Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Banksy superhero nurse painting sells for record price to fund NHS

Christie's London sold a painting portraying a healthcare worker as a superhero for €19.5 million on Tuesday, the most ever paid for a work by Banksy, who donated the work to a Southhampt­on hospital last May.

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"Game Changer," a onemeter- square ( three- footsquare) black-and-white painting of a child playing with a toy nurse as superhero by the artist Banksy sold at Christie's auction house in London for a record £16.7 million (€19.5 million / $23.2 million) on Tuesday, the most ever paid for a work by the anonymous artist.

The painting of a young boy hoisting a caped and masked nurse aloft — Batman and Spiderman relegated to the waste basket behind him — was donated to the University Hospital Southhampt­on by the artist last May, in appreciati­on for the service of frontline workers from the UK's National Health Service (NHS) in fighting the coronaviru­s.

It is said the work arrived with a letter reading: "Thanks for all you're doing. I hope this brightens the place up a bit, even if it's only black and white."

Proceeds will promote NHS worker welfare

Christie's says the Southhampt­on Hospitals Charity will use proceeds from the sale to "fund well-being projects for staff and patients," and to "distribute to a wider community of healthcare providers both within the NHS and charitable sectors."

"This incredible gift will be invaluable in helping us to focus on promoting and protecting the welfare of our staff as they heal and recover from the last year," said David French, interim chief executive officer at University Hospital Southampto­n.

Watch video00: 51Street artist Banksy highlights COVID-19 response Banksy, 'a constant barometer of nationwide sentiment'

Speaking of the artist and the painting — which had an estimated sale price of €4 million and was hammered down at €16.7 million — Katharine Arnold of Christie's called Banksy, "an extraordin­ary artist who is a constant barometer of nationwide sentiment."

"With the perfect image of a little boy playing with his

superhero doll; a nurse sporting the Internatio­nal Red Cross, he perfectly captured the essence of this moment in time," said the European contempora­ry art expert.

A reproducti­on of the work will take the place of the original at the hospital for patients, visitors and workers to enjoy.

Britain's chronicall­y underfunde­d NHS

The funding the painting will provide is much needed across the UK healthcare landscape. The NHS in particular is a chronicall­y underfunde­d behemoth that can never keep up with the demands put on it by an aging population despite annual budget increases.

That strain means that early screening for illness might not be done and waiting times at hospitals and physicians' offices are exacerbate­d by shortages of healthcare workers that have in turn been further negatively impacted by Brexit.

A 2018 Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) study comparing 21 countries found that the UK had among the lowest per capita number of doctors, nurses and hospital beds in the Western world, with only Poland having fewer doctors and nurses, and only three —Canada, Denmark and Sweden — having fewer beds.

The OECD also found that the UK had cut the number of hospital beds in the country by half — down to 100,000 — over the past 30 years.

The live-streamed sale at Christie's took place on the oneyear anniversar­y of the first lockdown order issued by Prime Minister Boris Johnson. To date, more than 126,000 UK citizens have died from the coronaviru­s.

js/aw (AP, dpa, Reuters)

 ??  ?? The donation of "Game Changer" was an "incredible gift" to the staff and patients of the UK's national healthcare system
The donation of "Game Changer" was an "incredible gift" to the staff and patients of the UK's national healthcare system

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