Banksy kept under spare bed to go on display in Salford

B

A Banksy that has spent most of its time wrapped in a blanket under its owner’s spare bed is to go on display for the first time in a decade.

Leopard and Barcode was offered to the organisers of The Art of Banksy after the show, which opens on 21 October in Salford’s MediaCityUK, was announced.

Banksy originally created it on a house near Bristol in 1999 or 2000 and it was saved by a local architect in 2010.

The exhibition’s curators said it was a “privilege” to be able to show it.

The work depicts a leopard walking away from a barcode, which has been made to look like a cage with its bars bent.

A spokesman for the exhibition said the anonymous artist sprayed it on the side of a house in the Clifton area of his home city of Bristol and had been “destined to be lost forever when the house was scheduled for demolition in 2010”.

However, he said a local architect had “spotted its significance and got permission to save the artwork, spending a day chiselling it off the wall”.

  • Banksy: What do we know about the anonymous artist?
  • The stories behind Banksy’s ‘Great British Spraycation’
  • Banksy to be made honorary professor


He said the work had spent most of the time since “wrapped in a blanket under the architect’s spare bed” and had been shown only once “at the local school where his wife worked”.

He added that the owner, who wished to remain anonymous, offered it to the exhibition in Salford after it was announced and as a late inclusion, it would be shown a little differently to the rest of the exhibits.

“In keeping with the ethos of having street art free to view by the public, Leopard and Barcode will be displayed in the foyer of The Art of Banksy, giving the public the opportunity to come and enjoy it free of charge,” he said.

The show, which has previously been held in a number of locations around the world, will bring together 145 authenticated works by the artist, including well-known pieces like Girl With Balloon (2002), Flower Thrower (2003) and Rude Copper (2002).

It will also include Brace Yourself (2010), a work which Banksy gifted to the band formerly known as Exit Through the Gift Shop in exchange for the rights to their name.

About the author

Olivia Wilson
By Olivia Wilson

Categories

Get in touch

Content and images available on this website is supplied by contributors. As such we do not hold or accept liability for the content, views or references used. For any complaints please contact adelinedarrow@gmail.com. Use of this website signifies your agreement to our terms of use. We do our best to ensure that all information on the Website is accurate. If you find any inaccurate information on the Website please us know by sending an email to adelinedarrow@gmail.com and we will correct it, where we agree, as soon as practicable. We do not accept liability for any user-generated or user submitted content – if there are any copyright violations please notify us at adelinedarrow@gmail.com – any media used will be removed providing proof of content ownership can be provided. For any DMCA requests under the digital millennium copyright act
Please contact: adelinedarrow@gmail.com with the subject DMCA Request.