,” declared South Australia’s Attorney-General and Aboriginal Affairs Minister, Kyam Maher. “These caves are some of the earliest evidence of Aboriginal occupation of that part of the country.” That evidence was subtracted this month by acts of vandalism inflicted on artwork in Koonalda Cave on the Nullarbor Plain, claimed to be the world’s largest limestone karst landscape and covering over 200,000 square kilometres.

Edward John Eyre, the first European to cross the Plain in 1840-1841, wrote hauntingly of it as “a hideous anomaly, a blot on the face of Nature, the sort of place one gets into bad dreams”. In his case, personal circumstances soured the impressions: horses dying of dehydration; a case of mutiny resulting in the killing of his companion John Baxter; the theft of the party’s supplies; the slimmest chances of survival.

The work in question, carvings on chalk limestone, is said to be some 30,000 years old, considered sacred by the Mirning people. By the time news reached CNN of the incident, eight thousand years had been shaved off the estimate, one more in line with the 1956 dating by archaeologist Alexander Gallus. In information available on the Commonwealth Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, the “finger markings and unique archaeological deposits found in Koonalda Cave provide a rare glimpse of Aboriginal life on the Nullarbor Plain during the Pleistocene.”

The rock art in question is now plastered by crude graffiti, featuring such messages as “don’t look now, but this is a death cave”. The verdict of archaeologist Keryn Walshe, whose encyclopaedic knowledge of the Koonalda Cave is unsurpassed, was gravely unequivocal. “The art is not recoverable.” To remove the graffiti from the soft surface would effectively do away with the art itself. “It’s a massive, tragic loss to have it defaced to this degree.”

Something of a consensus has been reached on how this took place. A steel case, installed in the 1980s, was breached by digging intruders. Astonishingly, the Mirning elders seemed to have been the last ones to know about it. Bunna Lawrie, for instance, only heard about the matter this month. (Access is usually restricted to a few male elders; the site is closed to tourists.) “We are the traditional custodians of Koonalda,” he declared in a statement, “and ask for this to be respected and for our Mirning elders to be consulted.”

Put it down to inadequate resources, and a lack of will, which has also seen previous acts of vandalism take place. “The failure to build an effective gate, or to make use of modern security services, such as wildlife monitoring cameras that operate 24/7, has in many ways allowed this vandalism to occur,” suggested Clare Buswell of the Australian Speleological Federation Conservation Commission in a submission to the Aboriginal lands parliamentary standing committee made earlier this year.

The statement by Lawrie reiterates the point. “Since 2018 we have been asking for support to secure the entrance as a priority and to offer appropriate Mirning signage. This support did not happen.” Other misfortunes had befallen the site since, including the collapse of the cave entrance, and access works that did not involve consultation and were “not approved.”

The destruction of such sites should shock, but each revelation seemingly inures the authorities to them. The pattern is clear: apologies follow; horror is expressed; and even offers of compensation made to cope with irreversible harm. But the business of trashing a legacy continues, digestible as the stuff of accident or indifference.

In many instances, laws sympathetic to development and mining also do much to doom such works to extinction. The rock shelters of the Jukaan Gorge site in Western Australia were remorselessly levelled by Rio Tinto in May 2020, an outcome that was ethically atrocious yet legally sanctioned by the legislation of the day.

Of note was the mining giant’s conduct towards local elders. The company’s legal team stomped on any protest, haughtily informing members of the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura (PKKP) that any emergency application to halt to the company’s works made to the federal government could only take place with the company’s blessing, and with 30 days-notice. Carol Meredith, the chief executive of the PKKP Aboriginal Corporation, recalled the sharp response from Rio’s lawyers, who stated that “we were not able to engage seeking out an emergency declaration that perhaps would have stopped proceedings, because of our claim-wide participation agreement.”

Within the wheels of the company, blissful ignorance reigned. Rio Tinto’s head of corporate relations, Simone Niven, was not only based in London but had little idea about the significance of the Juukan Gorge caves. Relations could hardly be counted as her strong suit.

Conforming to previous instances of such vandalism, penalties are being called for regarding the perpetrators of the graffiti. Under the legal regime, damaging such sites can carry a fine of $A10,000 or six months in prison. But the harm has been done; again, history has been left poorer, and the dreams worse than ever.

 

First published in CounterPunch December 29, 2022

 

READ MORE:

https://johnmenadue.com/country-for-bad-dreams-vandalism-on-the-nullarbor-plain/

 

 

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