Amir Schiby, another Israeli artist showed a painfully poignant upside-down image of four young boys playing on a Gaza beach. Palestinian artist Sami Musa has sent two pieces from his recent “Chic-art resistance” show, where instruments and detritus of war is repurposed in unexpected – even charming – ways. Bansky allowed his sheet-covered art to stay – generating an artistic dialogue between his invited artists from the Middle East.Īlongside Alzaqzouq, there was work by Israeli Neta Harari Navon – paintings based on press photographs of the evacuation of an Israeli settlement in the West Bank. He then lay down for a “die-in” in front of it. Speaking of which… Banksy invited three artists from Israel and three from Palestine, but one Palestinian artist, Shadi Alzaqzouq, took offence to the presence of his Israeli contemporaries and staged a protest, covering his work with a sheet on which he had written “RIP Gaza: Boycott Israel” in charcoal. The piece chimed exactly with Banky’s sentiments about state controls and personal freedoms. The work has been shown already in London and abroad, but Cauty had updated it for Dismaland. Tiny emergency lights flashed on and off, police appeared like ants in tight formations hunting for wrongdoers. A huge dystopian model village – entitled the Aftermath Dislocation Principle Part I – it contained some 3000 miniature riot police attending the aftermath of some terrible urban revolt. Jimmy Cauty – no one could miss the power of this extraordinary installation by Jimmy Cauty – formerly one half of the acid house duo The KLF. Severija Incirauskaite – Kriauneviciene – a Lithuanian artist who embroidered folk art daisies onto car doors – a weird melding of the old and new worlds. Shown in the dark first gallery, it was uncanny and fascinating in turn. We wonder where these works are now and what will become of them? Would they have any meaning in an art gallery?Īlongside Bansky, here’s a pick of some of the artists we most remember from our trip:ĭietrich Wegner – this Australian produced the unsettling ‘baby in a vending machine’ – a hyperrealistic model of a baby hanging in a real vending machine as if you could drop in a few coins and it buy it. They ‘all toil under the darkening clouds’ and shared a common concern for the fragility of the environment, fleeting between ominous foreboding and a sense of joy in the moment.īansky himself – as well as acting as producer and curator – made a huge amount of new work for the show – mostly large pop-art style installations, including the central apocalyptic fountain, the distorted Little Mermaid sculpture, the Fairy Castle with paparazzi, the woman attacked by seagulls (pictured), killer whale jumping out of the toilet, and the grim reaper who performed a disco/waltz in a dodgem car. Work by more than 50 artists from 17 countries was on show.
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