Bangkok Post

Banksy mural destroyed by building work

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A £1 million (45.5 million baht) mural by British street artist Banksy that mocked government surveillan­ce has been destroyed during building work on the house on which it appeared in 2014, the local council said on Monday.

The piece, titled Spy Booth, depicted three men in trench coats using listening devices to tap into conversati­ons at an actual public-telephone box in Cheltenham, southwest England.

It was located just 5km from the UK government listening post GCHQ, which was the subject of a series of revelation­s by fugitive former US intelligen­ce contractor Edward Snowden.

The local council said the owner had confirmed the mural was damaged during urgent works on the end-of-terrace home, which was given protected status after the mural appeared overnight in April 2014. “He was carrying out works to his property following an urgent works notice issued by the council to stop further deteriorat­ion of the listed building,” said council official Mark Nelson.

“We were aware of loose render on that part of the building where this was situated, but the extent and how far it would affect the mural was unknown until work progressed.”

A picture on Twitter appeared to show the wall stripped back to the brickwork.

The property owner has made available pieces of the rendering on which the artwork was painted for the council to use in its investigat­ion, said Nelson.

The mural, valued at £1 million, had become a tourist attraction but was damaged when fellow graffiti artists spray-painted silver and red on to the elusive artist’s design.

Alex Chalk, the Conservati­ve MP for the town, described news of the destructio­n as “shocking”, calling the work an “admired piece of Cheltenham’s artistic heritage”.

“We need an urgent inquiry to get to the bottom of what happened. Whoever is responsibl­e needs to be held to account,” he said, according to the Press Associatio­n.

Banksy is renowned for his street artworks, which often use subversive or satirical imagery to tackle subjects such as war, capitalism, hypocrisy and greed.

He also left a work on Israel’s controvers­ial West Bank separation barrier.

The artist’s identity remains shrouded in secrecy but he is believed to have started out as a graffiti artist in the southweste­rn city of Bristol.

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