Banksy confirms he created British seaside 'spraycation'
People stop to look at artwork created by Banksy in Great Yarmouth, U.K., Aug. 8, 2021. (Reuters Photo)


Banksy, Britain's most famous street artist, confirmed Friday what many had already suspected – that he is indeed the author behind a number of street works that have appeared recently in the British seaside towns of Suffolk and Norfolk.

An Instagram video clip, just over three minutes long and entitled "A Great British Spraycation," shows the elusive artist taking a summer road trip in a beat-up camper van with cans of spray paint stashed in a cooler.

In one work on the concrete sea-defense wall of a British beach, a rat lounges in a deckchair, sipping a cocktail.

In another, sticking to the seaside theme, a mechanical claw dangles above a public bench – as if anyone who sits there is about to be plucked up like a prize in an arcade game.

A couple take a selfie photograph below a graffiti artwork of an amusement arcade grabber, which bears the hallmarks of street artist Banksy, on a wall in Gorleston-on-Sea, U.K., Aug. 8, 2021. (AFP Photo)
Artwork created by Banksy is seen in Lowestoft, U.K., Aug. 8, 2021. (Reuters Photo)
A woman stands beside a graffiti artwork of a rat drinking a cocktail, which bears the hallmarks of street artist Banksy, on a wall at North Beach in Lowestoft, U.K., Aug. 8, 2021. (AFP Photo)
A stensil of children playing at being sailors is the subject of a graffiti artwork bearing the hallmarks of street artist Banksy can be seen on the wall of a bridge in Everitt Park in Lowestoft, U.K., Aug. 8, 2021. (AFP Photo)

Another shows a giant seagull swooping down to snatch some outsized chips (French fries) from a waste skip or dumpster.

A fourth, in Nicholas Everitt Park, shows three children in a rickety boat. One looks ahead while another is busy bailing out water with a bucket.

Above them, appears the inscription: "We're all in the same boat."

On the roof of a bus shelter, a couple also dances to the tune of a flat-capped accordion player, in a black and white painting evoking the faded, down-at-heel feel of many of the country's once-prosperous seaside resorts.

A man interacts with artwork created by Banksy in Lowestoft, U.K., Aug. 8, 2021. (Reuters Photo)

In recent years, the Bristol artist, who cleverly maintains the mystery of his identity, has kept the attention of the contemporary art world with his social commentaries and causes – migrants, opposition to Brexit, denunciation of Islamist radicals – as well as stirring the excitement of the moneyed art markets.

Last March, a work honoring caregivers fetched a record 14.4 million pounds (about $20 million).

The proceeds went to a hospital charity, Christie's auctioneers said at the time.