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Banksy's Dismaland theme park -- the street artist's dystopian take on Disneyland -- opened in August in southwest England, and tickets sold out within hours.
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Marketed as a "bemusement park," it featured work from fellow contemporary artists Damien Hirst, Jenny Holzer and Jimmy Cauty.
YUI MOK/PA Wire/PA Photos/Landov
This Cinderella piece -- taken inside of the decrepit castle at the center of the park -- riffs on the death of Princess Diana.
YUI MOK/PA Wire/PA Photos/Landov
Over 50 artists from 17 countries were represented among the works shown. Banksy contributed a selection of new works of his own, including this installation of a woman being attacked by seagulls.
YUI MOK/PA Wire/PA Photos/Landov
This killer whale jumping out of a toilet piece by Banksy was also on the grounds.
YUI MOK/PA Wire/PA Photos/Landov
Not every piece was quite so whimsical. This more topical installation -- one of the many games at the amusement park -- makes a powerful statement about the ongoing migrant crisis.
YUI MOK/PA Wire/PA Photos/Landov
Many of the artworks shown were politically motivated. This one by Peter Kennard and Cat Phillips makes a clear statement about Britain's current political leadership.
YUI MOK/PA Wire/PA Photos/Landov
Big Rig Jig, a sculpture by Mike Ross, on display at Dismaland.
YUI MOK/PA Wire/PA Photos/Landov
One of the highlights of the exhibition? The staff, who were convincingly glum throughout.
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It's not the first time Banksy has played on the amusement park theme. In a poignantly different scene from earlier in the year, a child in Beit Hanoun, Gaza walks past a mural that depicts children using an Israeli watchtower as a swing ride.
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In this image, taken in Februrary, a Palestinian child stands next to a Banksy mural of a kitten on the remains of a house that was destroyed during the war between Israel and Hamas in the summer of 2014.
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The secretive street artist built his reputation on playful images that began appearing on the walls of London and Bristol in the early 1990s. This image is from 2006.
Matt Cardy/Getty Images
Banksy's work often plays with overtly political themes such as surveillance culture and state corruption.
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... not to mention many a humorous dig at Britain's police force.
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Banksy famously took his firebrand style to the streets of New York in 2013, with a series of artworks appearing over the course of a month in neighborhoods around the city.
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The amusement park theme also made its way to New York's Lower East Side, during his month-long "residency" with this ghoulish exhibit "Grim Reaper Bumper Car."
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Despite his anti-establishment roots, Banksy has gone on to garner great enthusiasm from the high-end art market world. This stencil print "Love is in the Air" sold for $248,000 in 2013.
Courtesy Banksy
But not everyone is a fan. This Banksy mural depicting pigeons holding anti-immigration signs was destroyed by the local council in Clacton-on-Sea, England on October 1 after the council received complaints that the artwork was offensive.

Story highlights

Banksy to dismantle Dismaland "bemusement park" and turn it into shelters for refugees

Exhibition featured a run-down castle, a dead Cinderella, and a pond filled with migrant boats

NEW: Official says Calais has received no request from Banksy to move pieces of exhibition

Dismaland reportedly brought in £20 million for economy in southwest England

London CNN  — 

Banksy’s Dismaland, the “most disappointing” theme park in Britain, will be broken down and turned into shelters for migrants in France, the street artist has said.

“Coming soon … Dismaland Calais,” a statement on the park’s website announced Monday. “All the timber and fixtures from Dismaland are being sent to the ‘Jungle’ refugee camp near Calais to build shelters. No online tickets will be available.”

Attached to the statement is an image of Dismaland’s dilapidated castle towering over the French camp, which is currently home to at least 3,000 migrants, most of them from Sudan, Eritrea and Afghanistan.

But on Wednesday an official from the Calais mayoral office told CNN that there had been no request to move pieces of the exhibition to the “Jungle,” and that associations in the city working with refugees hadn’t heard from Banksy or Dismaland organizers either.

“One cannot just do what one wants,” the official, who gave his name as Louis, told CNN.

The sprawling art installation – Banksy’s dystopian send-up of Disneyland – is being dismantled after its five-week run in the seaside town of Weston-super-Mare in southwest England.

Visitors to the elusive British street artist’s “bemusement park” were able to explore a run-down version of Sleeping Beauty’s castle, join the paparazzi in snapping pics of a dead Cinderella, or treat themselves to balloons bearing the words “I am an imbecile.”

Banksy, whose identity remains unknown, described Dismaland as “a family attraction that acknowledges inequality and impending catastrophe,” in an interview with the Sunday Times.

01:53 - Source: CNN
New Banksy 'Dismaland' theme park launch

“It’s modelled on those failed Christmas parks that pop up every December – where they stick some antlers on an Alsatian dog and spray fake snow on a skip. It’s ambitious, but it’s also crap. I think there’s something very poetic and British about all that.”

Amongst the park’s darker attractions was a small pond where visitors could take control (or so it seemed) of migrant boats.

“In the remote control boat pond at Dismaland it randomly switches the boat you operate – so you have no control over whether your destiny is to be an asylum seeker or a western super-power,” Banksy told the Sunday Times.

“I feel like my generation was the first to deal with the mass media beaming the world’s problems to us in real time,” he said. “I remember the baked beans cooling in my mouth as Newsround showed pictures of flies crawling over the faces of African babies. Mostly we’ve chosen to deal with this by cocooning ourselves, that we can live with the guilt.”

“But why should children be immune from the idea that to maintain our standard of living other children have to die trapped in the hulls of boats in the bottom of the Mediterranean?”

Thousands of migrants fleeing war and poverty in Africa and the Middle East have drowned attempting to reach Europe this year.

Most of those who have made their way to Calais are hoping to end up in Britain. Since June, at least 11 people have died trying to cross into the UK via the Eurotunnel terminal near the French port city.

Tickets for Dismaland, which featured work from more than 50 artists in 17 countries, sold out within hours of going on sale in August.

Officials say the attraction brought more than 150,000 visitors and £20 million ($30 million) to the seaside town, the BBC reported Monday.

Banksy has achieved worldwide fame for his street art, which is often laden with social or political messages.

In February he released a two-minute film highlighting the plight of Palestinians in Gaza.

The video featured ironic messages in the style of a travel commercial, interspersed with shots of the artist’s work adorning the doors and walls of bombed out buildings.

“Make this the year YOU discover a new destination,” the film entreats the viewer. “Welcome to Gaza.”

Using the language of glossy brochures, it describes the territory, whose borders are largely controlled by Israel, as “nestled in an exclusive setting” and says it is “watched over by friendly neighbours.”

CNN’s Stephanie Halasz and Laura Smith-Spark contributed to this report.