Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Graffiti Artist Banksy Opens Home Goods Store To Troll Greeting Card Company's Legal Dispute

Graffiti Artist Banksy Opens Home Goods Store To Troll Greeting Card Company's Legal Dispute
The window of Gross Domestic Product (Banksy/PA)

Graffiti artist Banksy says he has been forced to open his own home goods store following a legal dispute involving a greeting card company.


The new store, called Gross Domestic Product, will span the windows of a former south London carpet shop and sell a range of “impractical and offensive" merchandise created by the artist.

In a statement, Banksy said the motivation behind the venture, on Church Street in Croydon, is “possibly the least poetic reason to ever make some art."

He said: “A greetings cards company is contesting the trademark I hold to my art, and attempting to take custody of my name so they can sell their fake Banksy merchandise legally.

“I think they're banking on the idea I won't show up in court to defend myself."

Welcome mats made from life vests salvaged from the shores of the Mediterranean (Banksy/PA)

Items being sold in the shop include a Union Jack stab-proof vest, worn by the rapper Stormzy during his Glastonbury performance, and a model of Frosted Flakes cereal mascot Tony the Tiger, re-imagined as a rug.

Welcome mats made from life vests salvaged from the shores of the Mediterranean, which have been hand-stitched by women in detainment camps in Greece, are also on display.

Mark Stephens, an arts lawyer and founder of the Design and Artists Copyright Society, is advising Banksy on what he describes as “frankly ludicrous litigation."

Merchandise in the shop window of the homeware store (Banksy/PA)

He said: “Banksy is in a difficult position because he doesn't produce his own range of shoddy merchandise and the law is quite clear – if the trademark holder is not using the mark, then it can be transferred to someone who will."

As a solution to the issue, Stephens proposed that Banksy began his own range of merchandise and opened a shop.

Stephens said the card company, who he refused to name, initiated the legal proceedings about 12 months ago.

Although people will be able to visit the store for the next two weeks, its doors will never open and the lights will remain on 24 hours a day.

Banksy said:

“The proceeds from these products will go towards buying a new migrant rescue boat to replace the one confiscated by Italian authorities."
"So you may well be committing a criminal offense by purchasing them."
“Sometimes you go to work and it's hard to know what to paint, but for the past few months I've been making stuff for the sole purpose of fulfilling trademark categories under EU law. It's not a very sexy muse."

Other items for sale include disco balls made from used police riot helmets and a toddler's counting toy where children are encouraged to load wooden migrant figures inside a haulage truck.

Items on display in the shop, which are only available to buy online, range in price from a £10 signed spray paint can to a handbag made from a house brick.

Banksy said despite trying to defend his artistic rights in this particular case, he has not changed his position on copyright.

He added: “I still encourage anyone to copy, borrow, steal and amend my art for amusement, academic research or activism. I just don't want them to get sole custody of my name."

A stab-proof vest worn by Stormzy is featured in Gross Domestic Product, a homeware store that is being launched in South London by the graffiti artist Banksy (Banksy/PA)

Amongst the crowds gathered outside the shop on Tuesday was Janet Jones, 62, who lives locally.

She said: “It's pretty incredible. The shop has been empty for a long while.

“I'm pretty sure it was empty yesterday, It's just happened so quickly."

Four security guards, dressed in brown trench coats, were stood outside the store.

They told PA news agency that they did not know who they were working for or how long the job would last.

Oliver Lewis, Croydon council's cabinet member for culture, leisure and sport, said: “It's really exciting, there's a lot of people out here generating a lot of interest.

“It just popped up overnight. That's one of the great things about street art, it's something for everyone to enjoy."

More from Trending

bedazzled MAGA hat
Timothy Hurst/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images

Threads User's Epic Rant Ripping MAGA Fans Who Now Claim They 'Always Had Doubts' About Trump Has The Internet Applauding

As prominent MAGA minions, like QAnon conspiracy peddler and former Georgia Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, have come out against MAGA Republican President Donald Trump, so too are some lesser known individuals.

Whether it's his Iran War, his continuing saga with the Epstein files, his utter failure to keep any of his campaign promises that they banked on helping them, or the abject incompetence of his hand-picked personnel, some members of MAGA are distancing themselves from the cult.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Trump Ripped For Somehow Making His 'Happy Mother's Day' Post All About Himself Without Any Mention Of Melania

President Donald Trump was criticized after he "honored" mothers on Mother's Day by attacking Democrats in a self-absorbed post on Truth Social, never mentioning his wife, First Lady Melania, who is the mother of his youngest son Barron.

Instead of acknowledging her and mothers around the country, Trump gloated about the economy and accused critics of having "Trump Derangement Syndrome," targeting Democrats and Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve Chair he's been trying to push out of his administration.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Zach Galifianakis; Donald Trump
Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend; Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Zach Galifianakis Expertly Lays Into Comedians Who Refuse To 'Challenge' Trump When He's A Guest On Their Podcasts

Actor and comedian Zach Galifianakis called out comedians who have had President Donald Trump on their podcasts and didn't "challenge" him, noting that they've effectively abdicated their role by not making jokes at Trump's expense or pushing back against things he says.

Galifianakis made that argument during a recent episode of Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, where host Conan O'Brien remarked that few, if any, people have challenged a sitting president the way Galifianakis did when he interviewed then-President Barack Obama in 2014 on his satirical series Between Two Ferns.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Sean Duffy
Fox News

Sean Duffy Ripped After Encouraging Americans To Take 'Road Trips' As Gas Prices Continue To Soar

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy was called out after he encouraged Americans to take "road trips" as gas prices continue to rise as a result of President Donald Trump's war in Iran.

Republicans have faced pressure from constituents nationwide to address the rising cost of living, but Americans are feeling pain at the pump now that the Iran war, which the Trump administration kicked off in late February, has prompted a spike in gas prices.

Keep ReadingShow less
Crossing guard Jamele Ransom went viral after eating ice cream during a live TV interview.
@nbcphiladelphia/TikTok

Philadelphia Crossing Guard Goes To Town On Ice Cream Cone While Describing Truck Crash On TV—And Becomes An Instant Icon

I scream, you scream, and apparently, Philadelphia crossing guards scream for ice cream during breaking news interviews. Crossing guard Jamele Ransom became an instant internet favorite after casually eating a cone while recounting a chaotic playground crash near S. Weir Mitchell Elementary School on live TV.

The now-viral moment came after police said Robert Littlepage, 18, of Douglasville, Georgia, allegedly attempted a carjacking last Tuesday before stealing a white utility truck and crashing near the school.

Keep ReadingShow less