Paul Hartnett/PYMCA/Getty
A stenciled image of two policemen kissing is seen in London in 2005. "Kissing Coppers" is one of Banksy's most famous works. Click through the gallery for a look at some of his other notable pieces.
Courtesy Matt Stannard
In June 2016 elusive UK street artist Banksy painted this mural for students at a primary school in his hometown of Bristol, England. Students had named a house at their school for the artist, who surprised them with the mural when they returned from a holiday break.
Carl Court/Getty Images
On January 25, a new mural by street artist Banksy appeared on the French Embassy in London, criticising the French authorities' reported use of teargas in a refugee camp in Calais, France. A riff on the iconic Les Misérables poster, it shows a young girl enveloped by CS gas, crying.
Said Khatib/AFP/Getty Images
A mural of a weeping woman, painted by the British street artist Banksy, is seen in Khan Yunis, Gaza, on Wednesday, April 1. The mural was painted on a door of a house destroyed last summer during the fighting between Israel and Hamas. The owner of the house said he was tricked into selling the door for the equivalent of $175, not realizing the painting was by the famously anonymous artist.
Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images
A Palestinian child stands next to a Banksy mural of a kitten on the remains of a destroyed house in Beit Hanoun, Gaza, in February 2015.
Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images
A child in Beit Hanoun walks past a mural February 2015 that depicts children using an Israeli watchtower as a swing ride.
Courtesy Banksy
A Banksy mural depicting pigeons holding anti-immigration signs was destroyed by the local council in Clacton-on-Sea, England, in October 2014 after the council received complaints that the artwork was offensive.
Matt Cardy/Getty Images
A Banksy work appears at a youth center in Bristol, England, in April 2014. Called "Mobile Lovers," it features a couple embracing while checking their cell phones. Members of the youth center took down the piece from a wall on a Bristol street and replaced it with a note saying the work was being held at the club "to prevent vandalism or damage being done." The discovery came shortly after another image believed to be by Banksy surfaced in Cheltenham, England.
Matt Cardy/Getty Images
A boy walks past graffiti street art believed to be by Banksy in April 2014. The image depicts men in trench coats and dark glasses holding old-fashioned listening equipment -- apparently a commentary on government surveillance. The artwork appeared on the side of a house in Cheltenham near the Government Communications Headquarters, the UK equivalent of the National Security Agency.
Courtesy Banksy
A set of balloons that reads "BANKSY!" is seen off the Long Island Expressway in Queens, New York, in October 2013. Banksy artwork appeared all over New York that month.
Courtesy Banksy
Banksy also offered up a T-shirt design on his website for fans to download and print on their own.
Courtesy Banksy
A leopard placed on the wall of New York's Yankee Stadium was revealed in October 2013.
Courtesy Banksy
"The Banality of the Banality of Evil" actually started out as a thrift store painting in New York City. Once altered by Banksy, who inserted an image of a Nazi officer sitting on a bench, it was re-donated to the store in October 2013, according to the artist's site.
Jason Szenes/EPA/Landov
Banksy's art exhibit "Grim Reaper Bumper Car" sits on New York's Lower East Side in October 2013. The famously anonymous artist, whose paintings regularly go for six figures at auction houses around the world, said he was on a "residency on the streets of New York."
Joy Scheller/Barcroft Media /Landov
A Banksy piece covers the main entrance to Larry Flynt's Hustler Club in New York's Hell's Kitchen in October 2013.
UPI/John Angelillo /LANDOV
Banksy's replica of the Great Sphinx of Giza was made in Queens out of smashed cinder blocks.
Joy Scheller/Barcroft Media/Landov
Banksy's "Ghetto 4 Life" appeared in the Bronx in October 2013. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg suggested that Banksy was breaking the law with his guerrilla art exhibits, but the New York Police Department denied it was actively searching for him.
Joy Scheller/Barcroft Media /Landov
Banksy art is seen on the Upper West Side of New York in October 2013.
JUSTIN LANE /LANDOV
Banksy work in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, was vandalized in broad daylight in October 2013.
Erik Pendzich/Rex USA
One of Banksy's pieces is this fiberglass sculpture of Ronald McDonald having his shoes shined in front of a Bronx McDonald's.
Daniel Pierce Wright/Getty Images
Graffiti depicting the Twin Towers popped up in the Tribeca neighborhood of New York in October 2013.
ANDREW GOMBERT/EPA/Landov
Banksy's "Sirens of the Lambs" art installation tours the streets of Manhattan in October 2013. It was a fake slaughterhouse delivery truck full of stuffed animals.
JASON SZENES/EPA/Landov
Banksy's "Concrete Confessional" is seen on the Lower East Side of Manhattan.
JASON SZENES/EPA/LANDOV
A Banksy mural is seen on a wall in Queens. The quote is from the movie "Gladiator." It says, "What we do in life echoes in eternity."
Andrew Burton/Getty Images
A woman poses with Banksy's painting of a heart-shaped balloon covered in bandages. The piece, in the Red Hook neighborhood of Brooklyn, was defaced with red spray paint shortly after it was completed.
Bebeto Matthews/AP
A Banksy mural of a dog urinating on a fire hydrant draws attention
Andrew Burton/Getty Images
This installation, seen in October 2013, on the Lower East Side of New York, depicts stampeding horses in night-vision goggles. Thought to be a commentary on the Iraq War, it also included an audio soundtrack.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images
Gallery assistants adjust Banksy's "Love Is in the Air" ahead of an auction in London in June 2013. The piece was sold for $248,776.
Jason LaVeris/Getty
"The Crayola Shooter" is found in Los Angeles in 2011. It shows a child wielding a machine gun and using crayons for bullets.
GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP/Getty Images
People walk past a Banksy painting of a dog urinating on a wall in Beverly Hills, California, in 2011.
Sean Gardner/Getty Images
Banksy murals popped up around New Orleans a day before the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina in 2008.
Sean Gardner/Getty Images
A silhouette of a child holding a refrigerator-shaped kite is seen on a wall in New Orleans in 2008.
Chris Graythen/Getty Images
Graffiti on the side of a building in New Orleans shows an elderly person in a rocking chair under the banner, "No Loitering," in 2008.
Mario Tama/Getty Images
A scene titled "Chicken Nuggets," from Banksy's "The Village Pet Store and Charcoal Grill," is seen in New York in 2008.
Dave Etheridge-Barnes/Getty Images
A man walks past a Banksy piece in London in 2006.

Editor’s Note: Allison Young is a Professor of Criminology at the University of Melbourne. She has received funding from the Australian Research Council to research legal, social and cultural responses to street art.

Story highlights

"The Art of Banksy" is a new exhibition dedicated to the work of elusive street artist Banksy

Unauthorized by the artist, the Melbourne exhibit has received some criticism for its commercial interests

CNN  — 

Take a selection of artworks by the most famous illicit artist in the world, add a city that’s passionate about its street art and a dash of controversy: the result is the new Melbourne exhibition “The Art of Banksy”.

Named in 2010 as one of the 100 most influential figures in the world, Banksy’s career began in Bristol in the 1990s, where he enthusiastically participated in the city’s graffiti scene.

Darrian Traynor/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
Street artist Banksy is considered one of the most influential artists in the world. His work is currently on display at an exhibit in Melborne.

In the early 2000s, he adopted stencilling as a technique, and became part of the art movement now called street art. Whereas graffiti involves a stylized calligraphy that centers on the repeated writing of an individual’s chosen name, or “tag”, street art allowed for a greater diversity of content and technique: with paste ups, stencils and layered images.

Banksy organized events in London such as Santa’s Ghetto, where an empty shop was taken over for the display of works on canvas or paper by artists – thus bypassing the gallery system - and his print workshop Pictures on Walls made editions of prints by various artists available for online purchase at affordable prices.

These print editions became so popular that fans would spend hours online attempting to buy works. While some wanted to own a Banksy print, others were buying for re-sale.

01:30 - Source: CNN
An unlikely outlet for creating street art

His prints quickly acquired a secondary market – increasing fivefold in value in a day. After the financial crisis of 2009, the market value of work by many street artists faltered – but the price of Banksy’s works did not. He has maintained that crossover from the street to the mainstream art world.

An unauthorized exhibition

“The Art of Banksy” is the direct consequence of his successful negotiation of the dividing line between the street and the art business. Indeed, the show exhibits works owned by private collectors, including Banksy’s former business manager Steve Lazarides, proprietor of the Lazarides gallery in London – famous both for his long association with Banksy and their very public estrangement.

The exhibition provides equal billing for both Banksy and Lazarides, who is credited as the show’s curator. Much has been made in the media about the artist’s purported unhappiness with the exhibition.

“The show is definitely unauthorized,” Lazarides told one journalist.

But this is by no means unusual, as I’ve written about in my book, “Street Art World”.

Works owned by private collectors are often shown in galleries with no consent needed from an artist. The Andipa Gallery in London was the first in 2007 to exhibit privately-owned Banksy works, and the street art show “Outpost”, held in Sydney in 2011, exhibited Banksy works from George Shaw’s New Zealand-based collection.

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

The Melbourne exhibition is housed in a marquee in a disused car park, next to the train lines at the back of Federation Square. Local artists such as Be Free, Heesco, George Rose and Bailer have painted works on panels lining the entrance to the marquee.

Inside, the show is all Banksy.

But the works are not displayed in a conventional gallery setting. The interior is said to be “inspired by the streets of London”, and is organized around the recreation of shopfronts, city streets and dimly lit spaces. The majority of works are prints, which line the “walls” of these recreated streets, with some larger pieces on canvas, tarpaulin or wood. There are also a few sculptural pieces, such as “Bullet-Proof David” (Suicide Bomber) from 2006.

Darrian Traynor/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
The exhibition features some of the artist's most prominent works.

For those who have only ever seen Banksy works online or in books and films, the show provides a chance to see his art close up, and it’s certainly interesting to analyze the works for their signature techniques (limited color range, satirical text, humor, and light political themes). They also give a glimpse into a key period in Banksy’s artistic development, the early-late 2000s.

It was during this period, in 2003, that Banksy visited Melbourne, and painted its streets. Still, if Melbourne has been waiting 13 years for his work to return to the city, then this show is something of a disappointment. Some installation choices do not serve the art well.

01:44 - Source: CNN
Up late with Vhils

A number of works are badly displayed: “Bullet-Proof David” is half-hidden by curtains and diminished by being placed on the floor rather than a plinth. Many near-identical prints are included; and there’s little effort made to contextualize the videos that run in some of the rooms.

Visitors who don’t know much about Banksy’s history may find themselves struggling to work out what they are seeing. The streetscape has an eerie artificiality: no London street ever looked so antiseptically clean and tidy.

Melbourne’s problem with street art

Exhibiting Banksy in Melbourne is also rife with contradictions.

Much-loved by Australia’s street art community, many of whom fondly remember his visit here, his remaining works in the city are regarded as endangered – gradually fading as the years go by, and also at risk from council cleaning crews and construction workers.

In 2010, a council worker painted over a Banksy rat in Hosier Lane, not realizing it had been painted by the world’s most famous street artist. The outcry prompted the deputy mayor to apologize to the city for the loss of a cultural icon – which in turn led to anger among members of the local street art community, who face severe penalties if caught painting on walls without permission.

Illicit art is still subject to prosecution and punishment in Melbourne: Victoria has some of the harshest penalties in Australia for graffiti, and while Melbourne’s Lord Mayor, who attended the exhibition’s opening party, has spoken publicly about his support for street art, it’s clear that his support is for murals done with permission in designated places.

Banksy’s street works – which are illegal – would be categorized as vandalism if done in Melbourne. For all Melbourne’s reputation as one of the street art capitals of the world, its city authorities have an uneasy relationship with the art form.

Darrian Traynor/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
The commercial nature of the exhibit -- which sells merchandise and charges entry -- has been widely criticised.

Back in 2003, when Banksy was visiting Melbourne, street art was seen as a way of circumventing the gallery system and about creating artwork for the public, for free or at a low cost. So much of that has changed: street art is now highly commercial.

But it’s not so much that artists are selling their work at higher and higher prices: to make a living from one’s art is an understandable ambition. But nowadays street art has been turned into a range of secondary products: calendars, gift cards, tea towels, and T-shirts.

Given that the exhibition represented an opportunity to provide an Australian audience with a chance to see so many Banksy works in one place, what is really surprising about “The Art of Banksy” is the way that its commercial interests seem to outweigh the display of the artworks.

Entrance to the show is $30, and, upon reaching the end, visitors find themselves confronted with a range of secondary merchandise for sale: baseball caps, mugs, cloth bags and fridge magnets.

Is this exit through the gift shop an ironic and knowing wink at Banksy’s critique of the commercialization of street art in his 2010 movie? Is it possible to own an ironic Banksy mug?

In the city where street artists can be punished for possession of a spray can, “The Art of Banksy” takes the commodification of Banksy one step too far.